The U.S. poultry industry will need to hold the nation's
lawmakers accountable if higher ethanol mandates result in further price
spikes or shortages in feeding ingredients, National Turkey Federation
(NTF) president Joel Brandenberger said. It will also have to
"press them to help solve a problem they created", he added.
Writing in NTF's December newsletter, economics consultant
Thomas Elam described the new ethanol mandate as a "game
changer" for U.S. agriculture.
He said that significant marketplace and technical obstacles stand
in the way of the higher mandate. The grain-based ethanol goal of 15
billion gallons would require 5.35 billion bushels of corn a year --
almost as much as will be used for poultry and livestock feed in the
U.S. during 2008.
If U.S. corn yields increase at 1.5 percent per year (the average
increase of the last 17 years), Elam said, enough would be produced to
meet ethanol demand and slightly greater feed and food use but no
increase in exports. A crop failure, however, would create difficulties.
In the hypothetical case of a 2021 yield of only 150 bushels per
acre, corn production would fall 3 billion bushels below the required
amount, he said. "The ethanol mandate requires that gasoline
blenders buy 15 billion gallons, regardless of cost," Elam noted.
"The 3 billion bushel shortfall will come from feed use, food use
and exports. Corn could easily go to $6, $7 or even $10 per bushel to
ration the supply. Ethanol prices will increase enough to cover the
higher costs of corn and U.S. food production will drop."
In related news, corn stocks for the first quarter of 2007 are
anticipated by many analysts to be higher than last year's levels
as the overall bigger production should boost supplies, analysts said.
Analysts also said the 2007-08 corn ending stocks will decline from the
level projected last month as a result of the small decrease in
production and continued strong export demand. That would lower the
amount of corn expected to be left over at the end of the marketing
year, analysts said. The average estimate for U.S. corn production was
13.109 billion bushels, 59 million bushels below the 13.168 billion
forecast in November by USDA, according to a survey of 19 analysts by
Dow Jones Newswires.
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