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East Central Indiana Agriculture Economic Development Summit

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Anaerobic digestion to make electricity (Fair Oaks, IN) Gasification to make electricity or methane (NC State) Bio-Town USA, Reynolds, IN ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: East Central Indiana Agriculture Economic Development Summit


1
East Central Indiana Agriculture Economic
Development Summit
  • Opportunities for Indiana Agriculture
  • December 7, 2005

2
Agenda
  • Vision for Indiana Agriculture
  • Indianas Strategic Plan for Agriculture
  • Key Strategic Initiatives
  • Bioenergy
  • Livestock Expansion
  • Diversification

3
AgricultureIn the Midst of a Revolution
  • Agriculture in the next ten years will
  • Become larger and smaller
  • Larger operationstraditional commodities
  • Smaller operationshigher profit, diversified
    operations
  • Transform issues into opportunities
  • Animal waste becomes power and odorless
    fertilizer
  • Conservation programs continue to improve
    environmental impact
  • Management practices technology will drive
    coexistence with non-farm neighbors
  • Indiana has a great chance of leading this
    revolution

4
Indiana Agriculture and Livestock Vision
  • To become the global leader in food and
    agricultural innovation and commercialization

5
Indianas Strategic Plan for Agriculture
  • To be the global leader in food and agriculture
    innovation and commercialization by

6
3 Prong Plan for GrowthOn all Strategies
7
Bioenergy is attractive because
  • Reduces reliance on foreign sources of energy
  • Produces a productive use for ag by-products
  • Example Animal waste turns to electricity
    through anaerobic digestion
  • Indiana has many natural advantages
  • Example Close to major demand Eastern
    Seaboard
  • Could make rural communities energy independent
  • Example BioTown, Reynolds, IN
  • May be cheaper
  • Example E85 sells for 0.30-0.50 below
    traditional gasoline

8
Overview of State Initiatives
  • Production
  • Ethanol, biodiesel, other forms
  • Promotion, usage and sale
  • Bio-Town, education, E85 program
  • Innovation
  • Research, development
  • Legislation
  • Production credits, usage incentives

9
Production
  • January 2005 Indiana had one ethanol facility
  • Today, we have
  • 18 new ones in process 6 of those already
    announced
  • 4 biodiesel plants in process 2 announced
  • Working closely with large farms to test
  • Anaerobic digestion to make electricity (Fair
    Oaks, IN)
  • Gasification to make electricity or methane (NC
    State)

10
Bio-Town USA, Reynolds, IN
11
Education and Usage
  • Governor and Lt. Governor modeling success
  • RV1 runs on biodiesel LGs Tahoe runs on E85
  • Working with Industry Partners (e.g. Soybean
    Board)
  • General consumer education
  • Unique programs
  • Kicking off expanded E85 Program in October
  • Only 12 pumps in the state today (Minnesota has
    170)
  • 1.1MM grant from US DOE
  • Will pay for E85 pumps around the state

12
Expanding LivestockA Key Opportunity
  • Livestock has a large impact on the economy
  • Direct investment and a 2-4x wage multiplier
  • Meat consumption continues to grow
  • US demand growingPork 3-4, Poultry 4-5
  • Pork fastest growing US ag export (1990 was 1.6
    of US production, now 8.6)
  • Lost market share in the last 10 years
  • ?20 reduction in hog inventory

13
Expanding LivestockA Key Opportunity
  • Infrastructure and processing capacity
  • Can reach 67 of US population in 24 hours
  • Most pork and poultry processors are expanding
    and bringing more animals in from out-of-state

14
Grow Production
  • Conducting economic study for optimal growth
  • Initial phase complete
  • Phase 2 done by 12/31
  • Identifying Indiana and out-of-state producers
    wanting to grow
  • Mostly large operations (2,000)
  • Working with processors on expansion plans
  • IPC Increasing capacity by 33 (Delphi)
  • IBP (Logansport)
  • Swift (Jeffersonville/Louisville)

15
Advance New Technology
  • Odor Reduction Task Force
  • EPA determining what, if any, emission regulation
    is required
  • Summarizing key drivers of odor and existing
    technologies (no silver bullet)
  • Technologies showing most promise are
  • Anaerobic digestion
  • Improved management practices
  • Task force immediate goals
  • Identify 2-3 technologies meriting further tests
  • Use States Livestock Promotion Funds to pay for
    test costs

16
Make Policy Recommendations
  • Long term commitmentpromote policy which
  • Fosters growth
  • Makes regulations streamlined and science-based
  • In 2006, we develop and test two new voluntary
    programs (for potential 2007 Session)
  • Certified Livestock Producer Programhigher
    standards with a reward
  • Livestock Friendly Area Designationaligning
    local interest with growth

17
Diversified FarmingNew Opportunities
  • Commodity agriculture increasingly concentrated
  • 3 of Indiana farms produce 68 of the outputand
    growing
  • Diversification is key to profitability for
    smaller farms
  • Organic natural (200 cows sustainable income)
  • Fruit vegetable (tomatoes increased profit
    vs. corn)
  • Contract growing (contract hogs 30K reliable
    income)
  • Ag Tourism (corn maze significant profit source)

18
DiversificationGo Forward Plan
  • Identify the Faces of Indiana Farming
  • Research complete by 1/2006
  • Sets the stages for targeted plans
  • Dedicated Diversification Project Manager
  • Develop transitional tools
  • Test concepts in 2006
  • Potential Legislation in 2007
  • Economic rewards for profitable diversification
  • Indiana Food Ag Venture Fund

19
Indiana AgriculturePossibilities Unbound
  • Agriculture is the foundation of Indianas
    economy
  • Agricultures transformation Big opportunities
    for IN
  • Agriculture A driver of rural Indianas
    come-back
  • Growth and leadership will come from
  • Expanding processing and production
  • New technology
  • Pro-agriculture legislation and governance
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