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Lucrative land: increased Demand For Farmland Drives Up Prices In Jefferson County

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2013 But as the price of commodity crops has climbed steeply, so has the demand for tillable farmland here. Land prices have doubled over the past five years as the area has evolved into a mecca for out-of-state farmers. Amish farmers have moved from Ohio and Pennsylvania to start farms here, while farmers from states across the Northeast and Midwest have scooped up the once inexpensive farmland to grow cash crops. Tillable farmland in the southern half of the county sold for $1,000 to $1,500 per acre five years ago, farmers say, but now goes for $2,000 to $3,000 per acre. In the county’s northern half, farmland that sold for less than $500 per acre is now priced at more than $1,000. Thanks to recent land purchases, the 950-cow dairy farm now owns about two-thirds of its 2,900 acres of tillable farmland; it leases the rest. About 1,600 acres of corn silage and 1,300 acres of hay will be harvested this fall. In February, Butterville Farms joined Robbins Family Grain, Sackets Harbor, and Hillcrest Farms, Ellisburg, to buy 2,600 acres of prime farmland in the towns of Watertown and Hounsfield for $4 million from a Connecticut landowner. In that deal, Butterville acquired 400 acres of tillable farmland off Route 3 in the town of Watertown. That price was considered expensive at the time, Mr. Barney said, but the land “has now at least doubled in value. We’d now get $4,000 per acre for that land.” “Here, everything we harvest goes through our cows,” he said. “As far as corn goes, it’s better that we harvest from our own land, because it’s now cheaper to grow than it is to buy. And if you wait to buy land, you can’t get any. We’d like prices to go back down to where they were, but I don’t think that’s going to happen.” Because of that trend, cash-crop farmers have purchased marginal farmland with heavier clay in the northern half of the county during the past five years for low prices, Mr. Hunter said. Soil on farms north of the Black River tends to drain water less efficiently, which results in lower harvest yields. While buying marginal farmland for cash crops is unusual, he said, farmers are raking in profits by doing so. As a result, Mr. Hunter said, farms that were leasing land at low prices have sometimes been bought out by cash-crop farmers who are willing to pay more. That is also a recent trend. OUT-OF-STATE TRANSPLANTS Despite climbing prices, tillable farmland here still is much less expensive than in other states, Sackets Harbor dairy farmer Ronald C. Robbins said. Ten years ago, he said, Jefferson County launched marketing initiatives to lure farmers from outside the region to take over farmland here. But those efforts have been scaled back, he said, because the influx of farmers from outside the region is competing with local dairy farms to buy land, driving up prices. He said cash-crop farmers have relocated operations to the north country from Kentucky, Nebraska, Iowa and Canada. Amish farmers have relocated here from Ohio and Pennsylvania. Tight competition for farmland has spurred large dairy farms such as Robbins Family Grain, which has 950 cows, to acquire farmland while they still can, Mr. Robbins said. After acquiring 950 acres of tillable farmland in the $4 million, three-partner sale in February, the farm plans to harvest 2,600 acres of corn for grain and silage, 2,200 acres of hay and 900 acres of soybeans this fall. A 280-stall dairy barn was built recently at the Sackets Harbor farm off County Road 145, which will enable it to expand its herd to more than 1,100 head of cattle over the next two years. Some small- to medium-size dairy farms, though, find it challenging to expand because of the farmland’s high prices, said Arthur F. Baderman, agricultural educator at Jefferson County’s extension office. “Some of these small farms don’t have anyone in the family to take over and are tired of milking cows,” he said. “They’re looking to either rent or sell land at high prices to larger farms so they can keep living in houses they’ve always lived in. They want to wipe the slate clean and have money for retirement.” Over that period, “there have been about six boom times where land values have increased at a rapid rate. But then we’ve hit times where land prices have gone from a positive to negative trend,” he said. “These cycles happen, and you can’t expect what’s going on in the last five years to be the trend in the next five, or further on out. Steep money and high commodity prices encourage people to buy land and expand, but that will change if we go back to low commodity prices in a year and interest rates go up.” “We were generally buying land here for 500 to 600 bucks a year ago, but now it’s over $1,000,” he said. “I think prices are going to go up 10 percent a year for a long time, because everybody is driving up the prices, and you have guys who are doing strictly crop farming.” Continue reading

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Novozymes Sticks to Sales Goal as China Slows

By Bloomberg News – Sep 6, 2013 (Corrects to say sugarcane-bagasse plants in fifth paragraph of story originally published Sept. 5) Novozymes A/S (NZYMB) , the largest maker of industrial enzymes, expects to achieve a target to sell its output to more than 15 cellulosic-ethanol plants by 2017 even as markets in the U.S. and China slow. “That will happen, so I’m not so concerned,” Peder Holk Nielsen, chief executive officer of the Bagsvaerd, Denmark-based company, said in an interview in Beijing. Novozymes, which hasn’t said how many cellulosic-ethanol plants it already sells to, seeks to add clients as governments study using more biofuel to replace gasoline. Its expansion in Brazil , where use of sugarcane biogas is growing, was given a boost with its 2012 acquisition of a stake in Beta Renewables SpA , which uses Novozymes products to break down non-food crops or waste and turn them into the sugary liquids used in biofuels. Beta Renewables has sold a technology license to Brazil for production of biofuels that use agricultural waste as feedstock, Nielsen said yesterday. The CEO expects more sugarcane-bagasse plants to open in the Latin American country, the world’s top sugar producer, around 2015. Residue from sugarcane processing “already sits in the backyard of ethanol plants, so it’s very available and makes it easiest for the Brazilians to go for it.” Biofuels growth has eased in North America and China as economic expansion ebbs. The U.S. corn-ethanol market shrank last year after overproduction caused a glut and corn prices soared, and will recover slowly, Nielsen said. China doesn’t yet offer subsidies to blend cellulosic ethanol into gasoline, curbing demand. Expansion Slows “Back in 2008, Chinese companies had very aggressive plans, so did American companies, and everything got delayed because of the crisis at least outside China and a lack of political commitment to do it,” Nielsen said. Beta Renewables has a cellulosic-ethanol demonstration plant in Crescentino, Italy , that started in the first half and will produce as many as 20 million gallons a year. Producers of biomass use the facility to process their material and can buy enzymes — the catalysts needed for conversion — from Novozymes, Nielsen said. “There’s a long line of partners waiting to get in. We’re working to get the plant running at full speed continuously,” he said. He expects the site to operate at maximum capacity this year. Novozyme’s bioenergy division accounted for 15 percent of sales in the first half. The household-care unit contributed the biggest share at 35 percent. To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Feifei Shen in Beijing at fshen11@bloomberg.net To contact the editor responsible for this story: Reed Landberg at landberg@bloomberg.net Continue reading

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Biofuel Blunder

Lobbying trumped science as politicians lavished more than $100-billion in subsidies on morally suspect energy Canada is not alone in doling out large sums of public money for biofuels. Globally, in 2011 Canada, the United States, the European Union, China, India, Brazil and Australia, to name the major players, spent more than $40-billion on biofuel subsidies in the name of energy security, green house gas reductions and regional economic development.  Since 2005 more than $100-billion worldwide has been allocated to biofuel programs with very little, if any, net improvement in reducing green house gas emissions. China has had to abandon its goals for corn ethanol production in the face of food shortages and the need to import vast quantities of corn. In the U.S., after years to transferring hundreds of millions of tax dollars to corn growers and the ethanol industry, it is now generally recognized that biofuels are not the answer to energy security. The process of fracking the oil fields of the mid-west has taken its place, even though many of the biofuel support programs are still in place. Substituting ethanol and biodiesel fuel for fossil fuels in vehicles has had little if any impact on reducing green house gases. Independent research using life cycle analysis has revealed that, at best, ethanol and most biodiesel fuel create about the same carbon footprint as gasoline. Even in those circumstances where there is a small improvement in green house gas reduction, the cost to reduce green house gas, in carbon dioxide equivalents, is hundreds of dollars per ton. In addition, there is growing concern, supported by detailed independent research, that ethanol and biodiesel production impose long term costs on forest sequestering, land use and the quality of water. The most devastating impact of opening the “corn for fuel” envelope has been the rise in food prices and food products that utilize corn as an input. The poorest in the world have suffered more than any other group. Not only has the demand for corn for ethanol increased food prices, but the increased cost has limited the amount of food aid that the United States can make available to the lowest income areas of the world. Writers have questioned the morality of polices that deliberately impoverish less developed countries. If the present global policies to support biofuels continue, the cumulative social cost that takes into consideration all the effects of subsidies and regulated production in the next decade could be close to half a trillion dollars. Such waste cannot be justified on any reasonable grounds. Most of the public subsidies for biofuels are bad policies but governments find it difficult to admit errors in judgment, decision and execution. The energy challenges of the 21 st century will not be met with simple solutions. They will require sensible choices by governments that can place the long term public interest ahead of short term political gain. Continue reading

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