Here's a little math problem for you: How many calories go into the ethanol that's in your tank of gas?
Enough to feed 22 people, if you're talking the bare minimum calories needed in a single day, according to researchers at the
New England Complex Sciences Institute
Their calculation
The researchers detail their facts and figures
here
So some of those corn calories still end up in your steak, not your car. And if that corn weren't used to make ethanol, it would
probably go into animal bellies
Still, the bigger question here — whether so much food should be burned up as fuel — is
getting asked a lot these days
The EPA is currently accepting
public comments
That's why several governors and members of Congress have
asked the EPA
But the researchers at NESCI say there's an even more pressing reason to consider dropping the ethanol mandate than hungry cattle: the risk of hungry, rioting people.
For Americans, higher corn prices will likely translate into
higher meat prices
And as we told you earlier this week, mathematical modeling by NECSI researchers shows a strong link between
high food prices and social unrest
"What happens here ... is driving the global food crisis,"
Yaneer Bar-Yam
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