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Corn Growers Making Headway in Alternative Energy

Corn Growers Making Headway in Alternative Energy. Ken McCauley National Corn Growers Association President October 2, 2006. Ken McCauley, NCGA President. Farms 3,500 acres corn & soybeans with his wife Mary and son Brad Leadership positions: NCGA Corn Board Member

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Corn Growers Making Headway in Alternative Energy

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  1. Corn Growers Making Headway in Alternative Energy Ken McCauley National Corn Growers Association President October 2, 2006

  2. Ken McCauley, NCGA President • Farms 3,500 acres corn & soybeans with his wife Mary and son Brad • Leadership positions: • NCGA Corn Board Member • NCGA Ethanol Committee vice chair • NCGA Research and Development Action Team • NCGA Finance Committee • Corn Board Liaison to the Biotechnology Working Group • Kansas Corn Commission

  3. About NCGA • Federation of grower associations and checkoff organizations in 26 states • Membership of nearly 33,000 dues-paying farmers • Represent nearly 300,000 farmers who contribute to state corn checkoff

  4. NCGA’s Mission “To Create and Increase Opportunities for Corn Growers”

  5. NCGA’sKey Priorities

  6. U.S. Ethanol Plants December 2002 In operation (66) 2.71 bgy Under construction (11) .48 bgy

  7. Ethanol Industry Production • 316,000 barrels per day (b/d) • 2006 production will likely exceed 5 billion gallons

  8. U.S. Ethanol Plants AS OF: June 2006 In operation (102) 4.75 bgy Construction (32) 2.03 bgy Proposed (127) 8.21 bgy

  9. Food and Fuel

  10. How Much Ethanol Can Come From Corn? • Increasing corn yields • Incremental acreage shifts • Demand for non-ethanol corn use is flat • DDGs will increasingly displace corn in feed rations • Improved ethanol efficiency

  11. Corn Growers are Producing Food AND Fuel • Steadily increasing demand for corn is being met with a steadily increasing supply • There is plenty of corn available for all uses • In addition to fuel, the ethanol process yields high-quality livestock feed and food products

  12. Corn Growers Are Producing Food and Fuel • Corn demand for ethanol has little or no impact on food prices • Larger supplies of corn will ensure continued availability of affordable corn • Increased production will allow corn growers to satisfy both domestic and export demand

  13. Ex: 80 m. ac. 188 bu./acre ~10% of gasoline mkt. ~5 billion bu. demand 9 Years for Infrastructure Development NCGA’s Vision Dozens of Yield-Acreage Combos get us there “15 x 15 x 15” • 15 billion bushel corn crop • 15 billion gallons of ethanol • …by 2015

  14. Summary: Lots of Things to Fear….. Bird Flu Hits Trailer Park……

  15. Running out of corn is not one of them……

  16. Making a Difference! Thank You! For more information visit www.ncga.com

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