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Associated Press ‘Investigative Report’ Skips Fact Checks

Following a recent release of an Associated Press (AP) ‘Investigative Report,’ a piece littered with misinformation, and inaccuracies that read more like an opinion piece, Tom Buis CEO of Growth Energy released the following statement:

“This so-called ‘Investigative Report’ is nothing more than a one-sided piece with explicit misinformation used in attempt to discredit the renewable fuels industry, an industry that is reducing our dependence on foreign oil, creating good paying jobs at home that cannot be outsourced, driving growth and innovation in rural America, all while improving our environment and providing consumers a choice and savings at the pump.

“The single take away from this piece is that the authors need to get a fact checker. Even the simplest of facts were misconstrued. The absence of rudimentary fact checking is truly astounding. Below, is a comprehensive fact check which corrects the astonishing long list of false claims and inaccurate information found within the AP story.

“Bottom line – this was an agenda piece, and the truth was irrelevant to what the author was fixated on writing.”

Fact Checking the AP’s Hatchet Job on Ethanol

The Associated Press recently released a biased, one-sided story on renewable fuel’s impact on the environment.

A full fact check of that story follows, but first some things the story got correct (direct excerpts):

A full review of the facts that were egregiously omitted or skewed in the AP story related to corn ethanol.

Fact: The 2008 Farm Bill removed funding for roughly 7 million acres of CRP land. Based on this law, the number of enrolled acres has decreased to fit within the programs new, smaller budget. It is legally impossible to get back to pre-2008 levels of CRP enrollment. This has nothing to do with ethanol. Since the cap was lowered, acres have been near (92%-98%) the new cap each year.

Fact: Acreage enrolled in the Wetlands Reserve Program hit a record high of 2.65 million acres in 2012. The land that is enrolled in the program stays for a minimum of 30 years, meaning landowners are not allowed to fill in wetlands as they please. USDA predicts that enrollment in this program will continue to rise.

Moreover, according to EPA’s latest Greenhouse Gas Inventory, no new grassland has been converted to cropland since 2005 and grassland sequestered 14 percent more carbon in 2011 (latest data available) than 1990.

Fact: Tom Daschle was a Senator from South Dakota and is not on the board of Growth Energy. The AP clearly didn’t bother to check even the most basic facts.

Fact: Corn prices have been below $7 per bushel for most of 2013. The day the AP article was first published, corn futures were trading at the lowest price since 2010: $4.26 per bushel.

Fact: Farmers increased corn acreage in 2012 and 2013 in response to drought ravaged corn supplies, not because of ethanol. In fact, less corn was and will be used for ethanol in 2012 and 2013 than in 2011. Moreover, the increase in corn acres has been achieved through crop switching, not through the cultivation of new lands, as the story alleges.

Fact: According to Argonne National Laboratory in a peer-reviewed study, when you tally emissions related to fertilizer and chemical production, diesel use on the farm, transportation of the corn, energy used by the ethanol plant, transportation of ethanol to the market, and land use change emission, corn ethanol on average reduces GHG emissions by 34 percent compared to gasoline.

Fact: The story ignores that for each bushel of corn that goes into an ethanol facility, 17 pounds of animal feed is produced and returned into the market.  When this major source of livestock feed is not omitted from the calculation, livestock feed remains by far the number one use of corn. In 2012, ethanol consumed 17.5 percent of the corn crop, while livestock feed accounted for 50 percent. 

Fact: According to the USDA, 4.67 billion bushels were used for ethanol and feed co-product production out of a total of 11.93 billion bushels produced. This represents 39 percent, not 44 percent. But since much of that 39 percent was used to make animal feed, only 17.5 percent of the crop turned into fuel.

Fact: If you look take a starting point of 2007, when the RFS was enacted, nitrogen use fell by 2010. Furthermore, the nitrogen required to produce a bushel of corn has fallen steadily over time. It has dropped 43 percent per bushel since 1980. 

Source: Growth Energy