New fuel altering dynamics of corn market – Market Watch

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Published: March 7, 2002

Booming ethanol production in the United States is changing long

established fundamentals of the corn market.

The price of U.S. corn is expected to rise a little in the new crop

year, despite factors that normally depress prices.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture forecasts corn seeded area will

climb to 78.5 million acres, up 3.6 percent.

USDA expects total production to reach 9.86 billion bushels, up from

9.51 billion last year.

Domestic feed use is expected to be down by 100,000 bu. to 5.75 billion

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A wheat head in a ripe wheat field west of Marcelin, Saskatchewan, on August 27, 2022.

USDA’s August corn yield estimates are bearish

The yield estimates for wheat and soybeans were neutral to bullish, but these were largely a sideshow when compared with corn.

due to reduced demand from the smaller beef cattle herd.

But the USDA is not down on prices. With lower carry-in stocks, the

total amount available is expected to be about the same.

The other factor is increased use of corn in ethanol production.

USDA expects food, seed and industrial use will climb 10 percent to

2.25 billion bu.

Uses in sweeteners, cereals and beverages should edge up, but corn used

in ethanol production is expected to jump by 30 percent to 890 million

bu.

One reason is the 2002 $150 million US Bioenergy Program that pays

incentives to ethanol producers.

More importantly, California has a deadline of Dec. 31 to eliminate

methyl tertiary butyle ether or MTBE from its gasoline. MTBE adds

oxygen to fuel to make it burn cleaner, but it has been found to leak

from underground storage tanks and contaminate wells.

Replacing MTBE with ethanol, another oxidant, would require so much

ethanol there is a debate in California over whether ethanol makers can

produce enough and get it to the state in time.

New York state is planning to ban MBTE in 2004.

Forthcoming federal legislation might boost ethanol even more.

The bill, The Energy Policy Act of 2002, has the potential to triple

renewable fuel use in the U.S. to five billion gallons US by 2012.

New technologies creating ethanol from biomass such as straw and wood

chips are just around the corner and might capture a significant part

of this growing ethanol market.

But a lot will come from corn, which will increase demand and support

prices, with estimates of $2.50-$2.60 US per bu. by the end of the

decade.

Given that barley prices are strongly influenced by corn, this could

have implications for Canadian farmers and feedlots.

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