Reuters
Wednesday September 10 2008
By Charles Abbott
WASHINGTON, Sept 9 (Reuters) - Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama told farmers on Tuesday that he backs the federal requirement to use ethanol as a way to reduce reliance on oil imports.
The alternative fuel, distilled mostly from corn (maize), is popular in farm country, particularly the U.S. Midwest. But sky-high grain prices and rising food prices have led to suggestions to relax the so-called renewable fuels standard.
Federal law calls for use of 9 billion gallons of ethanol as motor fuel this year.
A week ago, the Republican National Convention called for an end to ethanol mandates, in line with the views of its nominee, John McCain.
"I've long been a strong supporter of the RFS," Obama said during a brief telephone call to members of the National Farmers Union. "I am strongly committed to advancing biofuels as a key component of reducing our dependence on foreign oil."
Besides providing home-grown fuel, ethanol creates jobs in rural America, said Obama, who supported more rural economic development. The jobless rate in rural areas is well above the U.S. average.
Both candidates support development of fuel ethanol from cellulose, found in grasses and woody plants. McCain says he would end "mandates, subsidies, tariffs and prices supports that focus exclusively on corn-based ethanol" and let the free market identify the best alternative fuels.
Ethanol is most popular in the Midwest, also the largest corn-growing region. Some Republicans, like Sen. John Thune of South Dakota, say they support ethanol and disagree with their party platform.
A nationwide poll of farmers in late May found they split equally whether ethanol was good or bad for agriculture with roughly one-fourth undecided. Dan Miller, editor of Progressive Farmer magazine, which commissioned the poll, said livestock producers may be skeptical because the ethanol boom resulted in sharply higher feed costs.
In questioning 3,000 rural Americans, the poll showed 50 percent supported McCain, 34 percent backed Obama and the rest favored other candidates or were undecided. The margin between McCain and Obama was twice as large as the split between Republican and Democratic leanings. Rural Americans tend to be social and fiscal conservatives. (Reporting by Charles Abbott; editing by Carol Bishopric)