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Ethanol's luster is fading in D.C.

Critics fear diverting corn to biofuel use is raising food prices

By Justin Hyde , Detroit Free Press|May 23, 2008

WASHINGTON — WASHINGTON - The ethanol bandwagon has run off the road.

Thanks to rising food prices, ethanol has lost its luster in Washington. Lawmakers reworked the recent farm bill to lower incentives for ethanol. The governor of Texas wants a waiver from federal requirements for more of the fuel in the coming years. And critics from around the world - from food companies to United Nations officials - say ethanol is to blame for more expensive food.

In the middle sit Detroit's automakers, who have made ethanol the centerpiece of their environmental efforts - supporting ethanol mandates, building about 5 million flex-fuel vehicles so far, and pledging to make half their fleets capable of burning 85 percent ethanol fuel by 2012. So far, automakers have sat out this debate, but it could affect efforts to move toward biofuels from other sources.


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What's fueling the debate is a jump in food prices not seen in decades. After rising 4 percent last year - the largest increase since 1990, according to federal experts - retail food prices are expected to climb another 4 percent to 5 percent this year. Global demand, weather, oil prices, the weaker U.S. dollar - all have played some role.

But just how much of the inflation in food prices can be traced back to more expensive corn has been a raging debate in Washington over the past few weeks. Ethanol and farm advocates, including the Bush administration, say biofuels play a minuscule role in the overall food price increases, compared with a growing world population demanding more food than ever.

The U.S. ethanol industry has come under special scrutiny since it relies almost exclusively on corn, which is also used by livestock farmers and industrial food processors.

As with oil, corn prices could rise further, despite a startling 48 percent increase over the past year. Yet while prices stand at about $5.80 a bushel, and there was a record crop last year, U.S. farmers are expected to plant 8 percent fewer acres of corn this year.

Experts give several reasons for the reduction: Many farmers swap fields every season between corn and soybeans to preserve the soil; wheat, soybeans and other crops also have seen prices soar, and the costs of growing corn have grown with fuel prices.

Meanwhile, U.S. ethanol production continues to grow. Federal energy law requires the industry to produce at least 9 billion gallons this year, up from 6.5 billion last year. Combined with the decline in U.S. production, the ethanol industry could consume about 25 percent of the corn U.S. farmers grow.

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