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Category Archives: firm

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Processed Food Grain Purchases for 2024 in Rural Illinois – Food Price Fun

Biomass Rules Posted on March 24, 2025 by Mark JennerMarch 24, 2025

Food Price Fun compares the theory of food prices to practices of buying food.  On the one hand the Bureau of Labor and Statistics (BLS) Consumer Price Index (CPI) food prices provide the benchmark for the macroeconomy of food.  But … Continue reading →

Posted in analytics, economics, firm, Food Price Fun, macro, science | Tagged 2024, branded, competition, Consumer Price Index (CPI), food price, food price fun, generic, macroeconomic, microeconomic, processed food grain purchases, processed food grain purchases for 2024 in rural Illinois, processed grain, remoteness, rural Illinois, rural prices, store brand, urban prices | Leave a reply

The Power of USDA Data in Market Transparency

Biomass Rules Posted on March 14, 2025 by Mark JennerMarch 14, 2025

This chart is from the USDA, Economic Research Service (ERS), USDA Agricultural Projections to 2034, released on 2/18/25.  The 2025 USDA Agricultural Outlook Forum occurred the following week, 2/27-28/25.  This series of events mark the end of the last US … Continue reading →

Posted in analytics, economics, firm, macro, policy, production, science | Tagged Agricultural Projections to 2034, Economic Research Service (ERS), ethanol, export, February 2025, feed and residual, forecast, forward looking, global agriculture, harvest, historical data, intentions, market transparency, planting, power of USDA data, progress, the power of USDA data in market transparency, US agriculture, USDA, USDA Ag Outlook Forum | Leave a reply

The Heartbreak of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza

Biomass Rules Posted on March 5, 2025 by Mark JennerMarch 5, 2025

Last Thursday and Friday, (2/27 & 2/28/2025), the USDA held their annual February, Agricultural Outlook Forum in DC.  This marks the start of another growing season.  The February date allows for last year’s crop year data to be tabulated and … Continue reading →

Posted in economics, farm, firm, macro, policy, production, science | Tagged Agricultural Outlook Forum, Chief Economist, declining flock size, declining hens mean increasing egg prices, demand, egg laying hens, heartbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza, HPAI, increase egg prices, Seth Meyer, sick chickens, supply, USDA | Leave a reply

Ethanol Production Optimizes Outputs – University of Illinois

Biomass Rules Posted on March 3, 2025 by Mark JennerMarch 3, 2025

On the eve of USDA’s Ag Outlook Forum, Scott Irwin posted his analysis, Trends in the Operational Efficiency of the U.S. Ethanol Industry: 2024 Update.  It looks at four simultaneous outputs: ethanol, DDGS, corn oil, and CO2, from dry-mill ethanol … Continue reading →

Posted in analytics, economics, firm, policy, production, science | Tagged byproducts, carbon dioxide, co-products, corn oil, DDGS, dry mill, economies of scale, economies of scope, efficiency, ethanol, ethanol production optimizes outputs, ethanol production optimizes outputs – University of Illinois, Grain Crushings and Co-Products report, products, University of Illinois, USDA, wastes, wet mill | Leave a reply

Local Resource Endowment Comparative Advantages – Secret Life of Rural Communities

Biomass Rules Posted on February 6, 2025 by Mark JennerFebruary 6, 2025

When the benefits of an activity are difficult to put a dollar value on, or monetize, the traditional cost curves don’t tell the whole story.  Total costs are the sum of all the variable costs and fixed costs.  Undervalued community … Continue reading →

Posted in economics, firm, macro, science, Secret Life of Rural Communities, wealth creation | Tagged community assets, comparative advantage, cultural capital, empowering theory, if a tree falls, implicit benefits, implicit costs, junior livestock sale, local resource endowment, local resource endowment comparative advantages in the secret life of rural communities, lower fixed costs, lower total costs, lower variable costs, political capital, secret life of rural communities, social capital, thrift shop, volunteer army | Leave a reply

Making Sen$e of the Calculus of Food Price Increases

Biomass Rules Posted on January 30, 2025 by Mark JennerJanuary 30, 2025

Food price inflation is still in the news. Eggs have become a national security issue. Well, one would think so from the news. Mostly, the egg-laying chickens are sick and dying. But once we get beyond this egg-industry crisis, we … Continue reading →

Posted in analytics, economics, firm, macro, Real Adventures in Economics, science | Tagged American Farm Bureau Federation (AFBF), calculus, Consumer Price Index (CPI), egg price increases, first derivative, food inflation, food price increases, food prices, like zooming in on an elephant, low supply of eggs, magnification of price change, making sense of the calculus of food price increases, second derivative, Thanksgiving Meal Survey | Leave a reply

A Century of Lessons in US Soybean Production – Real Adventures in Economics

Biomass Rules Posted on January 24, 2025 by Mark JennerJanuary 24, 2025

One hundred and one years ago, USDA began counting the production of soybeans on US farms.  This is not because that is when farmers began harvesting soybeans for grain.  No.  This is when the quantity of soybean production was sufficient … Continue reading →

Posted in analytics, economics, firm, macro, policy, Real Adventures in Economics, science | Tagged 1924, 2024, a century of lessons in US soybean production - real adventures in economics, century of lessons, consumer choice, demand, macroeconomic policy, microeconomic technology, production is increasing, real adventures in economics, soybean growth like biofuel industry growth., supply, US soybean production | Leave a reply

Lab-Cultured Food has Arrived for Farm and Factory

Biomass Rules Posted on January 13, 2025 by Mark JennerJanuary 14, 2025

Fifteen years ago, I mentioned to my brilliant director at University of California, Davis, California Biomass Collaborative, that I thought we were heading to a future where we could produce milk and meat without animals, through cellular regeneration.  We had … Continue reading →

Posted in definition, economics, farm, firm, macro, policy | Tagged Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPR), cellular agriculture, Economic Research Service (ERS), Economics of Cellular Agriculture, factory, farm, fermentation, food, Food and Drug Administration (FDA), food safety, Food Safety Inspection Service (FSIS), global investment $5 billion dollars, lab-cultured, lab-cultured food has arrived for farm and factory, public transparency, regulatory oversight, USDA | Leave a reply

Farm Size, Asset Management, and Area Under Glass

Biomass Rules Posted on January 7, 2025 by Mark JennerJanuary 7, 2025

US Farm size is difficult to label in a quantitative way.  When a measure is easy to derive, it is not very relevant.  While moving toward unpacking cellular agriculture in the next few posts, there are formative steps to cover … Continue reading →

Posted in definition, economics, farm, firm, policy | Tagged area under glass, asset management, cellular, cellulose conversion, farm size, floriculture and bedding, food and animal feed, food crops, fuel and energy, hemp, microbial, mushrooms, nitrogen fixation, nursery crops, propagative materials, sod, soil microbes, transformation, waste treatment and utilization | Leave a reply

Food Price Inflation is Small Relative to Production and Manufacturing

Biomass Rules Posted on December 5, 2024 by Mark JennerDecember 5, 2024

If this chart looks familiar, it is because this is the food price inflation chart used in the post, ‘Food Prices are Not Driving 2024 Inflation – Real Adventures in Economics.  The difference is the scale of the vertical axis.  … Continue reading →

Posted in economics, firm, macro, policy | Tagged commodity-dependent, farm bill, farmers do not set prices, fluctuation, food price inflation, food price inflation is small relative to production and manufacturing, innovation, manufacturing, price volatility, Producer Price Index (PPI), production, relatively small, tariffs, volatility inverse to value | 1 Reply

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Mark Jenner, PhD
Biomass Rules
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Mission Statement:
Providing solutions through the strategic utilization of all kinds of biomass; the development of new markets for food, fiber, and fuels; and streamlining regulations.

bio·mass:
ˈbī-ō-ˌmas. noun. 1 : the unit area or volume of living matter, 2 : plant materials and animal waste used as renewable feedstocks into new processes.

rules:
'rül. 1: noun. 1 : regulations, bylaws or governing procedure, 2: verb. a : to exert control, direction, or influence on, b : to declare authoritatively.

Manure…
is not a four-letter word.

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