[AGL] Who'd a thought it?
michele mason
yaya.m at earthlink.net
Thu Feb 1 08:47:07 EST 2007
The Truth just seems to twist and turn in the wind. mm
On Jan 30, 2007, at 5:50 PM, Gerry wrote:
> US government subsidized corn is the bane of world agriculture, so
> cheap
> that indigenous farmers by the millions have given up trying to
> compete and
> headed to town. NAFTA made it exportable to Mexico, nominally a large
> producer of corn. But the US corn was so cheap it drove hundreds of
> thousands (at least--trying not to exaggerate) of growers off the
> farms (and
> across the border). All this was in the days of huge corn surpluses
> when the
> price per bushel was miniscule and there seemed to be no limit to the
> supply.
>
> Leave it up to the government to change the course. No one ever
> thought that
> the price of corn would rise precipitously. Huh? Yes, alas, the great
> Ethanol Boondoggle has driven up the price of corn to what threatens
> to be
> all time highs. By lavishing billions on the builders of ethanol
> production
> plants the government (Bush and Repug congress with full complicity
> from
> corn state Demos like Barack Obama) they have created a corn shortage.
> The
> whole world strung out on American corn, and the supply drying up.
>
> Read last week that the price of tortillas in Mexico has risen
> alarmingly.
> Now, totally dependent on US imported corn they are way up the creek
> without
> a paddle. How to get those farmers to come home and plant? Well, if
> they
> can, at current prices maybe we can start importing corn from Mexico,
> to
> make ethanol...
>
> Here's a good story on the subject.
> G
>
>
>
>> ETHANOL THREATENS FOOD AID
>> By Philip Brasher
>> Des Moines Register
>> January 14, 2007
>>
>> America's appetite for fuel ethanol could take food away from some of
>> the world's poorest people.
>>
>> The price of corn and other crops is soaring because of the demand
>> for grain to make ethanol, a gasoline additive, and that means that
>> the government's budget won't buy as much food as it used to. The
>> price of corn alone, a key food in Africa, has more than doubled in
>> the past year.
>>
>> The pinch is already being felt.
>>
>> Catholic Relief Services, one of several organizations that
>> distribute U.S.-donated food in Africa and Latin America, expects to
>> deliver 161,000 tons this year, down from 200,000 tons last year.
>>
>> "In the long run, it means that we are fueling our cars with food
>> that people might have eaten. There are important trade-offs," said
>> Lisa Kuennen-Asfaw, director of public resources for the
>> Baltimore-based group.
>>
>> The biggest global distributor of food aid, the World Food Program of
>> the United Nations, also is being squeezed by the demand for crops to
>> make biofuels. The price the program paid for Argentine soybean oil
>> was up 37% last year. The cost of Malaysian palm oil rose 33%.
>>
>> Congress could increase funding for food aid to make up for the
>> higher commodity prices. But if history is a guide, that likely won't
>> happen.
>>
>> Americans, and especially American farmers, take pride in feeding the
>> world's hungry, but the truth is that the government's food-aid
>> programs historically have at least as much to do with helping U.S.
>> agribusiness interests as helping the poor.
>>
>> The last time there was a similar surge in commodity prices --- in
>> the mid-1990s --- government food purchases fell sharply but
>> rebounded when global commodity prices collapsed a few years later.
>>
>> Purchases fell more than 40% from 1994 to 1996, but shot from 3.5
>> million to 10 million tons from 1998 to 1999. Since then, the volume
>> of food has varied from year to year, but the overall budget has been
>> relatively flat, and that worries aid organizations.
>>
>> "When commodity prices go up, food assistance will necessarily tend
>> to go down because food aid has to be bought," said Gawain Kripke of
>> Oxfam America, a development group.
>>
>> Look for farm-state lawmakers to argue that the rise in commodity
>> prices isn't such a bad thing for poor countries.
>>
>> After all, critics of U.S. food aid programs have long argued that
>> the donations can sometimes drive down the prices paid to local
>> farmers in regions where the commodities are distributed.
>>
>> "One of the things that could happen is that with prices going up
>> overall that could encourage agriculture in these countries," said
>> Rep. Collin Peterson, the Minnesota Democrat who now chairs the House
>> Agriculture Committee.
>>
>> That's true, but the higher commodity prices won't be much help in
>> the poorest countries, where farmers often can grow only enough food
>> to feed themselves and their families, according to aid groups.
>>
>> Meanwhile, there's little sign that the surge in the ethanol industry
>> is letting up. The industry is on track to add six billion gallons of
>> production --- more than twice the current capacity --- as existing
>> construction is completed over the next year or so.
>>
>> The Earth Policy Institute, an environmental think tank, recently
>> warned that the ethanol industry will be consuming 5.5 billion
>> bushels of corn a year, more than half of what was produced
>> nationwide in 2006, if the recent pace of construction starts
>> continues into this year.
>>
>> The biofuels boom isn't limited to the United States, either. Europe
>> is ramping up production of biodiesel from vegetable oils to reduce
>> the use of petroleum and cut greenhouse gas emissions.
>>
>> "It's very clear that we need to work on environmental and
>> conservation issues and other kinds of concerns that affect the
>> American public," said Kuennen-Asfaw, referring to the potential
>> benefits of alternative energy sources.
>>
>> "But we also have to think about the direction we're going in for
>> poor people around the world."
>>
>
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