Seeking Alpha
From Greentech Media:
Submit
an article to

By Michael Kanellos

Liquid fuel is a commodity, it turns out.

Brazilian drivers in many states are switching from ethanol made from sugar cane to gas as higher sugar prices are pushing ethanol prices up, says Reuters.

When ethanol costs about 70 percent as much or more than gas, drivers switch. Ethanol only provides about two-thirds of the energy content that gas does; as a result, when it passes the 70 percent mark, it effectively becomes more expensive. In big cities like São Paolo and Rio, ethanol costs 60 percent to 67 percent of the price of gas, so drivers still pick it up. After taxes, it's still economical.

Flex-fuel cars allow drivers to swap from one type of fuel to another. Most of the flex-fuel vehicles GM and Ford have sold in the U.S. have never guzzled a drop of E85 fuel, which consists of 85 percent ethanol, in large part because the stations don't exist in large numbers. In Brazil, stations are everywhere. The Brazilian experience is something that biofuel makers should keep in mind.

But does this mean that all alternative energy will be subject to commodity pricing? Probably not. Liquid fuel may be an exception because the switching costs with flex fuel cars in Brazil is nominal. If someone buys solar panels and the cost of conventional electricity goes down, they likely aren't going to unplug the panels and resell them to the neighbor. Conversely, if power goes up, no one will voluntarily plunge themselves into darkness and wait for the solar installer to arrive.

Print this article with comments
Comments
3
Comments 1 - 3 out of 3
You are viewing the latest 20 comments
  •  
    The ability to switch between traditional and alternative fuels does two things.
    1) Reduces the risks for transfer to the alternative
    2) Reduces the costs to society of too fast switching (in this case high sugar prices)

    Therefore although the headline here is a move back to gasoline, the ultimate effect should be a faster cheaper switch.
    Oct 22 09:56 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Author - GAS or GASOLINE - is there a difference???
    Oct 22 12:54 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    It seems that no matter what fuel the motorists use it's going to go up in price. If everyone uses electricity the electric rates will go up. If we use ethanol the crop prices on corn and sugar can will go up. After all, the name of the game is fleece the motorist.
    Oct 22 09:28 PM | Link | Reply
Viewing Comments 1-3 out of 3