vigilant wrote:I don't know anybody that drives an ethanol burning car either.
To some extent Vigilant, we all drive Ethanol burning cars...some just don't know it (or at least didn't in Okie land)
Ethanol stickers taking shape at state gas stations
By The Associated Press
TULSA -- Service station customers are seeing a lot more stickers concerning ethanol at the gas pumps.
Some of the stickers notify the public that
the fuel contains up to 10 percent ethanol, while others proclaim that customers are getting 100 percent gasoline with no ethanol mixed in.
A new state law that went into effect Tuesday requires gas stations selling ethanol-blended fuel to place stickers on the pump notifying the customers of this fact.
State regulators will be inspecting pumps to make sure all retailers are following the law.
Stations that use ethanol in their gasoline without notifying consumers can be fined $500 for each day of the violation and can be shut down by the Oklahoma Corporation Commission.
Oklahoma's ethanol sticker law was passed this past legislative session after many stations began selling blended gasoline in the past year without telling customers.
QuikTrip started using its E10 blend last fall without any stickers, but company spokesman Michael Thornbrugh said the public was notified through numerous interviews with the media at the time.
Many nearby states have been using ethanol blends at their pumps for years, he added.
"Oklahoma really has been an island with ethanol not being introduced," Thornbrugh said. "There was not proper infrastructure and adequate supply."
Part of the incentive to sell E10 fuel is that ethanol is significantly cheaper than regular gasoline. Ethanol costs less than $3 per gallon wholesale, while regular gasoline is selling at about $4 per gallon nationally.
The typical QuikTrip store was selling regular gas at $3.79 per gallon Tuesday. But Tom Frisch was selling his self-described "real gasoline" for $3.989 at his McKay's Conoco Service in Tulsa.
Frisch is one of numerous station owners who refuse to sell ethanol-blended fuel. They say it is bad for engines, gets fewer miles per gallon and is only cheaper because it is subsidized due to the power of agricultural states.
"The government is selling us down the road," Frisch said.
Ethanol's detractors say the corn-based product is inefficient as a fuel and also drives up food prices.
http://newsok.com/ethanol-stickers-taki ... le/3264888
(apologies if ya'll knew this and I'ma jist clutterin up dis thread)