K
KathleenElsie
Guest
I ask this question in this forum because I see it as a moral issue. Expensive oil for the ground is at least not taking food from the poor and disadvantaged. We have touted this as better for the environment then the use of crude oil. But is it?
I believe that we need to care for the people and the earth. God told us to do so. But in my opinion food for people and the environment would be better served if we drill for oil in our own country and not take food from the mouths of the poor…
townhall.com/columnists/DavidStrom/2007/11/13/biofuels_poison_for_the_poor
I believe that we need to care for the people and the earth. God told us to do so. But in my opinion food for people and the environment would be better served if we drill for oil in our own country and not take food from the mouths of the poor…
townhall.com/columnists/DavidStrom/2007/11/13/biofuels_poison_for_the_poor
Ethanol, it turns out, may be great politics in Midwestern corn growing states, but it is terrible environmental and economic policy. As more and more food is diverted from human consumption to producing fuel, prices for basic food are skyrocketing around the world. Deforestation is on the rise as third world countries try to cash in on the boom, and violence has broken out as small landholders are being kicked off their land to make way for large palm oil farms.
A coalition made up of Oxfam, the World Wildlife fund, and other groups is raising concerns about the current rush to replace fossil fuels with biofuels. Increased Ethanol production has led to a spike in corn prices that has caused food shortages in third world countries, including our neighbor to the South, Mexico. African and Asian countries that are currently unable to produce enough food for their own populations are clearing cropland to supply Ethanol for Europe’s new mandate of 10% Ethanol in all their gasoline.