Ontario Agriculture

The network for agriculture in Ontario, Canada

 

BIOFUELS: Do the fuels harm the food supply —and fuel prices — or don’t they?

 

Days after an Ontario study declared the debate on farm crops for fuel finally over, UN researchers are warning of dire consequences for the world's poor from the growing practice.

And another analysis, this one released by the Canadian Trucking Alliance, says federal government requirements to include fuel derived from crops in diesel fuel will push up transportation costs and consumer prices.

The debate over ethanol and biodiesel has become intense as the use of corn for fuel has soared to the point where four out of every 10 bushels of corn grown in North America this year will be used for fuel -- not food.

 

Read the rest of the article here:

http://www.lfpress.com/news/london/2011/06/20/18310371.html  

 

What do you think??

Views: 66

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

It would appear there is more than enough food to feed the world's population but the distribution and the associated costs are the real barriers.

 

Derivative speculations of agricultural commodities on Wall Street is proving to impact food costs, I believe, at a greater extent than the processing of the commodities.

 

Some studies are also speculating that " about 40 percent of all the food produced in the U.S. is thrown out".

 

That translates to "85 million gallons of water a day" wasted and "300 million barrels of oil per year". .....1400 calories of equivalent food waste/day or 150 trillion calories/year. Those are numbers for just one country alone.

 

I find the current ethanol/food debate to be a distraction from real global food problems. The distribution (manipulation) of wealth appears to be at the root of the problem.


http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0007940

Reply to Discussion

RSS

Agriculture Headlines from Farms.com Canada East News - click on title for full story

New and alternative sanitization procedures for antibiotic-free swine barns

Certain barns that switched to antibiotic-free production observed increased prevalence of pathogens after a few years on the program. Developing improved sanitization and disinfection procedures is an

Olymel Unveils Strategic Restructuring Plan in Response to Shifting Production Dynamics

Olymel, a key player in the meat processing industry, has unveiled a strategic restructuring plan aimed at optimizing its operational footprint amidst evolving production trends. This initiative follows the recent announcement of the closure of its Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu plant in Quebec, Canada.

Genesus Global Market Report Canada April 2024

The 2024 Canadian industry outlook is looking more positive for profitability each week

Mitigating Tail Biting in Pigs: Amino Acid Supplementation vs. Environmental Enrichment By Hannah Jansen DVM Southwest Ontario Veterinary Services

Some European producers have elected to formulate relatively low crude protein diets in an effort to reduce environmental nitrogen excretion (pollution)

Study Highlights Hog Pricing Trends, Importance of Livestock Mandatory Reporting

In a policy brief published by Iowa State University Center for Agricultural and Rural Development, economists apply the USDA's Livestock Mandatory Reporting (LMR) data to identify changes in how producers have priced hogs over time. Ever.ag Chief Livestock Economist Steve Meyer and Iowa State University associate professor and extension economist Lee Schulz examined various pricing mechanisms across three time periods and found that, in all but one instance, average negotiated prices have been lower than other categories. For all time periods studied, negotiated prices have been the most variable. Additionally, the average negotiated price has the largest coefficient of variation, indicating greater relative price risk than other pricing categories. Since wholesale pork volumes and prices became mandatory under LMR in 2013, producers and packers have been increasingly using USDA’s calculated pork cutout value as a pricing mechanism for hogs. Meyer and Schulz found that, for all t

© 2024   Created by Darren Marsland.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service