| 1888 Articles Home | Automotive Articles | Automotive RSS | ![]() |
||
Is Ethanol Our Right Choice? |
||||
And with ethanol production taking an increasing percentage of the corn crop, farmers are hard-pressed to meet the traditional demand for corn as food stuff for human or animal consumption, even though the Agriculture Department predicts 15 percent more corn will be grown this year than last.
With Detroit now talking up the merits of "flex-fuel" cars that could run on ethanol, distilleries that make the stuff are sprouting across the Midwest like so many corn stalks. All of which is great — if you grow corn.
But if you're a dairy farmer the higher corn prices are no cause for celebration.
Cows are animals that just love to eat corn feed -- corn protein helps produce better milk. But the higher corn prices mean that a diary farmer has to pay almost double this year for the corn feed they gives his cows.
Some farmers say they may well have to reduce their herd, which means "there'll be less milk produced because of the price of corn. That's the bottom line."
It gets more complicated.
Pigs, chickens, turkeys’ steers all are fed a mix of corn feed too. As a result, you guessed it; the price for those items will be rising at the supermarket.
"Almost everything in our refrigerator contains corn," says Lester Brown of the Earth Policy Institute. "Whether it's milk or eggs or chicken, pork, beef, ice cream, yogurt — these are all corn products."
And consider this: The price of wheat, soybeans and other crops will go up because farmers will be planting less of each.
Brown says the nation needs a "timeout" in building ethanol distilleries so people can consider the direction in which they are heading.
"While there are 40,000 members of the American Corn Growers Association," he says, "there are 300 million consumers in this country — all of whom get their food from supermarkets. And that supermarket checkout shock that they're going to be getting as a result of diverting so much grain to ethanol could be a political wake-up call."
And with the United States serving as bread basket to much of the world, what happens to America's crops is of interest far beyond the local supermarket shelf.
"What we're beginning to see is a sort of epic competition emerging in the world between the 800 million people who own automobiles and the 2 billion poorest people in the world who are now beginning to compete for the same grain supplies," Brown says. "We've never faced a situation like this before."
US government is betting big on ethanol as a green fuel that can help make America more energy-independent.
What do you think: Is ethanol our right choice as a green fuel?
About Author
Baki Krir is the owner of the http://puregreencars.com
Article Source:
http://www.1888articles.com
Other Related Articles Do Your Piece – Public Service With Cell Phones by Barry Nagassar Bathing Suit Season: Online Diets to the Rescue by Kelly Staller Is Ethanol Our Right Choice? by Baki Phoenix, Arizona Coldwell Banker Real Estate Home Buying by Nick McConnell |

