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Foley proposes E85 fuel...
Foley proposes E85 fuel pumps across Turnpike
Tuesday, September 19, 2006
For
immediate release: Monday,
Sept. 18,
2006
CONTACT: Connor Patton
at (614) 466-3350 or Mike Foley at (216)
390-2216
Foley
proposes E85 fuel pumps across Turnpike
State Rep.
Mike
Foley,
D-Cleveland, announced today new legislation
to require each service
plaza along the 241-mile Ohio Turnpike to
include at least one pump
offering E85, the ethanol-based fuel.
House Bill 660, which
has bipartisan support, is the first bill
introduced by Foley, who was appointed to the
14th District seat of the Ohio House
of Representatives on May 25.
Foley said his goal is
to promote use of the environmentally-friendly
fuel and make Ohio more
self-sufficient when it comes to energy use.
His plan would roughly double the number of E85
stations in Ohio by
making it available at all 14 Turnpike service
plazas by mid-2009.
An estimated 150,000
“flex-fuel” cars are already in operation in
Ohio. Foley
said he suspects more consumers would purchase
E85 if it was available. Ohio now has
11 gas stations that serve E85; at least seven
more are now planned.
“Ethanol has tremendous
potential to reduce Ohio’s
dependence on foreign oil while helping the
environment,” Foley said.
“The more we can make ethanol available to
consumers, the more we can
do to stimulate demand, help Ohio’s
economy and promote energy independence.”
Ohio
is the nation’s eighth-largest producer of
corn, and plans for six new
ethanol plants are now on the drawing board.
Jeff Eschmeyer, a
spokesman for Ohio Farmers Union, said making
E85 more available to
consumers will help farmers.
“With our resources and
potential, Ohio can be a
leader in ethanol production and
accessibility,” Eschmeyer said.
According to an analysis
by the University of
Minnesota,
ethanol produces 12 percent less greenhouse
gas linked to global
warming than gasoline. But E85 is now easier
to find in neighboring
states. Minnesota has 292 E85
stations and Illinois has
139. Ohio also
trails Indiana
by 28 stations and Michigan by
9.
New
York
recently took a similar step forward in
expanding supply when Governor
Pataki announced a plan to make E85 available
at all 27 New York State
Thruway service plazas.
“State government
needs to lead by example on this,” Foley said.
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