USDA: More corn needed for ethanol - Demand will require 10 million more
acres, economist warns:
By PHILIP BRASHER - REGISTER WASHINGTON BUREAU - September 7, 2006:
Washington, D.C. - Farmers must grow more corn in coming years to keep up
with the demand for fuel ethanol, the government's top agricultural economist
says. Farmers would need to plant 90 million acres of corn by 2010 - 10
million more than they did this year - to fill projected ethanol demand and
maintain existing levels of exports and livestock-feed usage, said Keith
Collins, the U.S. Agriculture Department's chief economist.
The increase almost equals the total corn acreage in Iowa, where farmers
planted 12.7 million acres of corn this year.
The growth in ethanol production could have several ramifications, Collins
and others said. It could push corn prices to record levels in coming years,
reducing government subsidies but potentially raising food prices. The
expansion of corn acreage could reduce soybean supplies and eat up land now
set aside for conservation. "There will be some costs (to rising ethanol
production), there is no question about that. But it can be manageable given
the objective of reducing foreign oil imports," Collins told the Senate
Environment and Public Works Committee on Wednesday. The committee's
chairman, Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Okla., expressed concern that the use of corn
for ethanol could wind up raising food prices significantly.
"Several politicians, including the president, and other interest groups have
stressed the security implications of importing oil from unstable parts of
the world. Yet, corn cannot be the answer," Inhofe said. The record average
annual price of corn was set in 1995 at $3.24 a bushel. This year, the USDA
expects corn prices to average between $2.15 and $2.55 a bushel. The surge in
ethanol production has raised concerns among livestock producers about the
cost and availability of animal feed. Hog and poultry producers are affected
most directly by increased corn prices, since a byproduct of ethanol
production, known as distiller's grains, readily substitutes for corn in
cattle feed.
There are 101 ethanol plants now in operation that can produce 4.8 billion
gallons of ethanol a year. Plants now being expanded or constructed will
increase annual production by 3 billion gallons. "The U.S. investment in
biofuel production in response to runaway oil prices is spiraling out of
control, threatening to draw grain away from the production of beef, pork,
poultry, milk and eggs," according to writer Lester Brown, whose recent
warnings about biofuels have attracted attention in Washington. Collins said
increases in corn yields will help meet demand for ethanol.
He also estimated that up to 7 million acres of land now idled under the
Conservation Reserve Program could be planted to corn and soybeans. Most of
that land is in Iowa and other Midwestern states. About 36 million acres of
former cropland, including nearly 2 million in Iowa, is now enrolled in the
program.
"Some of that land can be farmed economically and sustainably," Collins said.
The program is widely popular because the acreage provides habitat for birds
and other wildlife while helping to curb runoff that pollutes streams and
rivers. It's fine to remove land from the program as long as it is replaced
with more environmentally sensitive acreage, said David Nomsen, vice
president of governmental affairs for Pheasants Forever. Economists at the
University of Missouri's Food and Agricultural Policy Institute recently
estimated that CRP acreage would shrink by a million acres by 2010.
The economists, who analyze agricultural policy for Congress and federal
agencies, estimate farmers will plant 87 million acres of corn by 2010, a 9.6
percent increase over this year. Inhofe made clear that any legislation
increasing the amount of ethanol that the nation is required to consume would
have to pass through his committee. An energy bill passed last year will
require that motorists use 7.5 billion gallons of ethanol by 2012. That
target is likely to be reached long before then, and farm-state legislators
have proposed to increase the mandate. END
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