|

BUY
FEED CORN:
THEY'RE ABOUT TO
STOP MAKING IT...
by F. William
Engdahl
July 25, 2007
That
bowl of Kellogg’s Cornflakes on the breakfast table, or the portion of
pasta or corn tortillas, cheese or meat on the table is going to rise in
price over the coming months as sure as the sun rises in the East.
Welcome ladies and gentlemen to the new world food price shock,
conveniently timed to accompany our current world oil price shock.
Curiously
it’s ominously similar in many respects to the early 1970’s when
prices for oil and food both exploded by several hundred percent in a
matter of months. That mid-1970’s price explosion led President Nixon
to ask his old pal, Arthur Burns, then Chairman of the Fed, to find a
way to alter the CPI inflation data to take attention away from the
rising prices. The result then was the now-commonplace publication of
the absurd “core inflation” CPI numbers--sans oil and food. Stephen
Roche was the young Fed economist who was assigned the statistical
manipulation job by Burns.
The
late American satirist, Mark Twain once quipped, “Buy land: They’ve
stopped making it…” Today we can say almost the same about corn or
all grains worldwide. The world is in the early months of the greatest
sustained rise in grain prices, for all major grains including maize,
wheat, rice that we have seen in three decades. Those three crops
constitute almost 90% of all grains cultivated in the world.
Washington’s
calculated, absurd plan
What’s
driving this extraordinary change? Here things get pretty interesting.
The Bush Administration is making a major public relations push to
convince the world it has turned into a “better steward of the
environment.” The problem is that many have fallen for the hype.
The
center of his program, announced in his January State of the Union
Address is called ’20 in 10’, cutting US gasoline use 20% by 2010.
The official reason is to “reduce dependency on imported oil,” as
well as cutting unwanted “greenhouse gas” emissions. That isn’t
the case, but it makes good PR. Repeat it often enough and maybe most
people will believe it. Maybe they won’t realize their taxpayer
subsidies to grow ethanol corn instead of feed corn are also driving the
price of their daily bread through the roof.
The
heart of the plan is a huge, taxpayer subsidized expansion of use of
bio-ethanol for transport fuel. The President’s plan requires
production of 35 billion gallons (about 133 billion liters) of ethanol a
year by 2017. Congress already mandated with the Energy Policy Act of
2005 that corn ethanol for fuel must rise from 4 billion gallons in 2006
to 7.5 billion in 2012. To make certain it will happen, farmers and big
agribusiness giants like ADM or David Rockefeller get generous taxpayer
subsidies to grow corn for fuel instead of food. Currently ethanol
producers get a subsidy in the US of 51 cents per gallon ethanol paid to
the blender, usually an oil company that blends it with gasoline for
sale.
As a
result of the beautiful US Government subsidies to produce bio-ethanol
fuels, and the new legislative mandate, the US refinery industry is
investing big time in building new special ethanol distilleries, similar
to oil refineries, except they produce ethanol fuel. The number
currently under construction exceeds the total number of oil refineries
built in the US over the past 25 years. When finished in the next 2-3
years the demand for corn and other grain to make ethanol for car fuel
will double from present levels.
Not
just USA bio-ethanol. In March Bush met with Brazil’s President to
sign a bilateral “Ethanol Pact” to cooperate in R&D of “next
generation” bio-fuel technologies like cellulosic ethanol from wood,
and joint cooperation in “stimulating” expansion of bio-fuels use in
developing countries, especially in Central America, and creating a
“bio-fuels OPEC-like” cartel market with rules that allows formation
of a Western Hemisphere ethanol market.
In
short, the use of farmland worldwide for bio-ethanol and other
bio-fuels—burning the food product rather than using it for human or
animal food—is being treated in Washington, Brazil and other major
centers, including the EU, as a major new growth industry.
Phony
green arguments
Bio-fuel—gasoline
or fuel produced from refining food products—is being hyped as a
solution to the controversial Global Warming problem. Leaving aside the
faked science and the political interests behind the sudden hype about
dangers of global warming, bio-fuels offer no net positive benefits over
oil even under best conditions. Its advocates claim that present first
generation bio-fuels “save up to 60% of carbon emission.” As well,
amid rising oil prices at $75 per barrel for Brent marker grades,
governments such as Brazil’s are frantic to substitute homegrown
bio-fuels for imported gasoline. In Brazil today 70% of all cars have
“flexi-fuel” engines able to switch from conventional gasoline to
100% bio-fuel or any mix. Bio-fuel production has become one of
Brazil’s major export industries as well.
The
green claims for bio-fuel as a friendly and better fuel than gasoline
are at best dubious, if not outright fraudulent. Depending on who runs
the tests, ethanol has little if any effect on exhaust-pipe emissions in
current car models. It has significant emission, however, of some toxins
including formaldehyde and acetaldehyde, a suspected neurotoxin which
has been banned as carcinogenic in California.
Ethanol
is not some benign substance as we are led to think from the industry
propaganda. It is highly corrosive to pipelines as well as to seals and
fuel systems of existing car or other gasoline engines. It requires
special new gas pumps. All that conversion costs money.
But
the killer-diller about ethanol is that it holds at least 30% less
energy per gallon than normal gasoline, translating into a loss in fuel
economy per gallon of at least 25% over gasoline for an Ethanol E-85%
blend. No advocate of the ethanol boondoggle addresses the huge social
cost which is beginning to hit the dining room tables across the US,
Europe and the rest of the world. Food prices are exploding as corn,
soybeans and all cereal grain prices are going through the roof because
of the astronomical—Congress-driven—demand for corn to burn for
bio-fuel.
This
year the Massachusetts Institute of Technology issued a report
concluding that using corn-based ethanol instead of gasoline will have
no impact on greenhouse gas emissions, and would even expand fossil fuel
use due to increased demand for fertilizer and irrigation to expand
acreage of ethanol crops. And according to MIT “natural gas
consumption is 66% of total corn ethanol production energy,” meaning
huge new strains on natural gas supply, pushing prices there
higher.
The
idea that the world can “grow” out of oil dependency with bio-fuels
is the PR hype being used to sell what is shaping up to be the mist
dangerous threat to the planet’s food supply since creation of
patented genetically manipulated corn and crops.
US
farms become bio-fuel factories
The
main reason US and world grain prices are soaring in the past two years
and now pre-programmed to continue rising at a major pace, is the
conversion of US farmland to become de facto bio-fuel factories. In 2006
US farmland devoted to bio-fuel crops increased by 48%. None of that
land was replaced for food crop cultivation. The tax subsidies make it
far too profitable to produce ethanol fuel.
Since
2001 the amount of maize used to produce bio-ethanol in the USA has
risen 300%, trend increasing going forward. In fact, in 2006 US maize or
corn crops for bio-fuel equaled the tonnage of corn used for export. In
2007 it is estimated it will exceed the corn for export by a hefty
amount. The US is the world’s leading corn exporter, most going for
animal feed to EU and other countries. The traditional USDA statistics
on acreage planted to corn is no longer a useful metric of food prices
as all marginal acreage is going for bio-fuel growing. The amount
available for animal and human feed is actually declining.
Brazil
and China are similarly switching from food to bio-fuels with large
swatches of land.
A
result of the bio-fuel revolution in agriculture is that world carryover
or reserve stocks of grains have been plunging for six of the past seven
years. Carryover reserve stocks of all grains fell at the end of 2006 to
57 days of consumption, the lowest level since 1972. Little wonder that
world grain prices rose 100% over the past 12 months. This is just the
start.
That
decline in grain reserves, the measure of food security in event of
drought or harvest failure—an increasingly common event in recent
years—is pre-programmed to continue going as far ahead as the eye can
see. Assuming modest world population increase annually of some 70
million people over the coming decade, especially in the Indian
subcontinent and Africa, the stagnation or even decline in the tonnages
of feed corn or other feed grains including rice that is harvested
annually as growing amounts of bio-ethanol and other bio-fuels displaces
food grain, in fact means we are just getting started on the greatest
transformation of global agriculture since the introduction of the
agribusiness revolution with fertilizers and mechanized farming after
World War II. The difference is that this revolution is at the expense
of food production. That preprograms exploding global grain prices,
increased poverty and malnutrition. And the effect on gasoline import
demand will be minimal.
Prof.
M.A. Altieri of Berkeley University estimates that dedicating all
USA corn and soybean production acreage to bio-fuels would only meet
12% of gasoline and 6% of diesel needs. He notes that though one-fifth
of last year’s corn harvest went to bio-ethanol, it met a mere 3% of
energy needs. But the farmland is converting at a record pace. In 2006
more than 50% of Iowa and South Dakota corn went to ethanol refineries.
Farmers across the Midwest, desperate for more income after years of
depressed corn prices, are abandoning traditional crop rotation to grow
exclusively soybeans or corn with dramatic added impact on soil erosion
and needs for added chemical pesticides. In the US some 41% of all
herbicides used are already applied to corn. Monsanto and other makers
of glyphosate herbicides like Roundup are clearly smiling on the way to
the bank.
Going
global with bio-fuels
The
Bush-Lula pact is just the start of a growing global rush to plant crops
for bio-fuel. Huge sugarcane, palm oil and soy plantations for bio-fuel
refining are taking over forests and grasslands in Brazil, Argentina,
Colombia, Ecuador and Paraguay. Soy cultivation has already caused the
deforestation of 21 million hectares in Brazil and 14 million ha in
Argentina, with no end in sight, as world grain prices continue to rise.
Soya is used for bio-diesel fuel.
China,
desperate for energy sources, is a major player in bio-fuel cultivation,
reducing food crop acreage there as well. In the EU most bio-diesel fuel
is produced using rapeseed plants, a popular animal feed. The result?
Meat prices around the globe are rising and set to continue rising as
far ahead as the eye can see. The EU has a target requiring minimum
bio-fuel content of 10%, a foolish demand that will set aside 18% of EU
farmland to cultivate crops to be burned as bio-fuel.
Big
oil is also driving the bio-fuels bandwagon. Prof. David Pimentel of
Cornell University and other scientists claim that net energy output
from bio-ethanol fuel is less
than the fossil fuel energy used to produce the ethanol. Measuring all
energy inputs to produce ethanol from production of nitrogen fertilizer
to energy needed to clean the considerable waste from bio-fuel
refineries, Pimintel’s research showed a net energy loss of 22% for
bio-fuel—they use more energy than they produce. That translates into
little threat to oil demand and huge profit for clever oil giants that
re-profile themselves as “green energy” producers.
So
it’s little wonder that ExxonMobil, Chevron and BP are all into
bio-fuels. This past May, BP announced the largest ever R&D grant to
a university, $500 million to the University of California-Berkeley to
fund BP-dictated R&D into alternative energy including bio-fuels.
Stanford’s Global Climate and Energy Program got $100 million from
ExxonMobil; University of California-Davis got $25 million from Chevron
for its Bio-energy Research Group. Princeton University’s Carbon
Mitigation Initiative takes $15 million from BP.
Lord
Browne, the disgraced former CEO of BP declared in 2006, “The world
needs new technologies to maintain adequate supplies of energy for the
future. We believe bioscience can bring immense benefits to the energy
sector.” The bio-fuel market is booming like few others today. This
all is a paradise for global agribusiness industrial companies like
Cargill, ADM and Monsanto, Syngenta.
All
this, combined with severe weather problems in China, Australia, Ukraine
and large parts of the EU growing areas this harvest season, guarantee
that grain prices are set to explode further in coming months and years.
Some are gleefully reporting the end of the era of “cheap food.”
With disappearing food security reserves and disappearing acreage going
to plant corn and grains for food, the bio-fuel transformation will
impact global food prices massively in coming years.
Another
agenda behind Ethanol?
Uh
Huh. The dramatic embrace of bio-fuels by the Bush Administration since
2005 has clearly been the global driver for soaring grain and food
prices in the past 18 months. The evidence suggests this is no accident
of sloppy legislative preparation. The US Government has been
researching and developing bio-fuels since the 1970’s. The bio-ethanol
architects did their homework we can be assured. It’s increasingly
clear that the same people who brought us oil price inflation are now
deliberately creating parallel food price inflation. We have had a rise
in average oil prices of some 300% since the end of 2000 when George W.
Bush and Dick Halliburton Cheney made oil the central preoccupation of
US foreign policy.
Last
year, as bio-ethanol production first became a major market factor, corn
prices rose by some 130% on the Chicago in 14 months. It was more than
known when Congress and the Bush Administration made their heavy push
for bio-ethanol in 2005 that world grain reserves had been declining at
alarming levels for several years at a time when global demand, driven
especially by growing wealth And increasing meat consumption in China,
was rising.
As a
result of the diversion of record acreages of US and Brazilian corn and
soybeans to bio-fuel production, food reserves are literally
disappearing. Global food security, according to FAO data, is at its
lowest since 1972. Curiously that was just the time that Henry Kissinger
and the Nixon Administration engineered, in cahoots with Cargill and ADM—the
major backers of the ethanol scam today—what was called The Great
Grain Robbery, sale of huge volumes of US grain to the Soviet Union in
exchange for sales of record volumes of Russian oil to the West. Both
oil and corn prices rose by 1975 some 300-400% as a result.
Today
a new element has replaced USSR grain demand and harvest shortfalls.
Bio-fuel demand, fed by US government subsidies is literally linking
food prices to oil prices. The scale of the subsidized bio-fuel
consumption has exploded so dramatically since the beginning of 2006
when the US Energy Policy Act of 2005 first began to impact crop
planting decisions, not only in the USA, that there is emerging a de
facto competition between people and cars for the same grains. Lester
Brown recently noted, “We’re looking at competition in the global
market between 800 million automobiles and the world’s two billion
poorest people for the same commodity, the same grains. We are now in a
new economic era where oil and food are interchangeable commodities
because we can convert grain, sugar cane, soybeans—anything—into
fuel for cars. In effect the price of oil is beginning to set the price
of food.”
In
the mid-1970’s Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, a protégé of the
Rockefeller family and of its institutions stated, “Control the oil
and you control entire nations; control the food and you control the
people.” The same cast of characters who brought the world the Iraq
war, the global scramble to control oil, who brought us patented
genetically manipulated seeds and now Terminator suicide seeds, and who
cry about the “problem of world over-population,” are now backing
conversion of global grain production to burn as fuel at a time of
declining global grain reserves. That alone should give pause for
thought. As the popular saying goes, “Just because you’re paranoid
doesn’t mean they aren’t out to get you.”

© 2007 F.
William Engdahl
Editorial Archive
F.
William Engdahl
is author of the book, ‘A Century of War: Anglo-American
Oil Politics and the New World Order,’ Pluto Press Ltd. He has a
soon-to-be published book on GMO titled, ‘Seeds of Destruction: The
Hidden Political Agenda Behind GMO’. He may be contacted through his
website, www.engdahl.oilgeopolitics.net.
CONTACT
INFORMATION
F. William Engdahl
Email
l Website
|