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Non-Tech : Farming

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To: Snowshoe who wrote (1357)6/18/2008 8:14:43 PM
From: patron_anejo_por_favor  Read Replies (1) of 4448
 
The subsidy doesn't help Cosan, they produce sugar cane-based ethanol in Brazil and don't receive a penny of it. Quite the opposite, since it makes the competitive product (U.S. grown corn-based ethanol) cheaper. So elimination of the subsidy helps, how much of it needs to be eliminated to given Cosan a clear advantage is up to question.

If the "mandate" is rolled back, Cosan's ethanol would have to compete on it's own, but it's more than competitive since price of production of Brazilian sugar cane based ethanol is the lowest in the world. Even with a rollback, ethanol would be used as an additive (as it was before the mandates).



(See pp 82):

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