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Corn Farms Prosper, but Subsidies Still Flow

9/6/2007Iowa Falls, IowaA sign outside an Iowa Falls feed mall advertises the highest prices bid for corn in a decade.
9/6/2007Iowa Falls, IowaA sign outside an Iowa Falls feed mall advertises the highest prices bid for corn in a decade. (Dan Morgan - Twp - The Washington Post)
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The bank still holds a mortgage on his land, Handsaker notes.

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Ethanol prices have been tumbling recently as supply catches up with demand. Some ethanol companies, including Rastetter's, have put plans for new refineries on hold pending action by Congress to expand required use.

But such action faces stiff opposition from the livestock industry, which contends that the added demand for corn could mean higher feed and food costs. Environmental groups say it could jeopardize water supplies and sensitive lands in exchange for only minimal savings in the use of fossil fuels, given the amounts of gasoline and chemical fertilizer needed to raise corn.

Meanwhile, the prices of fertilizer, seed and land have been rising rapidly as landlords and corporations move to capture their share of higher grain prices. "As far as the bioeconomy, I don't think any of us thinks it's the golden egg," said April Hemmes, who owns 1,000 acres of prime farmland near Iowa City.

Morgan, a former Post reporter who specialized in agriculture, is a contract writer of the newspaper and a fellow with the German Marshall Fund, a nonpartisan public policy institution.

Database editor Sarah Cohen contributed to this report.


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