Ethanol fuels rural renaissance
There are already about 100 U.S. ethanol plants in operation, up from 50 in 1999, and 78 more are under construction, reports Dinneen. They range from Texas and California to New York and Florida. They use corn, sorghum, soybeans and other crops to produce ethanol. Development of practical cellulosic ethanol production plants (from switch grass, corn stalks, municipal solid waste and other sources) is underway. “I’ve had the privilege of going out to grand openings of several ethanol plants,” says Dinneen. “Standing in front of 1,000 farmers who have invested in these plants; the excitement is palpable.” These farmers benefit in three ways: They get profits from the ethanol sales, higher prices for crops and the acreage they own becomes more valuable. In Iowa, land prices have risen about 60 percent during the 2000’s, according to a report from Iowa State economist Mike Duffy. Compare that with Iowa single-family house prices, which have risen only about 4.5 percent a year over that period, according to the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight figures.
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