[Rhodes22-list] WHOA! Energy - Politics - Tequila

john Belanger jhnblngr at yahoo.com
Sun Jun 3 23:25:06 EDT 2007


at least the rum supply will be unaffected.....except possibly by an influx of deprived tequila drinkers switching over to rum!!

Brad Haslett <flybrad at gmail.com> wrote:  As most of you know, I'm dead against ethanol for a variety of valid
reasons. Apparently, no one gives a shit. This might just rally people to
my way of thinking. Brad

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Ethanol boom may fuel shortage of tequila Mexican farmers burning agave
fields and replanting them with corn
Reuters
Updated: 7:16 p.m. CT May 29, 2007

MEXICO CITY - Mexican farmers are setting ablaze fields of blue agave, the
cactus-like plant used to make the fiery spirit tequila, and resowing the
land with corn as soaring U.S. ethanol demand pushes up prices.

The switch to corn will contribute to an expected scarcity of agave in
coming years, with officials predicting that farmers will plant between 25
percent and 35 percent less agave this year to turn the land over to corn.

"Those growers are going after what pays best now," said Ismael Vicente
Ramirez, head of agriculture at Mexico's Tequila Regulatory Council.

The large, spiky-leaved agave thrives on high, arid land and can take eight
years to reach maturity. To remove the plants, growers cut them at their
stems and often burn the fields to remove the roots.

Tequila, drunk in shots and cocktails around the world, is named after a
town in the western Mexican state of Jalisco.

Production of agave, from the lily family, soared in recent years as farmers
cashed in on record prices brought about by a shortage of the plant at the
start of the decade.

Despite rapid growth in tequila drinking, especially overseas, the
over-supply of agave has driven prices for the plant to rock-bottom levels.

Many growers have started to abandon the crop in favor of corn, whose price
has rocketed in line with massive growth in U.S. demand for ethanol after
President Bush outlined targets last year to use the corn-based fuel as a
gasoline alternative.

Agave supply is also being hit this year by disease in the fields, partly
due to farmers caring less for the plants after prices dropped.

"The problem that we are going to see, perhaps by mid-2008, is that a lot of
agave is sick," Agriculture Ministry official Arnulfo del Toro said. "That
will have to be taken out and production is going to drop a lot."
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