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Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Got Milk? Spike in fuel and corn prices driving the price of milk to all time highs

The mainstream media has finally broken the news - higher demand for ethanol has lead to a chain reaction of inflation throughout the food chain. Dairy products like milk, cheese, and pizza are experiencing inflation due to dairy farmers having to raise their prices with a gallon of milk approaching $4 at the grocery stores.

The dairy farmers are experiencing a perfect storm of price hikes for their two biggest expenditures - fuel for their machinery and corn which is used to feed their dairy cows. The dairy farmers are able to pass the cost onto the consumer, so the small pizza shop owner and low wage earners with 5 mouths to feed are the ones who are going to be feeling the pinch.

Now here is my question to you. For the short term consumers are going to suffer from both $3 gasoline and $4 milk, but what does this mean for the long run?

I for one think it could save us from going farther down a path towards chaos. I am serious when I say that. Corn is a commodity that should not be treated like a non-renewable fossil fuel. With the exception of natural events such as hurricanes, droughts, etc the price of corn should remain stable and not be subject to shortages due to government policies.

If our governments, both federal and state, continue to subsidize ethanol investments then we are going to be in a heap of trouble. There is only so much land available to grow corn and only so many bushels of corn that can supply ethanol fuel without affecting our food chain.

So, $4 milk may be a blessing in disguise as long as our politicians are paying attention. This may finally open their eyes to the fact that in order to meet ethanol demand they MUST LOWER OR REMOVE the tariff on imported sugar. Unless cellulosic technology is ready(it seems to be a year or two away) we must have another source for ethanol besides corn. Sugar has already been proven to more efficient source for ethanol and would be much cheaper than corn as long as the 54 cent subsidy is removed.


So, is there anyone out there who still think that corn based ethanol won't have a big impact on our food chain?

5 comments:

Nathan Schock said...

http://www.ethanol.org/pdf/contentmgmt/Corn_for_ethanol_not_to_blame_for_food_prices_62907.pdf

Schultz said...

LOL!!! You just sent me a press release from a pro-ethanol group. Talk about a credible source!

Nathan Schock said...

I thought you might click through to the study they referenced, but I'll provide the link this time from the National Corn Growers Association: http://www.ncga.com/news/notd/pdfs/061407_EthanolAndFoodPrices.pdf

Schultz said...

Okay, now you sent me a link to a corn growers lobbying firm in Washington, DC.

After looking at your blog I just realized you were from South Dakota, one of the capitals of genetically engineered corn, so I will forgive you for your bias.

I'm not anti-ethanol but I anti-corn ethanol. Like those who doubt global warming you're going to have a tough time convincing people like me that corn is a wise choice for replacing the bulk of our petroleum based fuels.

There is too much unbiased evidence out there against your position to convince me otherwiese.

Schultz said...

Another one for you Nathan:

http://content.hamptonroads.com/story.cfm?story=127679&ran=107711&tref=rss

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