U.S. coalition to fight American biofuel subsidies
Oil companies, meat and dairy groups and nutrition advocates are likely to form a coalition to oppose higher renewable-fuel mandates and tax breaks for alternative energy in the farm bill, said Charles Stenholm, a lobbyist and former House Agriculture Committee member.
Stenholm said the coalition would support research, particularly on cellulosic ethanol, but in other aspects of alternative energy urge Congress to "be careful about the way the government subsidizes it" and "let the market be the determinant as much as is humanly possible."
If indeed the market were to be allowed to work in a genuine and truly global way, the developing world would get a major boost, because it can produce biofuels much more competitively than U.S. farmers. In this sense, we hope the American anti-subsidy coalition succeeds in its mission (as far as tax breaks are concerned). A recent report by the Global Subsidies Initiative showed that uncompetitive and energy inefficient biofuels ("lobby fuels") made in the U.S. receive billions in subsidies via hundreds of schemes, without which they would never survive (earlier post). The subsidies have created a market for ethanol and biodiesel in the U.S. - mission accomplished. But it is now time to abandon them and allow more efficient and competitive producers in.
U.S. agricultural subsidies have a global effect, and were the cause of the collapse of the World Trade Organisation's Doha Round, last year. Trade specialists however see the development of a global biofuels industry as an opportunity to revive the talks and close a deal on Doha. If biofuels create a viable global market for farmers, then the need for subsidies would disappear and the dispute could be partly resolved (earlier post).
But things will not be that easy. There are signs that the U.S. administration will pump even more billions worth of subsidies into the sector.
Stenholm, who is a senior government affairs adviser at a large law firm, said he has been hired by the American Petroleum Institute to protect its interests in the renewable-energy debate and that his clients also include the International Dairy Foods Association, the National Pork Producers Council and the Livestock Marketing Association:
ethanol :: biodiesel :: biomass :: bioenergy :: biofuels :: energy :: sustainability :: subsidies :: corn :: developing world :: WTO :: Doha :: bioenergy trade ::
Oil companies have long argued that government intervention favorable to renewable fuels is unfair. Stenholm said meat and dairy groups are concerned that increased use of corn for ethanol is leading to higher feed prices while nutrition advocates are concerned that food prices may rise, making it harder for poor people to afford food. As a veteran of farm bill debates in Congress, Stenholm said, "Until you get the nutrition community behind your overall (bill), you can't pass it."
Agriculture Department Chief Economist Keith Collins said at a Farm Bureau session Sunday that the use of ethanol has so far not increased food costs because producers and processors have made their decisions based on past years' supply and demand, but that the demand for corn for ethanol could increase food costs in future years.
Stenholm said he believes the basic commodity programs that subsidize crops such as wheat and cotton will be reauthorized. The high prices for corn, soybeans and wheat, Stenholm said, means the Congressional Budget Office will project that subsidies for those commodities won't be high.
He said Congress does need to deal with a World Trade Organization ruling that a farm bill provision banning the planting of fruits and vegetables on land that receives subsidies means that that a direct payment program that the United States has classified as non-trade distorting is trade-distorting.
But he added, "I'd be surprised there's any real opposition (in the commodity title) that can't be compromised into a winning position. ...You know the ingenuity of the agriculture committee."
Stenholm represented the 17th District of Texas until the Republican-controlled Legislature reconfigured the boundaries of the district. He lost a race for re-election in 2004.
Stenholm said the coalition would support research, particularly on cellulosic ethanol, but in other aspects of alternative energy urge Congress to "be careful about the way the government subsidizes it" and "let the market be the determinant as much as is humanly possible."
If indeed the market were to be allowed to work in a genuine and truly global way, the developing world would get a major boost, because it can produce biofuels much more competitively than U.S. farmers. In this sense, we hope the American anti-subsidy coalition succeeds in its mission (as far as tax breaks are concerned). A recent report by the Global Subsidies Initiative showed that uncompetitive and energy inefficient biofuels ("lobby fuels") made in the U.S. receive billions in subsidies via hundreds of schemes, without which they would never survive (earlier post). The subsidies have created a market for ethanol and biodiesel in the U.S. - mission accomplished. But it is now time to abandon them and allow more efficient and competitive producers in.
U.S. agricultural subsidies have a global effect, and were the cause of the collapse of the World Trade Organisation's Doha Round, last year. Trade specialists however see the development of a global biofuels industry as an opportunity to revive the talks and close a deal on Doha. If biofuels create a viable global market for farmers, then the need for subsidies would disappear and the dispute could be partly resolved (earlier post).
But things will not be that easy. There are signs that the U.S. administration will pump even more billions worth of subsidies into the sector.
Stenholm, who is a senior government affairs adviser at a large law firm, said he has been hired by the American Petroleum Institute to protect its interests in the renewable-energy debate and that his clients also include the International Dairy Foods Association, the National Pork Producers Council and the Livestock Marketing Association:
ethanol :: biodiesel :: biomass :: bioenergy :: biofuels :: energy :: sustainability :: subsidies :: corn :: developing world :: WTO :: Doha :: bioenergy trade ::
Oil companies have long argued that government intervention favorable to renewable fuels is unfair. Stenholm said meat and dairy groups are concerned that increased use of corn for ethanol is leading to higher feed prices while nutrition advocates are concerned that food prices may rise, making it harder for poor people to afford food. As a veteran of farm bill debates in Congress, Stenholm said, "Until you get the nutrition community behind your overall (bill), you can't pass it."
Agriculture Department Chief Economist Keith Collins said at a Farm Bureau session Sunday that the use of ethanol has so far not increased food costs because producers and processors have made their decisions based on past years' supply and demand, but that the demand for corn for ethanol could increase food costs in future years.
Stenholm said he believes the basic commodity programs that subsidize crops such as wheat and cotton will be reauthorized. The high prices for corn, soybeans and wheat, Stenholm said, means the Congressional Budget Office will project that subsidies for those commodities won't be high.
He said Congress does need to deal with a World Trade Organization ruling that a farm bill provision banning the planting of fruits and vegetables on land that receives subsidies means that that a direct payment program that the United States has classified as non-trade distorting is trade-distorting.
But he added, "I'd be surprised there's any real opposition (in the commodity title) that can't be compromised into a winning position. ...You know the ingenuity of the agriculture committee."
Stenholm represented the 17th District of Texas until the Republican-controlled Legislature reconfigured the boundaries of the district. He lost a race for re-election in 2004.
1 Comments:
Thank you, Biopact Team, for this interesting article. Please note that the link to the Capital Press article requires a subscription to view it. Any additional details on this initiative that you can provide would therefore be appreciated.
The rest of your article helpfully underlines the important distinction between (1) a WTO deal on agriculture that legitimizes the current, highly distorting subsidies to domestic production of ethanol and biodiesel, and (2) one that makes a significant dent in all barriers to trade in agricultural products (primary commodities AND value-adding products), including trade-distorting subsidies. Given the decisions policy makers are still taking in respect of biofuels (for example, the recent action by the U.S. Congress to extend by another 15 months the $0.54/gallon secondary duty on imported ethanol), all indications are that the agricultural lobby and their political allies in the North have little interest in opening their countries' doors to biofuels from the South, and therefore have in mind the first scenario.
When they say, "If biofuels create a viable global market for farmers, then the need for subsidies would disappear and the [WTO] dispute [over farm subsidies] could be partly resolved", what they mean is "If subsidized domestic production of biofuels creates a viable market for our farmers, then the need for direct farm subsidies would disappear, and the WTO dispute over farm subsidies could be partly resolved." Even then, crop farmers (in the USA, at least) are not offering to give up the insurance provided by price-support programmes, and are only providing soothing assurances that they probably will not need to avail themselves of these programmes as often as in the past. Replacing crop subsidies with open-ended subsidies for biofuels made by the same crops, while keeping trade-distorting commodity programmes on the books, is hardly a satisfactory "solution" to the Doha Round.
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