Page 32—Corn Talk, Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 14, 2000 Ethanol Supporters Urge Passage Of Reformulated Fuels Act NCGA and the Renewable Fuels Association recently urged President Clinton and his administration to support passage of the Federal Refor mulated Fuels Act (S. 2962) before the conclusion of the 106th Congress. The bill, which was ap proved Sept. 7 by the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, would ban MTBE in four years and create a national program re quiring the use of renewable fuels. In a Sept. 19 letter to Clin ton, NCGA President Lynn Jensen and RFA President Eric Vaughn wrote, “There has never been a more press ing need to promote the in creased value-added production of domestic, re newable fuel ethanol. They noted that the Clean Alternative Fuels Program proposed in S. 2962 would generate jobs, increase farm income, reduce farm pro gram expenditures, and reduce U.S. dependence on imported oil. It’s time to turn up the heat and tell Congress to pass renewable fuels legislation this year. Visit NCGA’s home page (www.ncga.com) nutrient usability available. When applied in-furrow, 9 or in a transplant solution you have the ability to achieve greater fertilizer efficiency with lower rates equaling greater profits. 9-18-9 5-15-15 Contact PARS, Inc. Elizabethtown, PA 800-929-2676 or 717-367-5272 Quality liquid fertilizer since 1954! www.Nutra-Flo.com ORN BITS for more information on how you can help. Corn Checkoff Dollars Launch Fiber Research Project The NCGA and Archer Daniel Midland (ADM) on Sept. IS announced the be ginning of a new two-year re search project partnership that is expected to expand corn markets. The goal of the research is to create a commercial manu facturing process that con verts corn fiber or bran into higher valued products. These would include chemi cal feedstocks such as ethy lene glycol and propylene glycol for antifreeze, and fuels such as ethanol. Corn fiber or bran is an abundant by-product of the wet milling industry and is used as low-priced feed. The project won’t provide a quick-fix to the current low prices corn growers are facing because of the nation’s 10 billion-bushel corn crop. But it is another example of how NCGA has been using grower checkoff dollars to fund research that creates higher valued products from corn. Producing the higher valued products will grind more corn, and reducing the supply of corn ultimately im- proves prices. Growers will benefit from the entire project and leverage their in vestment of checkoff dollars 10-to-l. In the $2.5 million project, NCGA, as the project mana ger, will contribute $250,000 in staff management and ADM will provide about $600,000 in researcher time and other resources. DOE has awarded a $1.7 million grant for the research. Bat telle Pacific Northwest Na tional Laboratory of Richland, Wash., is a subcon tractor for the project. This is another milestone on the road to biobased in dustries and new markets for renewable resources. DOE’s Vision for the Agricultural Industry of the Future pro gram has a goal of having re newable resources provide 10 percent of the consumer chemical feedstock market by 2020. The $1.7 million DOE grant is part of DOE’s Bioproducts and Bioenergy Technology program, a new effort that develops opportu nities in bioproducts, biopower and biofuels. NCGA Welcomes EPA Report Showing No Risk To Butterflies From Bt Corn The NCGA welcomed a report recently by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) that refutes claims about biotech’s al leged impact on Monarch butterflies. Blake can help* Blake can help with all your vegetable seed needs. He has years of experience in the vegetable seed industry. He is constantly evaluating new varieties to increase your yields and boost your profits. You can trust Blake to help you plan variety programs that meet your needs. Call him today! Put his knowledge to work for you. miLi nwg PENNSYLVANIA MASTER CORN GROWERS ASSOC., INC. In August, research by two lowa State University ento mologists suggested that Ba cillus thuringiensis (Bt) corn pollen might have an adverse impact on Monarch butterfly populations. However, the EPA said that tests per formed on Bt corn, cotton, and potato crops confirm the agency’s original findings that there are “no unreason able adverse effects from these products.” “Overall, the available in formation indicated a very low probability of risks to Monarchs in areas beyond the near-edge of cornfields,” the EPA noted. The agency concludes that the published preliminary Monarch toxicity information is not sufficient to cause undue concern of widespread risks to Monarch butterflies. ‘Know Where to Go’ With Biotech Grain Recently, Genetic ID an nounced it had detected Cry9C in Taco Bell taco shells. Cry9C, or Star Link, a biotech protein developed by Aventis Corp., has not re ceived approval for food use in the U.S. or abroad. NCGA is skeptical about the report for several reasons: less than one-half of one per cent of total 2000 U.S. corn acreage is planted to biotech corn containing Cry9C, and NCGA questions the validity of Genetic ID’s findings, largely because of its own skepticism of biotechnology, the antibiotech stand of the group that ordered the test ing, and its past record of drawing conclusions about the presence of genetically modified materials that were later proven inaccurate. Regardless of the alleged findings, NCGA is stepping up its “Know Where To Go” campaign for harvested biotech corn, reminding all participants in the food pro duction chain to take special care in handling hybrids con tain Star Link and any corn grown within 660 feet of it. According to the licensing agreement, grain from Star- Link hybrids is to be directed into domestic feed and non food industrial markets. Likewise, this grain is not ap proved for export sale, and must be kept out of these markets.