What are biofuels?
Biofuels are fuels made from renewable, farm-based products that lower prices at the pump, lower carbon emissions, and support economic growth in rural America.
Bioethanol is a renewable, earth-friendly biofuel made from plants. Most bioethanol is currently made from corn and sorghum, but new technologies allow it to be created from other materials like wood chips and agricultural waste.
Bioethanol is blended into gasoline - 98% of the gasoline sold in the U.S. includes 10 percent bioethanol. It burns cleaner and cooler than oil, which is good for our environment and our car engines. And the higher the bioethanol content in gasoline, the greater the benefits.
Uplifting Rural America
Ethanol production is a domestic energy industry, creating jobs and economic vitality all across America--especially in rural areas of the nation.
* In 2019, the U.S. ethanol industry helped support nearly 349,000 jobs.
* Ethanol contributed more than $43 billion to the Gross Domestic Product and added $23.3 billion to household income.
* This generated more than $10 billion in tax revenue for federal, state, and local governments.
Every American has a voice in the decisions impacting the fuel they put in their vehicles, the price they pay at the pump, the solutions available to advance America's clean energy future and other pressing issues.
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