According to the WSJ in a fascinating article from October 5th, 2007, small beer brewers are getting squeezed by dramatically higher prices of barley and hops.
Consumers could pay 50 cents to $1 per six pack more in the coming months for many small-batch "craft beers," as brewers pass on rising hops and barley costs from an unpalatable brew of poor harvests, the weak dollar and farmers' shift to more profitable crops. Other makers of craft beers, the fastest-growing segment of the U.S. brewing industry, say they may eat the higher ingredient costs, which will pare their profits.The price of malting barley has increased by a whopping 75% in the last several months, from around $4/bushel to about $7/bushel. As a result, the price of small-batch beer is expected to increase, and some small beer makers are actually in danger of folding.
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Craft beer makers have faced escalating costs over the past year. Prices for malting barley, which accounts for a beer's color and sweetness, have jumped as farmers increasingly shifted to planting corn, which has been bringing higher prices because of high demand from makers of biofuels, like ethanol. The weak dollar also has made it more expensive for U.S. brewers to buy commodities from Europe.
Wouldn't it be better to allow importation of Brazilian sugar beet based ethanol, tariff free, and leave more of our agricultural capacity for the tasty stuff?
5 comments:
Whoa there sparky, import ethanol from out side of the US? What are you thinking?!
Why the moguls at AMD* might not be able to afford the newest, gold plated Bugatti if we don't have government mandates for US sourced, corn based, ethanol.
How can you be so full of right wing hate? You should be happy to pay more for beer, Tostitos, Doritos and everything else corn based in order to support energy independence.
Besides, the Brazilians are a bunch of Papists!
* That's Archer Midland Daniels, the ag monster, not the chip maker.
I thought it was ADM (Archer Daniels Midland?)
Otherwise, excellent work!
Aren't there alternatives to corn that we wouldn't have to import in the long run? I agree that importing South American Sugar Beat Ethanol makes sense short term, but I had read and posted on the fact that there are alternate sources for Ethanol, that can be produced in the United States, without corn. Corn based Ethanol, is just another form of farm subsidy welfare. What are your thoughts??
Don't cornfuse me!
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