Ethanol found not guilty in skyrocketing food prices

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A truck carrying corn to the Marquis Energy ethanol plant in Hennepin stops at the scalehouse Thursday to be weighed and have its load checked for moisture levels. A recent government report revealed the diversion of corn from the nation’s food supply to the fuel supply was responsible for a small fraction of the total increase in the price of food from April 2007 to April 2008.
A truck carrying corn to the Marquis Energy ethanol plant in Hennepin stops at the scalehouse Thursday to be weighed and have its load checked for moisture levels. A recent government report revealed the diversion of corn from the nation’s food supply to the fuel supply was responsible for a small fraction of the total increase in the price of food from April 2007 to April 2008. (BCR photo/Barb Kromphardt)
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One year ago, ethanol was struggling in the court of public opinion. Starving children in Africa were blamed on the diversion of corn from food to fuel, and the Grocery Manufacturers Association released a statement saying federal food-to-fuel mandates had led to more than one-quarter of the nation’s corn to be diverted from food to ethanol production, driving up the price of corn and other commodities to historic highs.

But a recently released report by the Congressional Budget Office, titled “The Impact of Ethanol Use on Food Prices and Greenhouse-Gas Emissions,” found that while increased ethanol production did contribute to rising food prices between April 2007 and April 2008, high energy prices had a much more profound effect on the price of food.

According to the report, food prices increased by 5.1 percent during that time, or five cents on every dollar.

And how much of that was caused by the diversion of corn to ethanol production?

Somewhere between 0.5 and 0.75.

According to the report, “Over the same period, certain other factors – for example, higher energy costs – had a greater effect on food prices than did the use of ethanol as a motor fuel.”

Other factors found to have contributed to the price increase were a growing demand for meat, the depreciation of the U.S. dollar, and concerns about a poor harvest due to unfavorable weather for spring planting.

Agriculture advocates did not hesitate to say, “I told you so.”

On Thursday, Bob Stallman, president of the American Farm Bureau Federation; Roger Johnson, president of the National Farmers Union; and others held a media conference call to discuss the report.

Stallman said the government statistics prove ethanol played only a minimal role in last year’s food price increases.

“These results of the CBO report came as no surprise to Farm Bureau,” Stallman said. “With so many fingers in the till between the farmer and consumer, there are numerous factors responsible for higher food prices, including labor expenses, energy costs, financial speculation, increased demand, weather production losses and the weak U.S. dollar.”

Johnson agreed.

“The CBO report states what we have known all along,” he said. “America’s farmers are not a significant reason for increasing grocery store prices.”

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