End to ethanol could stave off grain crisis
By Lucy Hornby
BEIJING (Reuters) - Halting production of ethanol from grains would help ease global grains shortages in the short-term, the founder of the Earth Policy Institute think tank said on Tuesday.
Ethanol, a fuel made from corn, accounts for a 20 million ton increase in the amount of grains consumed each year, far outpacing growth of about 2 million tonnes a year on average in demand from China, Lester Brown told reporters in Beijing.
Brown also called for higher water prices to encourage efficient water use and stave off a looming shortage caused by retreating glaciers and depleted aquifers.
"Growth in demand for ethanol in the United States exceeds growth for all purposes from the rest of the world," Brown said.
"One short-term solution is to end ethanol production."
To reduce reliance on imported crude oil, the U.S. government mandates the use of 9 billion gallons of ethanol in motor gasoline this year. But critics say growing corn for ethanol increases the use of water and petroleum for fertilizer and farming, without significantly reducing fuel demand overall.
A 'counter-lobby' of agricultural feed consumers and taxpayers is developing against the ethanol lobby, said Brown, who advocates radical cuts in carbon emissions by 2020 to avert global warming and a widespread food crisis in failing states.
"We're seeing internal politics develop in a way we haven't before. This is not your mother's food shortage." Continued...


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