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Agriculture, energy more closely linked

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by Staff Writers
West Lafayette, Ind. (UPI) Feb 21, 2008
U.S. scientists said the recent boom in ethanol production from corn has tightly linked the agriculture and energy sectors in unprecedented fashion.

"We are living through a revolution in American agriculture," said Purdue University Professor Wally Tyner, who noted the prices of corn and crude oil, which prior to 2007 fluctuated nearly independently, have become more closely linked due to the use of massive quantities of corn to make ethanol.

Tyner said one of the most dramatic aspects of the ethanol "revolution" is a ballooning percentage of corn crops being made into ethanol, which prior to 2004 had been lower than 10 percent. Now, for the first time, ethanol has replaced exports to become the second largest use of the grain behind that of domestic animal feed, Tyner said.

Tyner's paper, co-written by Purdue researcher Farzad Taheripour, was presented last week in Boston during the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

The paper -- available at http://www.agecon.purdue.edu/papers/ -- is to be published in the Review of Agricultural Economics.

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Global Biopact On Biofuels Can Bring Benefits To Both Rich And Poor Nations
Sydney, Australia (SPX) Feb 21, 2008
A GLOBAL Biofuels Biopact between rich and poor countries can help alleviate poverty in the developing world while helping to solve the problems of global warming and energy security in the developed world, says a new paper in the journal Biofuels, Bioproducts and Biorefining published by SCI and John Wiley and Sons.







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