|
by Bill Sweet
It’s not often the Wall Street Journal sings the praises of the
United Nations and global bureaucracies, but that’s just what it did
last week, in an editorial citing calls by organizations like the U.N.
Food and Agriculture Organization to put an end to the suspension of
corn ethanol subsidies.
“Remove provisions of current national policies that subsidize (or
mandate) biofuels production or consumption,” advised the FAO and 10
other international organizations, after the G20 advanced industrial
countries asked them to take a position in 2010.
What prompted the Journal’s article is, of course, the drought
that has been ravaging the U.S. corn crop and threatening soybean and
wheat harvests as well. U.S. livestock producers are lobbying the
Environmental Protection Agency to temporarily suspend the Renewable
Fuel Standard, as consumers fret over how much higher corn ethanol
prices are contributing to the summer run-up in gasoline prices.
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment