Title: Biofuels Industry and Impacts on Agriculture
1Biofuels Industry and Impacts on Agriculture
- Dwight AakreFarm Management SpecialistJanuary
2007 - Web Page http//www.ag.ndsu.nodak.edu/aginfo/farm
mgmt/farmmgmt.htm
2-13-07
2Prices For New Crop Dec/Nov Futures 2/9/07
3The Global Setting Tight World Coarse Grain
Stocks
of total use
2006/07 12
19
15
Crop Year
Source Keith Collins, USDA
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5Ethanol Industry Expansion
- As of Jan 1, 110 plants operating with 5.39 b
gallons of capacity - 73 new plants and 8 expansions under construction
with 6.0 b gallons of capacity - Total capacity of all plants is 11.39 b gallons
- Numerous additional plants announced
6Corn used for Ethanol U.S.
- 2005 11 percent of corn production used for
ethanol - 2007 25 percent of corn production used for
ethanol - by 2008 N.D. plants will use 90 percent of 2006
production
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9Impacts of Expanded Ethanol Industry
- significant number of rural-based, good-paying
jobs - localized improvement in basis leads to a higher
price to farmers, higher feedstock prices and
less plant profitability - impacts traditional markets, livestock, exports,
alternative crops - some regions may overbuild
10Livestock Impacts
- DDGS is a partial replacement for soybean meal
and corn - SBM is higher in amino acids and is more
digestible - U of M dietary recommendations
- grow finish hogs 10 to 20 percent of ration
- lactating sows 20 percent
- gestating sows 30 to 40 percent
- broilers, layers, turkeys 10 to 15 percent
- lactating dairy cows 20 percent
- beef cattle 30 to 40 percent
11Livestock and Poultry Impacts (FAPRI)
- production of all livestock species increase
- net returns to all species are down
- turkeys, broilers and hogs experience the biggest
reduction in net returns
12Transportation is a Big Challenge for DDGS
- costs 50 per ton to ship to California dairies
- costs 6 per ton to ship to Midwest swine and
poultry outlets - increased costs of containers hurts exports
13U.S. Acreage of Annual Crops
- 2006 Corn 78,561,000
- Soybeans 75,565,000
- Wheat 57,344,000
- Other 44,539,000
- All 256,009,000
14Corn Acres Needed
- In order to maintain existing markets
- by 2011, we will need 14 million additional corn
acres at trend-line yields - Expected ethanol production of 10 to 11 billion
gallons
15Soybean Acres Needed
- If the majority of expansion uses soybean oil
- By 2011 we will need 4.5 million additional acres
of soybeans at trend-line yields - SBO has competition from corn oil, white or
yellow grease, other
16Biggest Boost for Biodiesel is the Federal Tax
Credit
- A per gallon write-off for biodiesel blenders
- 0.50 per gallon for fuel from recycled grease
- 1.00 per gallon for fuel from fresh vegetable
oil - Recycled grease is the preferred feedstock
because it is cheaper
17Impact on Soybeans (FAPRI)
- planted acreage decreases 3.3 million acres from
06/07 to 10/11 crop years - oil used for biodiesel doubles from 107 million
gallons to 216 million gallons - Soybean oil price increases 27 percent
- Soybean meal price decreases 8 percent
- farm price of beans increases 4 percent
18Ethanol Impact on Planted Acreage
- 2007 corn acres will come primarily from
soybeans. A substantial amount will also come
from cotton and some may come from fallow, flax
others. CRP could be a source of acres in
subsequent years.
Source Fapri Preliminary Baseline Nov '06
19Will ND/MN farmers change cropping plans for 2007?
- market prices
- rotations
- risk
- equipment
- rents
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22Ethanol Economics
- 60 crude oil 2.07 wholesale gasoline
- 2.07 gasoline 1.38 ethanol (.667 energy
value) - 1.38 ethanol plus 0.51 tax credit 1.89 per
gallon
23Ethanol Economics (contd)
- If DDGS are valued at 77.56/ton 0.66/bu of
corn - Plant operating costs 0.52/gal or 1.56/bu
- Plant capital costs 0.24/gal or 0.72/bu
24Ethanol Economics (contd)
25Ethanol Economics (contd)
26Long-Run Equilibrium Impact of 60 Oil 4.05
Corn
USDA 2005
Estimated Long-Run Equilibrium
Percent Change
Corn Price (/bu)
2.00
4.05
103
Corn Area (mil ac)
81.80
95.60
17
Soybean Price (/bu)
5.66
5.22
-8
Soybean Area (mil ac)
72.00
59.30
-18
Sbn Meal Price (/ton)
174.20
92.70
-47
Sbn Oil Price (/cwt)
23.41
32.50
39
Wheat Price (/bu)
3.42
4.60
35
Wheat Area (mil ac)
57.20
46.30
-19
Source Center for Ag and Rural Development, Iowa
State University, Paper 06-BP49, November 2006.
27Potential Crop Acreage Shift
- Corn Belt
- soybeans and winter wheat to corn
- CRP will come back into production
- Great Plains
- increase in corn and sorghum
- decrease in small grains
- increase in minor oilseeds
- little change in soybeans
- CRP will be reduced
28Ethanol and Biodiesel Represent New Demand
- increased demand leads to a higher price
- higher price leads to increased supply
- higher price leads to less quantity demanded and
a search for a substitute - cellulose feedstock for ethanol
29Biomass Potential from Crop Residue
- Corn Belt 98.9 m tons (corn stover)
- Great Plains 35.5 m tons (corn and soybean
stover, wheat, barley and oat straw) - West Coast 2.4 m tons (corn stover, wheat,
barley and oat straw) - Delta 4.6 m tons (rice straw)
- Southeast 3.6 m tons (sugarcane bi-product)
30Difficulties with Biomass
- bulky high transportation cost
- inconsistent quality characteristics
- contamination, impurities
31Ethanol Risks
- lower oil prices
- surplus of DDGS
- slowing of RFS momentum
- shortage of feed stock
- relatively long lag on construction
32Risk
- Who will blink when the next short corn crop
arrives? - Will exports drop off?
- Will livestock feeders buy less?
- Find substitutes
- Liquidate herds
- Will ethanol plants shut down?
- Will food processors back away from corn?
33Ethanol and Corn Prices Changing economics
/ gallon
Source Keith Collins, USDA
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38Summary
- A shift in the demand curve
- 3-5 per bushel trading range
- Likely to last 3-5 years
- Impact is far ranging
- Acreage reallocation
- Land value and rents
- Prices of inputs, both capital and supplies
- Livestock and poultry sector
- May be a close analogy to the mid 70s