B20 in Oregon is from Sequential Biofuels, made from waste vegi oil. No farm subsidies there.
Our legislature did pass subsidies this past summer to encourage increased biofuels refining capacity and encourage farmers to grow canola and other feedstock crops. There was also a small personal income tax credit included for consumers who use biodiesel. None of this has really kicked in yet.
The Econbrowser blog posting is by James Hamilton, who cites Reason.org as one of his sources (that was what I was noting). Looks like the Yuma plant did run into environmental obstacles in getting a clean air permit to operate, but that isn't it's biggest problem. See:
http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepubli ... ery19.html
One would think that one would want to have identified a source of oil before making plans to build a refinery.
Profit should certainly rise in relation to consumption. The beef people have with the oil industry is that profit has risen far in excess of consumption, with little investment in new technology or infrastructure.
To try and bring this back around full circle... concern about dependence on fossil fuels is the main reason I bought the CRD, and it seems a lot of other folks acted on the same values. I am more than a little grumpy that after 9/11 occured (with the support of Saudi oil money), all Americans were encouraged to do was go shopping. If every American had been encouraged to buy the most fuel efficient vehicle that meets their needs, and instead of "I support the troops" ribbons in 15 mpg soccer-mom Suburbans we had "I support the troops" ribbons on 25-30 mpg diesel SUV's (and 40-50 mpg diesel cars), the country would be in a lot better shape. And we'd be paying a lot less for fuel.