SMRs and AMRs

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

In Farm Belt, Ethanol Plants Hit Resistance

By MONICA DAVEY
New York Times

SPARTA, Wis. — When plans were announced for a new ethanol distillery on the outskirts of this city of 9,000, residents complained that it would mar the view from the municipal golf course. They worried that its emissions would taint the milk-based products made at nearby Century Foods International, one of the community’s biggest employers. They even argued over whether the plant would reek like burned molasses or blackened popcorn or fermenting beer.

The T-shirts opponents printed up told the story: “Good idea. Bad location.”

For years, the arrival of an ethanol distillery in agricultural America was greeted mainly with delight, a ticket to the future in places plagued by economic uncertainty. But in the nation’s middle, the engine of ethanol country, the glow is dimming.

In Kansas, Illinois, Indiana, Minnesota and even Iowa, the nation’s largest corn and ethanol producer, this next-generation fuel finds itself facing the oldest of hurdles: opposition from residents who love the idea of an ethanol distillery so long as it is someplace else.

“What they are trying to sell we aren’t buying,” said Deb Moore, who owns a sandwich shop and soda fountain here.

The disputes have left some proposed plants waiting, mired in lawsuits; a few have given up.

(Continued here.)

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