Farms.com Home   Ag Industry News

Ethanol Demand Rises with Summer Travel Boom

Jul 08, 2025
By Farms.com

E15 Gasoline Gains Traction as Drivers Hit the Road

A surge in summer road trips is driving up ethanol demand in the United States, offering a timely boost to corn farmers and renewable fuel producers. With gas prices low and favorable production economics, ethanol blending is reaching record levels.

This season’s travel is expected to hit historic highs. According to AAA, 61.6 million people are driving during the Independence Day holiday, a 2.2% increase from last year. Memorial Day travel also set records with 45.1 million vehicle travelers. The main reason? Cheap fuel.

Ethanol, a corn-based fuel additive, is becoming even more popular due to the availability of E15, a gasoline blend with 15% ethanol. Although E15 was previously restricted during summer over smog concerns, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) approved year-round sales this year, giving drivers access to a cleaner and more affordable fuel.

“Given the significant demand and the economics of producing ethanol are advantageous, we’re seeing a record level being blended into the pool,” said Ilshat Haris, managing director and partner with Boston Consulting Group.

E15 is currently sold at around 4,300 gas stations across the country. Though this is still a small share of the 150,000 stations nationwide, it’s growing. The Renewable Fuels Association reports E15 can be up to 39 cents per gallon cheaper than traditional E10 gasoline, adding to its appeal.

This ethanol demand could be key for farmers, who planted 95.2 million acres of corn this spring—the most since 2013. Corn prices fell to $4.06 per bushel in early June due to expectations of a record harvest.

Chris Boshart, CEO of Gold-Eagle Cooperative, said, “From a corn standpoint, we need these plants up and running at full.”

With federal renewable fuel standards requiring roughly 15 billion gallons of ethanol use this year, experts like Ben Brown from the University of Missouri believe strong summer demand may help reach or exceed that goal.


Trending Video

Why the Fertilizer Crisis Won’t End When the Iran War Does

Video: Why the Fertilizer Crisis Won’t End When the Iran War Does

The fertilizer crisis didn’t start with war — it revealed a system already under strain.

Seed World U.S. Editor Aimee Nielson breaks down what’s really happening in global fertilizer markets and why the impact on farmers may last far longer than current headlines suggest. Featuring insights from global fertilizer expert Melih Keyman and industry leaders Chris Abbott and Chris Turner, this conversation explores:

Why fertilizer supply was already tight before geopolitical disruption

What the Strait of Hormuz and global trade routes mean for input availability

How rising nitrogen prices are crushing farmer margins

Why this crisis could affect seed choices, crop mix and acreage decisions

The hidden risks around phosphate and sulfur supply

Why experts say this situation may get worse before it gets better

Even if tensions ease, the underlying issues — supply constraints, investment gaps and purchasing behavior — are still in play.

Watch to understand what this means for farmers, the seed industry and the future of global food production.