Alphabetical           State by State
 Finance Send this page to a friend!  
 Home
 Finance
 Advice
 Banking
 Bankruptcy
 Bonds
 Chats and Forums
 Conventions and Conferences
 Corporate Profiles and Reports
 Currency
 Earnings Calendars
 Exchanges
 Financial Services
 Financing
 Futures and Options
 Hard Assets
 Information Media
 Initial Public Offerings
 Insurance
 Investing
 Investment Models
 Investment Picks
 Motley Fool
 MSN MoneyCentral
 News and Media
 Organizations
 Reference and Guides
 Retirement Planning
 Small-Cap Investing
 Socially Responsible Investing
 Technical Analysis
 Usenet
 Venture Capital
 Web Directories
Copyright © 1998-01 OpenHere
Company Information
Suggest a Site
FAQ
VirtualDesk
Login:

Password:
Economists Blast US Corn Ethanol Program
Wednesday, May 7, 2008 8:05 PM

The U.S. program subsidizing the use of corn for the production of fuel ethanol came under sharp criticism at a...


The U.S. program subsidizing the use of corn for the production of fuel ethanol came under sharp criticism at a Senate hearing Wednesday. Economists told the panel the program leads to higher food prices. VOA's Barry Wood has more.

Twenty percent of the U.S. corn crop goes into ethanol production
Twenty percent of the U.S. corn crop goes into ethanol production
Corn prices worldwide have increased by 50 percent over the past year. John Sununu, a Republican senator opposed to farm subsidies, says corn prices have risen in part because America is using increasing amounts of corn to produce fuel for automobiles.

"When you're diverting a third of the [corn] crop to ethanol it has a real impact on prices," said Senator Sununu. "To produce a gallon of ethanol takes 1700 gallons of water. Thirty million acres of land, going to produce the corn for ethanol."

Calling the US ethanol program a disaster, Sununu said it is replete with taxpayer subsidies as both farmers and ethanol producers receive tax breaks from the government. In addition, he said, imports of cheaper sugar-based ethanol are blocked by high tariffs.

David Beckmann, the president of a church-based anti-hunger agency, says US farm subsidies should be abolished. Such a move, he says, would help bring down food prices.

"To have a more dynamic, responsive [subsidy free] agriculture, that is going to bring down food prices in the medium term," said David Beckmann.

Both Beckmann and Sunnunu spoke at a hearing of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee. Other experts told the committee ending the ethanol program could reduce corn prices by about 15 percent.

Josette Sheeran, 22 Apr 2008
Josette Sheeran, 22 Apr 2008
Josette Sheeran, the head of the Rome-based United Nations World Food Program, says the high price of oil has boosted the demand for food-based alternative fuels. This, she says, has contributed to the overall rise in food prices.

"And so what we're finding is that often energy bidders can outbid food buyers and consumers, and the higher the price of oil is the higher the price the energy producers are willing to pay," said Josette Sheeran.

Sheeran said in Africa palm oil and cassava are increasingly being used as alternative fuels.

Finance
Get Stock Quote: Enter Symbol(s)

Symbol Lookup
My Portfolio
Our Privacy Vow 
  • Financial Home

  • Iran Says Rise in Production Will Not Affect Record Oil Prices

  • US Treasury Secretary Says Credit Markets Slowly Returning to Normal

  • Saudi Arabia Says It Has Already Increased Oil Production to Meet Demand

  • EU-Latam-Caribbean Summit Opens in Peru

  • Oil Prices Soar to New Record High Above $127 a Barrel

  • Bush in Saudi Arabia for Nuclear Deal  

  • Bush to Hold Talks With Saudi King on Oil Prices

  • High Gasoline Prices Cause Hardship in US  

  • UN Scales Down Global Growth Forecast

  • Zimbabwean Central Bank Issues Z$500 Million Note Worth About US$2  

  • Huge Congo-China Mining Deal Questioned  

  • US Imposes Sanctions on Subsidiaries of Belarusian State-Run Oil Firm

  • French Bank to Sell Billions in Assets to Deal With Subprime Losses

  • British Leader Promises to Steer Country Through Tough Economic Times  

  • Indonesia Will Raise Fuel Prices Despite Protests

  • African Countries Move to Bio-Farming to Alleviate Food Shortages  

  • New Report Says US Inflation Pressures Appear to be Easing  

  • US Commerce Secretary Encourages Chinese Investment

  • Zimbabweans Government Waives Customs Duties On Food, Other Key Goods  

  • US Senate Panel Considers Response to Global Food Crisis

  • Study Links Everyday Chemicals to Obesity  

  • High Crop Prices Squeezing US Farmland Conservation Program  

  • In Burkina Faso, One Hotel's Fight Against Sex Tourism  

  • Some Businesses Find Silver Lining in Weak US Economy  

  • African Foreigners in Equatorial Guinea Find Business, Problems  

  • South Korea Delays US Beef Imports Amid Public Protests  

  • French Parliament Blocks Bill to Allow Genetically Modified Crops

  • All-Electric Car by Nissan to Go on Sale in 2010

  • Gas Prices Soar, Americans Buy Smaller Cars  

  • Growing Indian Economy Sparks Housing Boom