Posted on 01/12/2007 6:47:18 AM PST by xzins
High Demand Causes Surge in Corn Prices By LIBBY QUAID ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ethanol plants and foreign buyers are gobbling the nation's corn supplies, pushing prices as high as $3.40 a bushel, the Agriculture Department said Friday.
Farmers haven't seen prices this high for more than a decade. The monthly crop report forecast even better prices than in December, raising the estimate 10 cents to $3 to $3.40 a bushel.
Robust prices have made corn more expensive for livestock feed and as food for people. But a drop-off in those uses was more than offset by growing demand from foreign markets. Exports are forecast to claim 2.25 billion bushels of corn from last year's crop, up from last month's forecast of 2.2 billion bushels.
Overall, the corn crop came in at 10.5 billion bushels, slightly under last month's forecast of 10.7 billion bushels. Anticipated yields were 2.1 bushels lower per acre, and the area planted and harvested was slightly smaller than expected.
The amount of corn used for ethanol, forecast at 2.15 billion bushels, was unchanged from last month.
Nationwide, supplies of corn are expected to drop to 752 million bushels, a drop from last month's forecast of 935 million bushels and a steep decline from last year's supply of 1.967 billion bushels.
Seed corn is hybrid. If you save the corn to re-plant, what you will harvest the second time around will bear very little resemblance to the original breed and the yield will be substantially smaller.
I disagree, my dad has used his corn with very little difference.
Open pollinated corn is only planted as a specialty corn or where someone is really living off a trust fund and is trying to prove some social point.
You can replant with heritage seed.
Really good post
BTTT
>>>Feed for livestock is a different issue. There's barely a middleman in that transaction.
Are you aware that one of the primary co-products of the ethanol creation process is animal feed?
You tell em
Yes, but the issue is the price of corn rising because of demand. It would be nice to see dual use, and that should lower the price somewhat, but my understanding is that the alcohol is a byproduct of the organism feeding on the sugar in the corn. Am I wrong?
I'd think that the second use of the corn would be less nutritious than the initial.
It's more than nice - it's a fact of the industry. Multiple, viable, economically valuable products come out of the ethanol production process - not just the ethanol.
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The above is in reference to one bushel of corn...
Duh. Did leftists really not see this coming? Are they really that inept when it comes to basic economics? Next they will be telling us that mandating Californians to purchase medical insurance (increasing demand at the point of a gun) will somehow result in lower insurance rates. Oh brother.
Good list. Thanks.
Thanks.
Wow! Thank you for the eye-opening post. You enlightened me!
Ethanol inflames grain market: Corn, wheat prices hit daily maximum
Note: this topic is from January 12, 2007.Thanks xzins.
Overall, the corn crop came in at 10.5 billion bushels, slightly under last month's forecast of 10.7 billion bushels. Anticipated yields were 2.1 bushels lower per acre, and the area planted and harvested was slightly smaller than expected. The amount of corn used for ethanol, forecast at 2.15 billion bushels, was unchanged from last month. Nationwide, supplies of corn are expected to drop to 752 million bushels, a drop from last month's forecast of 935 million bushels and a steep decline from last year's supply of 1.967 billion bushels.Remarkably enough, ethanol was made from more corn than was actually produced. /s
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