USDA Chief Economist made the following remarks to the US Senate Energy Committee on Sept 6 regarding corn & projected ethanol production:
-US needs 10 million more acres of corn by 2010 than seeded this year to maintain existing levels of exports and livestock-feed use
-expected increases in corn yields will help meet demand but 10 million more acres are needed to prevent much smaller exports and much higher livestock feeding costs.
-those new acres will come from switches from wheat, corn and the Conservation Reserve Program
-at current crude oil, gasoline and ethanol prices, ethanol plants are profitable at much higher corn prices
-based on USDA models, ethanol mills getting $2.25/gal for ethanol can pay as high as $5.00/bu for corn and still cover cash operating costs
If you want to read Collins' entire statement go to:
http://www.usda.gov/oce/
and click on Sep 06, 2006 statement.
Of course, petroleum prices can decline as they did in the '80s. Nevertheless, there are interesting times ahead.
-US needs 10 million more acres of corn by 2010 than seeded this year to maintain existing levels of exports and livestock-feed use
-expected increases in corn yields will help meet demand but 10 million more acres are needed to prevent much smaller exports and much higher livestock feeding costs.
-those new acres will come from switches from wheat, corn and the Conservation Reserve Program
-at current crude oil, gasoline and ethanol prices, ethanol plants are profitable at much higher corn prices
-based on USDA models, ethanol mills getting $2.25/gal for ethanol can pay as high as $5.00/bu for corn and still cover cash operating costs
If you want to read Collins' entire statement go to:
http://www.usda.gov/oce/
and click on Sep 06, 2006 statement.
Of course, petroleum prices can decline as they did in the '80s. Nevertheless, there are interesting times ahead.
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