SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum
GLD 375.96-1.8%Nov 14 4:00 PM EST

 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext  
From: elmatador2/22/2007 9:17:26 PM
   of 217826
 
Forget about the Industrial Revolution. Lets talk Rural Revolution

Corn $2 a bushel for years before the ethanol boom $4.04 a bushel this week.

Latin corn farmers see gold in ethanol
Staff and agencies
22 February, 2007

By JULIE WATSON, Associated Press Writer Mon Feb 19, 4:37 PM ET

CIUDAD SERDAN, Mexico - Rogelio Zacaula plucks an ear of corn from his field with the pride of a prospector unearthing the gold that legend says is buried in the slopes surrounding the nearby Orizaba volcano.

"I have never seen prices like this," said Zacaula, 66, who has been growing corn since he was 10. "We suffered for so many years, years in which no one even wanted to buy our crop — until now."

Corn had languished around $2 a bushel for years before the ethanol boom caused prices to soar, reaching $4.04 a bushel this week. Corn prices should reach new highs over the next five years, according to Keith Collins, chief economist for the U.S. Department of Agriculture .

Collins predicts U.S. farmers will need to plant 90 million acres of corn by 2010 — nearly 10 million more than now — to meet demand of the rapidly growing U.S. ethanol industry. And that means world markets will need to turn to corn-producing regions such as Latin America to fill the gap if U.S. exports drop.

Brazil and Argentina, the Western Hemisphere‘s biggest corn exporters after the U.S., are expecting near-record harvests in 2007. Also in the top 10 is Mexico, corn‘s birthplace, and farmers here are rapidly boosting production.

Mexican farmers who now plant corn on 21 million acres are proposing expanding that by 4.3 million acres this year alone. They also want the government to fund the irrigation of another 1.9 million acres, said Carlos Salazar of the National Confederation of Mexican Corn Growers.

Mexican entrepreneurs now hope to transform the corn industry. While the biggest growers can sell directly to multinational firms, Salazar said his association is using the boon to find ways to guarantee local markets for medium and small size farms as well.

About 60 percent of Mexico‘s corn growers are subsistence farmers, producing just enough for their own consumption, and are not involved in the market. These farmers, who tend to grow on steep mountainsides that barely sustain their crops, are not likely to benefit from the boom in demand.

For Mexico‘s more than 3.1 million commercial corn farmers, it could not have come at a better time.

In the Pacific coast state of Sinaloa, Mexico‘s agricultural powerhouse, industrial-scale growers recently doubled the amount of acreage of corn, switching 617,750 acres of soybean and other crops. Sinaloa producers, who now have planted corn on 1.1 million acres, are also buying more land, Salazar said.

Growers hope the ethanol phenomenon will cushion what they feared would be a devastating blow with the full opening of borders to U.S. exports of corn and beans in 2008 under the North American Free Trade Agreement, or NAFTA.

Since 1994, Mexico‘s rural sector has lost an estimated 1.6 million jobs, prompting many farmers to seek work in the U.S.

But Zacaula says many of his fellow corn farmers are sticking around now while the money is good.

"They see that there are opportunities here," said Zacaula, a father of seven whose family cultivates 111 acres, and has managed to invest his profits into a concrete home, a pickup truck and a small herd of cattle.

In southern Puebla state, Zacaula belongs to a group of 6,000 farmers who have signed a contract with the government to sell their corn for a fixed price. In exchange, the farmers are guaranteed a market for their corn, given technical assistance, discounts on fertilizer and seed, and the use of tractors, combines and other equipment.

Puebla growers also recently invested in a $1.6 million machine to bag corn and send it directly to the tortilla mills, cutting out a need for a middleman in a move that also could lower local consumer prices.

President Felipe Calderon signed a similar accord Jan. 18 with business organizations to try to limit the price of tortillas to about 35 cents a pound after it shot up by 14 percent last year and sparked protests.

On a recent afternoon, children from the town practiced an Aztec dance on Zacaula‘s farm for the inauguration of the growers‘ new warehouse, paid for in part by the recent profits. Wearing headdresses of pheasant feathers, they kicked up dust as they spun near a towering mound of dried corn stalks, their brightly colored costumes covered in mirrors reflecting the sunlight.

"There is a lot to celebrate this year," Zacaula said.

By JULIE WATSON, Associated Press Writer Mon Feb 19, 4:37 PM ET

CIUDAD SERDAN, Mexico - Rogelio Zacaula plucks an ear of corn from his field with the pride of a prospector unearthing the gold that legend says is buried in the slopes surrounding the nearby Orizaba volcano.

"I have never seen prices like this," said Zacaula, 66, who has been growing corn since he was 10. "We suffered for so many years, years in which no one even wanted to buy our crop — until now."

Corn had languished around $2 a bushel for years before the ethanol boom caused prices to soar, reaching $4.04 a bushel this week. Corn prices should reach new highs over the next five years, according to Keith Collins, chief economist for the U.S. Department of Agriculture .

Collins predicts U.S. farmers will need to plant 90 million acres of corn by 2010 — nearly 10 million more than now — to meet demand of the rapidly growing U.S. ethanol industry. And that means world markets will need to turn to corn-producing regions such as Latin America to fill the gap if U.S. exports drop.

Brazil and Argentina, the Western Hemisphere‘s biggest corn exporters after the U.S., are expecting near-record harvests in 2007. Also in the top 10 is Mexico, corn‘s birthplace, and farmers here are rapidly boosting production.

Mexican farmers who now plant corn on 21 million acres are proposing expanding that by 4.3 million acres this year alone. They also want the government to fund the irrigation of another 1.9 million acres, said Carlos Salazar of the National Confederation of Mexican Corn Growers.

Mexican entrepreneurs now hope to transform the corn industry. While the biggest growers can sell directly to multinational firms, Salazar said his association is using the boon to find ways to guarantee local markets for medium and small size farms as well.

About 60 percent of Mexico‘s corn growers are subsistence farmers, producing just enough for their own consumption, and are not involved in the market. These farmers, who tend to grow on steep mountainsides that barely sustain their crops, are not likely to benefit from the boom in demand.

For Mexico‘s more than 3.1 million commercial corn farmers, it could not have come at a better time.

In the Pacific coast state of Sinaloa, Mexico‘s agricultural powerhouse, industrial-scale growers recently doubled the amount of acreage of corn, switching 617,750 acres of soybean and other crops. Sinaloa producers, who now have planted corn on 1.1 million acres, are also buying more land, Salazar said.

Growers hope the ethanol phenomenon will cushion what they feared would be a devastating blow with the full opening of borders to U.S. exports of corn and beans in 2008 under the North American Free Trade Agreement, or NAFTA.

Since 1994, Mexico‘s rural sector has lost an estimated 1.6 million jobs, prompting many farmers to seek work in the U.S.

But Zacaula says many of his fellow corn farmers are sticking around now while the money is good.

"They see that there are opportunities here," said Zacaula, a father of seven whose family cultivates 111 acres, and has managed to invest his profits into a concrete home, a pickup truck and a small herd of cattle.

In southern Puebla state, Zacaula belongs to a group of 6,000 farmers who have signed a contract with the government to sell their corn for a fixed price. In exchange, the farmers are guaranteed a market for their corn, given technical assistance, discounts on fertilizer and seed, and the use of tractors, combines and other equipment.

Puebla growers also recently invested in a $1.6 million machine to bag corn and send it directly to the tortilla mills, cutting out a need for a middleman in a move that also could lower local consumer prices.

President Felipe Calderon signed a similar accord Jan. 18 with business organizations to try to limit the price of tortillas to about 35 cents a pound after it shot up by 14 percent last year and sparked protests.

On a recent afternoon, children from the town practiced an Aztec dance on Zacaula‘s farm for the inauguration of the growers‘ new warehouse, paid for in part by the recent profits. Wearing headdresses of pheasant feathers, they kicked up dust as they spun near a towering mound of dried corn stalks, their brightly colored costumes covered in mirrors reflecting the sunlight.

"There is a lot to celebrate this year," Zacaula said.
Report TOU ViolationShare This Post
 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext