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Crop Report: Corn Prices Keep Rising-(but but but it was to be be cheap/replenish able fuel)
ap ^ | 12/11/06 | By Libby Quaid, Associated Press Writer

Posted on 12/11/2006 8:28:31 AM PST by Flavius

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Farmers are getting the best price for corn in more than a decade amid strong demand for ethanol and feed, the Agriculture Department reported Monday.

Average corn prices for the year were forecast at $2.90 to $3.30 a bushel, up 10 cents from last month's estimate, according to the monthly crop report.

he last time prices were as good was 1995, when the average was $3.25 a bushel. This year is the fifth time corn prices have risen above $3 a bushel. Last year's average was $2 a bushel.

The production forecast was unchanged at 10.7 billion bushels of corn, down from last year's 11.1 billion bushels. The nation's ethanol fuel plants are expected to use about 20 percent of the corn crop, and exports should consume roughly the same share.

Analysts also left the forecast unchanged for soybean production, predicting 3.2 billion bushels, up from about 3 billion bushels last year.

The price forecast for soybeans rose to $5.70 to $6.50 a bushel, up from last month's estimate of $5.40 to $6.40 a bushel. Last year's price was $5.66 a bushel. Roughly 35 percent of the crop is expected to be exported to foreign markets.

Export demand has softened, however, for beef and poultry, the department said. Analysts lowered the export forecast for beef amid problems with shipments to South Korea and for chicken amid slower-than-expected sales.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: energy; ethanol; farming; iran
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guess the moral of the story is buy oil futures before major middle east conflicts

and then buy alternatives and ride them to collapse

yahoo

guess one should buy diesel,electric,ethanol/gas,hydrogen car and just rotate them every 10-15 years as that market moves

i suppose getting a horse would not hurt either

1 posted on 12/11/2006 8:28:35 AM PST by Flavius
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To: Flavius

but will the pro-ethanol morons get a clue?


2 posted on 12/11/2006 8:32:07 AM PST by flashbunny (Run and Govern as conservatives, win elections. Run and govern as liberals, lose elections.)
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To: Flavius

Let's get real. Ethanol subsidies isn't a way to solve the energy crisis. It's a way for the Democrats and the RINO wannabes to butter up ignorant greens and buy the farm vote, which is vital for 2008.


3 posted on 12/11/2006 8:34:28 AM PST by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: Flavius
-(but but but it was to be be cheap/replenish able fuel)

Funny thing, that whole demand-price relationship.

4 posted on 12/11/2006 8:35:36 AM PST by The_Victor (If all I want is a warm feeling, I should just wet my pants.)
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To: flashbunny

>>>but will the pro-ethanol morons get a clue?

We have a clue. Several in fact. It's the rest of you who need a clue or two. I'll get you started in clues: Corn for ethanol is not a food OR fuel choice - it's food AND fuel. Here's another: no one expects ethanol to be a total replacement for petroleum - it can be, and is, a viable means of reducing the need for imported oil. Every barrel of oil we don't have to import from people who want all of us infidels dead is a good thing.


5 posted on 12/11/2006 8:36:53 AM PST by Keith in Iowa (Liberals: People whose relationship to reality appears to be somewhat tenuous.)
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To: Flavius

wait till ethanol gets going - you'll be paying 2 bucks for an ear of corn...


6 posted on 12/11/2006 8:38:37 AM PST by camle (keep your mind open and somebody will fill it full of something for you)
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To: Keith in Iowa

Good on you, Keith.

It also keeps the price of my corn and milo up to where it ought to be in the first place.


7 posted on 12/11/2006 8:40:24 AM PST by Concho (IRS--Americas real terrorist organization.)
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To: Keith in Iowa

"Corn for ethanol is not a food OR fuel choice"

But doesn't it become that, if you ask the question:

For which, would you rather deplete the topsoil?


8 posted on 12/11/2006 8:44:09 AM PST by mutley
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To: Keith in Iowa
Thanks, Keith. Folks outside of the Midwest need to know that after corn (cattle feed) has the ethanol cooked out, there is still cattle feed left over.
My only concern is that high corn prices will mean fence row to fence row planting which will eliminate slews and brushy areas where Mr. Pheasant makes a home.
9 posted on 12/11/2006 8:44:19 AM PST by Eric in the Ozarks (BTUs are my Beat.)
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To: The_Victor

I know how we can cure all that, we can tax it

oh and feel good about it, and start to share hugs and sing few songs praising the mother earth

that will solve all that ails the mankind er personkind er son in the name

well humanoid oops man in the word, Huoind kind there thats good


10 posted on 12/11/2006 8:44:46 AM PST by Flavius (Qui desiderat pacem, praeparet bellum)
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To: Flavius

Perhaps on Superman's Bizarro World, but on this planet, a 14% rise in the price of corn isn't considered a "collapse".


11 posted on 12/11/2006 8:45:35 AM PST by Mr. Lucky
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To: Eric in the Ozarks

There's more than cattle feed left after the ethanol is made from the corn...and many farmers like to hunt too, so they'll maintain habitat that they can make use of after the harvest.


12 posted on 12/11/2006 8:46:21 AM PST by Keith in Iowa (Liberals: People whose relationship to reality appears to be somewhat tenuous.)
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To: Flavius

Well, since apparently our nation does not have the willpower to win a war against a bunch of terrorists and ragtag militias, we had either better get used to ethanol or start studying up on the koran.


13 posted on 12/11/2006 8:46:25 AM PST by elmer fudd
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To: Flavius
That horse thing isn't exactly a dumb idea since hay fields and corn fields aren't exactly in competition with one another.

The other economic reality has been staring us in the face ever since the ethanol stupidity has been flourishing.

I am not convinced that alternative fuels is anything more than a legacy of allowing radical enviros a voice in policy.

We have the finest fuel known to man to this point in time, it is found in the ground and you drill to get access to it.

Until a true and marketable alternative is discovered, and developed, we are not being very smart to allow folks who are stuck on stupid to even voice their destructive opinions.

Shut them up and get on with life, instead of allowing the God players to bring this nation to it's knees in obeisance to folly.
14 posted on 12/11/2006 8:47:18 AM PST by wita (truthspeaks@freerepublic.com)
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To: Flavius

I would pay a farmer in America five dollars a gallon for ethanol before I pay a raghead ninety-nine cents for a gallon of gasoline. PERIOD.


15 posted on 12/11/2006 8:49:31 AM PST by domenad (In all things, in all ways, at all times, let honor guide me.)
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To: Eric in the Ozarks

Actually, the new plant being planned in SW Kansas, will burn feedlot manure for the heat required, thus eliminating that problem, the residue of the manure will be returned to the feedlots to pave the pens. The grain will have the alcohol removed from the carbohydrates, and the remaining high protein mash will then be returned to the feedyards as feed. It is hard to beat a system like that, and it also blows holes in the nay-sayers whining about energy requirements needed to produce ethanol.


16 posted on 12/11/2006 8:49:52 AM PST by Concho (IRS--Americas real terrorist organization.)
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To: mutley
Tillage doesn't necessarily deplete the topsoil; to the contrary, it can build it. Profitable farmers tend to make much better stewards of the soil than do unprofitable ones.
17 posted on 12/11/2006 8:49:53 AM PST by Mr. Lucky
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To: Keith in Iowa

flashbunny,

The same corn cannot be used for food and fuel. The demand added by the SUBSIDIZED Ethanol industry WILL drive up the price of corn. Did you know that ethanol is both less efficient than gasoline and pollutes more? As long as we are burning Middle Eastern and South American oil our own oil is waiting safely in the ground for future use. Why burn ours when we can buy theirs? Yes, we could stop burning their oil but wouldn't that piss them off even more?


18 posted on 12/11/2006 8:50:40 AM PST by curtish
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To: Flavius

Glad to see the farmer maing a buck. They get about 10 cents out of a $4.00 dollar box of corn flakes.The rest goes to the packager.


19 posted on 12/11/2006 8:50:44 AM PST by sgtbono2002 (The fourth estate is a fifth column.)
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To: Keith in Iowa

Use some ethanol, and start chipping the oil-filled rocks in Utah, and we're two steps closer to telling the Muslims to f*** off.


20 posted on 12/11/2006 8:50:50 AM PST by RockinRight (Barack Hussein Obama, Jr. He's a Socialist. And unqualified.)
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