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    Corn rationing predicted in 2008

    Corn rationing predicted in 2008

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    NEW YORK — A BB&T Capital Markets analyst said Monday corn rationing may be necessary this year, following a U.S. Department of Agriculture report predicting farmers would plant far fewer acres of corn in 2008.

    According to the March Prospective Plantings Report, farmers intend to plant about 86 million acres of corn this year, down 8 percent from 2007, when the amount of corn planted was the highest since World War II.

    Analyst Heather L. Jones said in a note to investors if the USDA estimate proves accurate, the year may produce just 200 million bushels of corn. That, she said, wouldn't be enough to meet demand, given current export and feed demand trends and higher ethanol demand. Both ethanol and animal feed are made with corn.

    "That is an untenable inventory demand, in our opinion," she said. "Consequently, we believe demand must be rationed or there needs to be a big supply response from other growing regions of the world."
    The plantings report caused nervousness among meat producers and food makers who spent last year struggling to offset higher corn costs. Even though acreage was high, demand for ethanol and need overseas pushed prices to record levels.

    Jones said she expects corn prices to rise even more, especially if unfavorable weather damages any of the crop.

    The report delivered some promising news for meat producers, who also use soybeans to make feed. Farmers estimated they will plant 74.8 million acres of soybeans, up 18 percent from 2007.

    But that might not bring much relief, Jones said, since corn is still the primary feed ingredient.

    Shares of Tyson Foods Inc., one of the world's largest meat companies, fell 12 cents to $16.01 in afternoon trading, while shares of pork producer Smithfield Foods Inc. dropped 39 cents to $25.57.

    Chicken producer Pilgrim's Pride Corp. shares dipped 19 cents to $20.28. Earlier in the day, the stock reached a new four-year low of $20.08.

    #2
    Well I guess we should make Ethanol out of sugar cane.



    ethanol fuel]] program uses cheap sugar cane, mainly bagasse (cane-waste) for process heat and power, and modern equipment, and provides a ~22% ethanol blend used nationwide, plus 100% hydrous ethanol for four million cars. The Brazilian ethanol program provided nearly 700,000 jobs in 2003, and cut 1975–2002 oil imports by a cumulative undiscounted total of US$50 billion.[1] Today, Brazil gets more than 30% of its automobile fuels from sugar cane-based ethanol.[2]

    The Brazilian government provided three important initial drivers for the ethanol industry: guaranteed purchases by the state-owned oil company Petrobras, low-interest loans for agro-industrial ethanol firms, and fixed gasoline and ethanol prices where hydrous ethanol sold for 59% of the government-set gasoline price at the pump. These pump-primers have made ethanol production competitive yet unsubsidized.[1]

    In recent years, the Brazilian untaxed retail price of hydrous ethanol has been lower than that of gasoline per gallon.[1] Approximately US$50 million has recently been allocated for research and projects focused on advancing the obtention of ethanol from sugarcane in São Paulo.[3]

    Comment


      #3
      More than half of world ethanol production is produced from sugar and sugar byproducts, with Brazil being by far the world leader. Currently, there is no commercial production of ethanol from sugarcane or sugar beets in the United States, where 97 percent of ethanol is produced from corn.

      Technologically, the process of producing ethanol from sugar is simpler than converting corn into ethanol. Converting corn into ethanol requires additional cooking and the application of enzymes, whereas the conversion of sugar requires only a yeast fermentation process. The energy requirement for converting sugar into ethanol is about half that for corn.


      Comment


        #4
        Analyst Heather L. Jones said in a note to investors if the USDA estimate proves accurate, the year may produce just 200 million bushels of corn. That, she said, wouldn't be enough to meet demand, given current export and feed demand trends and higher ethanol demand.



        I think we need to take care of our own before we export.

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by texag93 View Post
          Analyst Heather L. Jones said in a note to investors if the USDA estimate proves accurate, the year may produce just 200 million bushels of corn. That, she said, wouldn't be enough to meet demand, given current export and feed demand trends and higher ethanol demand.



          I think we need to take care of our own before we export.
          amen to that

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by Luck_of_the_Draw View Post
            More than half of world ethanol production is produced from sugar and sugar byproducts, with Brazil being by far the world leader. Currently, there is no commercial production of ethanol from sugarcane or sugar beets in the United States, where 97 percent of ethanol is produced from corn.

            Technologically, the process of producing ethanol from sugar is simpler than converting corn into ethanol. Converting corn into ethanol requires additional cooking and the application of enzymes, whereas the conversion of sugar requires only a yeast fermentation process. The energy requirement for converting sugar into ethanol is about half that for corn.


            http://www.rurdev.usda.gov/rbs/pub/sep06/ethanol.htm
            You don't reckon there's anything political about ethanol production do you?

            Comment


              #7
              Might be cheeper to just plant your own plots for the animals. If left standing corn will last a long time. The hogs and coons are a drawback though.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by texag93;587647
                [B
                I think we need to take care of our own before we export. [/B]
                You dang protectionist!!!
                Originally posted by Luck_of_the_Draw View Post
                Well I guess we should make Ethanol out of sugar cane.



                ethanol fuel]] program uses cheap sugar cane, mainly bagasse (cane-waste) for process heat and power, and modern equipment, and provides a ~22% ethanol blend used nationwide, plus 100% hydrous ethanol for four million cars. The Brazilian ethanol program provided nearly 700,000 jobs in 2003, and cut 1975–2002 oil imports by a cumulative undiscounted total of US$50 billion.[1] Today, Brazil gets more than 30% of its automobile fuels from sugar cane-based ethanol.[2]

                The Brazilian government provided three important initial drivers for the ethanol industry: guaranteed purchases by the state-owned oil company Petrobras, low-interest loans for agro-industrial ethanol firms, and fixed gasoline and ethanol prices where hydrous ethanol sold for 59% of the government-set gasoline price at the pump. These pump-primers have made ethanol production competitive yet unsubsidized.[1]

                In recent years, the Brazilian untaxed retail price of hydrous ethanol has been lower than that of gasoline per gallon.[1] Approximately US$50 million has recently been allocated for research and projects focused on advancing the obtention of ethanol from sugarcane in São Paulo.[3]
                Originally posted by Bill M View Post
                You don't reckon there's anything political about ethanol production do you?
                Yes it is! And it is common knowledge. The cane farmers back home were ****** when they learned the government was supporting the corn farmers in the midwest.

                Comment


                  #9
                  I need to fill my feeder before it gets shipped to some third-world country that doesn't give a rip about America anyway.

                  I'm off to harass the yotes and contemplate corn shortages.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Goverment

                    Cant be ture the Goverment is here to Help you, thats wfat my tax man told me........

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Are there any big cane growing regions or states besides Louisiana (south of I-10)

                      I realize if the demand were there others would grow it too, just wondering if there is much growth outside of LA.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Originally posted by kfd82 View Post
                        Are there any big cane growing regions or states besides Louisiana (south of I-10)

                        I realize if the demand were there others would grow it too, just wondering if there is much growth outside of LA.
                        Florida & Texas both have good acreage of sugarcane! There is alot of cane north of I-10 also.....just not very far north!

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Guess I need to stock up on precious metals and gemstones, guns and ammo, and corn...
                          That is if I can get my tax debt lowered!!

                          Comment


                            #14
                            It's just the big boys putting their thumbs on us again.just another product being manipulated to drive the price higher. I guess I'll have more money for fuel next year.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Crop rotation at work. They plated more corn last year so now it decreases when they rotate the crop to soybeans or wheat.

                              Comment

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