‘Phenomenal’ corn yields blunt ethanol’s impact on livestock feed

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A new report from the George Morris Centre acknowledges ethanol’s impact on the availability of corn for livestock is minimal – in the short term

Comments

The George Morris Centre's people, and I, are all economists - to an economist, "serendipity" means a temporary vacation from reality, while, apparently to a crop scientist like Dr. Daynard, "serendipity" appears to mean that the cornucopia theory works, at least for now.

To a banker looking at an application from a hog farmer wanting to build a new barn, both serendipity and cornucopia mean it's likely to be a bad loan.

More to the point, I'm not prepared to share Dr. Daynard's enthusiasm about ethanol in Ontario, unless and/or until he's prepared to put his money, lots of his money, into a hog barn.

Stephen Thompson, Clinton ON

Who owns and pays for the George Morris Centre?

According to their web-site, the George Morris Centre is a registered, not-for-profit, charitable organization, and in their words, still financially "fuelled" by the endowment of their founder.

Therefore, I guess they really can, and do, speak the often-unpalatable truth about issues of concern to agriculture - and so they should.

Stephen Thompson, Clinton ON

could somebody answer who owns the center?

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