China to Miss its 2010 Ethanol Target

Corn vs CaneAccording to a recent Reuters report, China will miss its 2010 ethanol as fuel target. This is because China is not relaxing control over non-grain feedstocks, at the same time as restricting ethanol production through grain.

“We are unable to meet the ethanol target. The major reason is because of a shortage of raw material,” said Ren Dongming, a deputy director with Energy Research Institute of the National Development and Reform Commission.

This is quite significant, since China has been ranked as the third largest ethanol producer in the world.

Since China is such a large crude oil importer, any methods to reduce oil dependence meant a potential gain for the economy, as well as potential emissions reductions. However, due to food security concerns, in June China began to restrict ethanol production, utilizing grain products for food production rather than energy products.

China’s ethanol target had been a blending 2 million tonnes of ethanol in gasoline by 2010 and 10 million tonnes by 2020. Additionally, ethanol consumption had begun to be phased in across the country, leading to concerns about fuel supplies.

The ten Chinese provinces using ethanol fuel were:

  • South China: Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region;
  • Northeast: Jilin, Liaoning and Heilongjiang provinces;
  • North: Henan and Hebei provinces;
  • East: Anhui, Shandong and Jiangsu provinces; and
  • Central: Hubei Province

Photo Sources: rfarmer and swanksalot via Flickr under a Creative Commons licence.

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Comments

  1. Unfortunately, I don’t expect much of anything from China anymore. If they couldn’t get Beijing clean for the Olympics, the most important international event in their history, I fail to see what they WOULD consider changing course for.

    It seems to me like, 100 years from now, China may be environmentalism’s final frontier.

    Also, in many ways, I think Chinese environmental problems will be seen as the dirty legacy of the American model – by taking the American lifestyle and applying it to nearly 2 billion people, China grossly highlighted the problems with our lifestyle, and proved we were living the high life on borrowed time.

  2. gawain kripke says:

    You have to credit China for taking some responsibility for it’s ethanol program. if it’s driving food prices up, then it needs a second look.

    The US, on the other hand, refuses to even consider reviewing ethanol mandates and subsidies. So 1/3 of the corn harvest (about 1/10 of the world’s corn) will be converted to ethanol and burned in SUVs. Meanwhile, about a billion people don’t have enough to eat.

    China looks sensitive and careful by comparison.

    • China sensitive?
      you are talking about same goverment that kill 3 thousands in THE MIDDLE OF ITS CAPITAL CITY !?
      they only do what can bring them money then call themselve socialist
      lol!

    • Chinese goverment is seating on the top of more than 2 trillions dollar reserves ,they can afford to pay higher corn ,sugar and cassava prices
      trade balance is only fair!

  3. zozzancs says:

    Oh… China. They need a lots of food. Here in Hungary we have a huge amount of extra corn every year which we can not sell to anyone. Some years ago we started to produce E85. It was great. Less corn, less oil import, cheap fuel and gain for local businesses dealing with ethanol. You probably don’t know, but Hungary is the second largest E85 fan in Europe. We have about 400 gas stations serving E85, and we are a pretty small country. Only Sweden has more: ~1600. (Check the map of hungarian E85 petrol stations: http://e85kutak.info)

    The only problem is, that our #&@{˘^ˇ° government no invented some extra tax for E85, which made it too expensive. In Europe there is a rule of thumb, that the price of E85 should be maximum 70% of the gasoline price to make more and more people use it. Now, here in Hungary the price is over 80%. The problem is, that a car with E85 uses 20-30% more fuel than with gasoline. So now, here when you use E85, you drive more expensive. That’s how “we” help green fuel to spread… :(

Trackbacks

  1. [...] China to Miss its 2010 Ethanol Target According to a recent Reuters report, China will miss its 2010 ethanol as fuel target. This is because China is not relaxing control over non-grain feedstocks, at the same time as restricting ethanol production through grain. [...]

  2. [...] Jump-starting things back home – China’s domestic ethanol industry is not dead, mind you. It’s just not a big priority right now. Working closer with Brazil on ethanol could result in China gaining the technology and experience necessary to revitalize its own ethanol industry, which is all but certain to miss its 2010 production target. [...]

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