El Salvador to be involved in ethanol project
As part of a new biofuel/ethanol initiative sponsored by the US and Brazil, El Salvador will apparently be the location for an early demonstration according to reports:
Additional coverage of the announcement in La Prensa Grafica is found here.
Ethanol heavyweights Brazil and the U.S. have chosen El Salvador as the site of a biofuels feasibility study, President Tony Saca said Sunday.
Saca said the governments of Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and U.S. President George W. Bush sent him word that they had chosen El Salvador for the pilot program during their meeting Saturday at the Camp David presidential retreat. It was not clear what the pilot program would entail.
"This ratifies El Salvador as the best prepared country in the region to develop a platform and be an alternative energy model," Saca said.
Saca expressed hope that ethanol and other biofuels can create opportunities for this Central American country's sugarcane industry and decrease dependence on oil.
Additional coverage of the announcement in La Prensa Grafica is found here.
Comments
However, the U.S. sticks a $0.54/gal duty, unless you happen to be a Caribbean Basin Initiative (hello Reagan!), of which of course there is only _one_ country in the Pacific: good 'ole ES.
So it works like so, if you are a Brazilian distiller:
(a) If eth in the U.S. is too cheap, you'd rather sell your product in Braz.
(b) If eth in the U.S. is very dear, you'd rather ship the thing directly to the U.S., who cares about 50 measly cents?
(c) If eth in the U.S. falls within a certain range... that happens to be a 50-cent range, then you can make $$ by shipping the thing to ES, dehydrating it, and re-shipping to the U.S. But transhipping is expensive
So you see, plant plans are a very risky proposition, 'cause the price band where plants are usable is very narrow. Your plant could end up sitting idle most of the time.
Unless, of course, you happen to have minimum purchase agreements with Salvadoreans.
So I predict that (1) either the plant will never be built by the Brazilians (with OPIC cheap funding, thanks, US taxpayers!), or (2) it will be built on top of a Salvadorean ethanol mandate signed by the ARENA clowns.
Since ethanol gives you 25% les mileage per gallon, the plucked hens here will be Salvadorean consumers.
Thanks for the analysis.
sugar cane, corn, palm is not the solution
ONLY HEMP IS
see my site
www.fairtradefish.org for links to info on this and a link to my bro's site in Chile safariseeds about other sources NOT needing petro chemicals to cultivate
in ES any effort at ethanol will be disastrous, and of course corrupt with no common sense involvement
good luck.
May God Bless America.