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Meeting renewable-fuel targets will require more corn acreage, use more fertilizer, create more runoff and reduce returns to livestock producers, according to a new USDA report. <br /> <br /> The report, titled “Ethanol and a Changing Agricultural Landscape outlines how the Energy Independence and Security Act (EISA) of 2007 established specific targets for the production of biofuel in the United States.<br /> <br /> Until advanced technologies become commercially viable, meeting these targets will increase demand for traditional agricultural commodities used to produce ethanol, resulting in land-use, production, and price changes throughout the farm sector. This report summarizes the estimated effects of meeting the EISA targets for 2015 on regional agricultural production and the environment. Meeting EISA targets for ethanol production is estimated to expand U.S. cropped acreage by nearly 5 million acres by 2015, an increase of 1.6 percent over what would otherwise be expected. Much of the growth comes from corn acreage, which increases by 3.5 percent over baseline projections. Water quality and soil carbon will also be affected, in some cases by greater percentages than suggested by changes in the amount of cropped land. The economic and environmental implications of displacing a portion of corn ethanol production with ethanol produced from crop residues are also estimated.<br /> <br /> Land for new biofuel feedstock production comes from two main sources: acreage not currently in production and acreage shifted from other crops. The amount of additional land and displaced crops associated with increased biofuel production differs by region. If the RFS targets are met, total cropland is projected to increase by 1.6 percent over baseline conditions by 2015, with corn acreage expanding by 3.5 percent and accounting for most of the cropland increase. While corn acreage expands in every region, traditional corn-growing areas would likely see the largest increases—up 8.6 percent in the Northern Plains, 1.7 percent in the Corn Belt, and 2.8 percent in Lake States. Prices are expected to increase slightly for most crops compared with the baseline, although the price increase could be reduced if corn yields increase at a faster rate than expected.<br /> <br /> Corn is a heavy user of nitrogen fertilizer. Given the RFS targets, the resulting increase in fertilizer use and shift from corn-soybean rotations to continuous corn production leads to deterioration of key environmental performance measures. Nitrogen losses to surface water and groundwater increase by 1.7 and 2.8 percent, respectively, while soil runoff increases by 1.6 percent from the baseline. Differences in geography, soil type, and prevailing agricultural production activities lead to considerable variation in environmental effects among regions.<br /> <br /> The increases in leaching to groundwater are greatest in the Lake States and Southeast, while increases in runoff to surface water are greatest in the Corn Belt and Northern Plains.<br /> <br /> As energy feedstocks that are also used as animal feed move more toward biofuel use, higher costs of animal feed reduce returns to animal production. Production of livestock declines slightly by 2015 relative to the baseline—0.6 percent for farm-fed cattle and 0.5 percent for poultry—which may result in reduced manure nutrient runoff and leaching in some areas.<br /> <br /> Technical advances in biofuel production may soon allow other plant material to be used as energy feedstock. One of the most readily available sources of “cellulosic” feedstock is crop residues. Increased use of residue could reduce demand for corn, reducing requirements for most agricultural inputs. But replacing corn-based ethanol with biofuel created from crop residues could have mixed results on environmental quality. Removal of large amounts of crop residues requires replacement of nutrients through increased application of fertilizer and increases runoff and soil erosion.<br /> <br /> Replacing 3 billion gallons of corn ethanol with crop residue ethanol could increase nitrogen runoff and leaching in the Corn Belt, although reduced corn plantings in other regions cause these measures to decline in much of the United States.<br /> <br /> Copyright 2009Vance Publishing Corp. All rights reserved.<br />
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