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1. Demand For Ethanol Prompts More Pa. Farms To Grow Corn
Sure, I think that there s not much question that corn prices are directly related to a new use for corn. Pennsylvania Agriculture Secretary Dennis Wolff says in prior years, the amount of corn produced per acre has been increasing while actual number of acres devoted to corn has been declining. In some cases, the extra Pennsylvania corn acreage will come from land that has been in reserve and not farmed for years, and in some cases, it ll mean fewer acres of other crops, a five percent...
Source

2. AGRIBUSINESS: Ethanol Fever Spurs Rush to Plant Corn
A cold April and early rains have slowed farmers in southern Minnesota, and especially in Iowa, the heart of the nation's corn crop, where farmers had just 14 percent of the crop in the ground by Sunday, compared with 58 percent in the ground by the same time last year, according to the U. Despite farmers' corn intentions, the weather has reminded everyone that nothing in farming comes easy. A cold April and early rains have slowed farmers in southern Minnesota, and especially in Iowa, the...
Source9 hours ago

3. Weather Critical to Meet Growing Demand for Corn
They say a bumper crop could hold prices steady while yielding enough corn to meet the needs for ethanol, livestock farmers and other food production. A drought, on the other hand, could squeeze the market and send corn prices spiraling. Corn prices that hovered around two-dollars a bushel for a decade have nearly doubled in the last year due to ethanol demand. Many farmers and analysts say corn prices likely won't dip below three-dollars per bushel this year due to ethanol demand. But...
Source

4. Corn Boom In The Cotton Belt From Ethanol Push
An expected corn planting rush to feed growing ethanol demand will likely spread from the Corn Belt to the land of cotton. Combined, the three states are expected to add 1.2 million acres of corn while trimming cotton production by more than a million acres. Billy Joe Ragland says high corn prices offer a chance to make a little money for a change on his long-time cotton farm in central Mississippi. But the sharpest increases are expected where cotton has been king for generations. The...
Source

5. Corn Concerns
They say a bumper crop could hold prices steady while yielding enough corn to meet the needs for ethanol, livestock farmers and other food production. A drought, on the other hand, could squeeze the market and send corn prices spiraling. Corn prices that hovered around two-dollars a bushel for a decade have nearly doubled in the last year due to ethanol demand. Analysts tell the Associated Press, the combination of ethanol and weather uncertainties will make for a volatile corn market this...
Source

6. Sweet corn isn't new, but improved taste is
Fresh ears direct from the corn patch are so much tastier and so much more appealing than corn prepared and served in any other way. If you've shopped for corn seed, it is easy to get confused by the initials on the packet or by the catalog description. In short, it is not your father's or your mother's sweet corn. If it is not possible to separate the corn by distance, stagger the planting date so that your corn tassels at least two weeks earlier or later than the other varieties. It is...
SourceDeseret News,UT

7. Wisconsin corn prices drop in March; soybeans hold steady
Those prices are still well above where they were at this time last year when corn was at $2. Department of Agriculture released its 2007 planting intention reports which indicated American farmers expected to plant 15 percent more acres of corn this year the largest area planted to corn since 1944. A pair of farm reports released Thursday indicated corn prices in Wisconsin dropped last month while farmers paid about 8 percent more than they did a year ago for products they need to keep...
Source5/4/2007

8. Growth of ethanol industry likely to boost competition for corn
However, the higher corn prices may be negative for some of the livestock producers that will have to bid for corn against ethanol plants and foreign exports. Generally, the growth of the ethanol industry likely will reduce the amount of corn available for exports or livestock feed. In a short crop year, the potential is for very strong corn prices as ethanol plants and other corn-dependent industries bid for limited stocks. The question for the industry is how many more acres will switch...
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9. USDA's report shows highest U.S. corn acreage since 1944
Soybean acreage is expected to be down 8.4 million acres, and spring wheat acreage is projected to decline by 1.1 million acres. This expected surge caused corn prices to be very high during the winter, which led producers to increase acreage to meet the growing demand, he said. Corn for ethanol production is expected to surge by at least 65 percent for the 2007 corn crop compared to last year's crop, Hurt said. Indiana producers were no exception, as corn acreage is expected to be up by...
Source

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