Corn ethanol production, food exports, and indirect land use change

T.J. Wallington, J.E. Anderson, S.A. Mueller, E. Kolinski Morris, S.L. Winkler, J.M. Ginder, Ole John Nielsen

33 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The approximately 100 million tonne per year increase in the use of corn to produce ethanol in the U.S. over the past 10 years, and projections of greater future use, have raised concerns that reduced exports of corn (and other agricultural products) and higher commodity prices would lead to land-use changes and, consequently, negative environmental impacts in other countries. The concerns have been driven by agricultural and trade models, which project that large-scale corn ethanol production leads to substantial decreases in food exports, increases in food prices, and greater deforestation globally. Over the past decade, the increased use of corn for ethanol has been largely matched by the increased corn harvest attributable mainly to increased yields. U.S. exports of corn, wheat, soybeans, pork, chicken, and beef either increased or remained unchanged. Exports of distillers' dry grains (DDG, a coproduct of ethanol production and a valuable animal feed) increased by more than an order of magnitude to 9 million tonnes in 2010. Increased biofuel production may lead to intensification (higher yields) and extensification (more land) of agricultural activities. Intensification and extensification have opposite impacts on land use change. We highlight the lack of information concerning the magnitude of intensification effects and the associated large uncertainties in assessments of the indirect land use change associated with corn ethanol.

Original languageEnglish
JournalEnvironmental Science & Technology (Washington)
Volume46
Issue number11
Pages (from-to)6379-6384
Number of pages6
ISSN0013-936X
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5 Jun 2012

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