>That butane has recently been redefined as "oil"Butane hasn't been redefined recently. It's been counted as C&C at least as far back as the 1970s.
>In the years since, it has contributed little or nothing to offsetting American oil declines.This statement is wrong, because america (US) hasn't declined, its C&C production has risen. Same for most american countries. Ethanol adds about 10% of production for the US. For Brazil, its much higher.

[i>]Truth is you are no more likely to drive a ethanol vehicle today than you were 10 years ago.[/i]
Correct. All cars in the US run on 10%-15% ethanol now just like they did 10 years ago. Victory for ethanol!
Ethanol is inferior and expensive.Its lower pollution in processing and use. It makes use of all the cropland we have spare due to the green revolution. Might as well do something with all that sunlight. Sunlight isn't expensive, its free. If it was so inferior and expensive then Brazil wouldn't bother with it.
Double counting of the petroleum used to grow/harvest/grind/ferment/distill the corn and the final liquid.Of course we're allowed to use some of the fuel we have to obtain more fuel.
Your effectively saying that since the 1st caveman used a lump of coal on his campfire, all the fuel gotten since then doesn't count because its a knock on effect of the prosperity afforded by that 1st lump of coal.
What does corn ethanol have to do with butane, propane, other NGL's? It is this: energy is used up, burnt, and lost to use these liquids.Yes. Also same for the 2nd piece of coal used by a caveman. He was slightly more prosperous due to that 1st piece of coal.
>You can't store them in a jerry can, a tank in the yard, large containers.
It's really not that hard.
NGL's do not flow like liquid petroleum.Yes they do.
You need to understand the concept of EROEI and it affect on available fuel.Good. I do.
Butane is difficult to ship and store.
It's easy.
For the USA to convert to use, would mean special compressor-pumps at every gas station.
Special airtight storage tanks.
Special delivery trucks.
compare this with a gasoline tanker...
Special cars.
Hardly. It's easy to convert gasoline and diesel engines over to lpg.
Special tanks.
Special NGL gas lines all over the country. (You can't just truck butane efficiently.The worlds trucks have trucked butane for decades. The worlds pipes have piped gas for nearly a century at least.
>The upshot is that we must expend ever more energy just delivering energy.Same with any commodity. More of it, more work in shifting it. The caveman had to take the 1st lump of coal to his fire. It just gotten worse since then...
Not only does declining "net-energy" drive up costs beyond our ability to pay
More energy per person than ever, and its going up.
That is why it is disingenous to measure NGL's from the ground, when the real energy asset is mostly used up getting it from the ground.Absurd. Not more than 0.1% of the energy in history's LPG reservoirs has been needed to tap those reservoirs. Same today.
So while it may appear that the downsides of unconventional oils are only economic (fixed/rectified by higher prices and more potential reserves) that is WRONG.Yep. Totally wrong. There are no downsides to them at all.
It actually take more energy to produce ethanol then is measured in the final liquidAnother doomer myth. Humans have been producing ethanol fuel before modern agriculture gave them petroleum powered tools. The energy in ethanol fuel comes mostly from the sun.
http://library.thinkquest.org/07aug/018 ... _hist.htmlIf you stopped spinning in your doomer hysterics for a moment, you'd realise that since its been possible to farm food for 11,000 years ( that is, get the sun's energy into bio-chemicals ) without petroleum, then we could burn this energy instead of eat it. A lot of the worlds ethanol is made from sugarcane.
>So remaining useful liquid is actually less and cost more. Nearly right. The remaining useful fuel is actually more and costs less.
The kicker: our society (and many like ours. And many very different) was built on inexpensive, abundant petroleum.Good, because we've got plenty more inexpensive abundant petroleum for a century to comes, natural gas and coal for a thousand years, and nuclear reserves for billions of years. These energy sources have kicked us into an advanced civilization.
We must commute by heavy car (in dangerous traffic) to our jobs.Woah... did you say dangerous traffic? Forget peak oil, we'll all be dead by dangerous traffic by the end of today.
Our manufactured goods all come from far away.Boats have extremely low transport costs. It's cheaper per good to ship goods around the world than it is for every community to have their own factories produce their own stuff. Society has fallen towards a global economy because its cheaper than hundreds of local economies. There was careful analysis done on this years ago in our energy concerned community, but if you've spent the last 10 year spinning around in hysterics just singing the old LATOC myths to yourself you won't have noticed.
The system is fragile, automated, complex, and very vulnerable. And it is rusting.No. It's very robust, automated, complex and very strong. It's getting newer and brighter every day.