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Category Archives: firm

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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

Hidden Benefits of Declining Hog Pastures

Biomass Rules Posted on November 12, 2024 by Mark JennerDecember 30, 2024

The United States is losing farmland but productivity and output continue to increase.  Last week, the loss of 11 million acres of pastureland to cropland was explored.  That blog also examined the over emphasized claims on cattle as an environmental … Continue reading →

Posted in economics, farm, firm, policy | Tagged declining hog pastures, Dust Bowl, Farm Services Agency (FSA), hidden benefits, hidden benefits of declining hog pastures, hogs per acre, increased animal welfare, increased density, increased hog production, indoor hogs, Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS), reduced emissions, reduced erosion, USDA | Leave a reply

Community Wealth Creation Reflects Both Micro and Macroeconomics

Biomass Rules Posted on July 11, 2024 by Mark JennerJuly 11, 2024

All of the ‘local market’ references in the Greenville, Illinois Independence Day post have evolved from guiding farmers and agribusinesses for decades on moving bulky, undervalued manure and biomass residues.  The farther they travel, the less reusable value they have.  … Continue reading →

Posted in economics, firm, macro, wealth creation | Tagged community, community wealth creation reflects both micro and macroeconomics, cultural capital, cultural values, financial capital, human capital, intellectual capital, local influence, macroeconomics, microeconomics, monetize, natural capital, physical capital, political capital, rural, social capital, volunteer hours, wealth creation | Leave a reply

Utility-Scale Solar and Wind Development in Rural Areas: Land Cover Change (2009–20)

Biomass Rules Posted on June 26, 2024 by Mark JennerJune 26, 2024

Karen Maguire, Sophia J. Tanner, Justin B. Winikoff, and Ryan Williams USDA, Economic Research Service, May 2024 The following findings were reported in this interesting report. This study examines land cover surrounding rural solar and wind installation sites from 2009–20. … Continue reading →

Posted in economics, firm, policy | Tagged change, cropland, development, energy, footprint, installation, land cover, land in farms, pastureland, rural areas, solar, utility-scale, utility-scale solar and wind development in rural areas land cover change 2009–2020, wind | Leave a reply

The Price of Food Dominates Alternative Use Markets

Biomass Rules Posted on June 11, 2024 by Mark JennerJanuary 14, 2025

This chart was created in 2011 to illustrate the US. price of fuel relative to the US. price of food.  The debate back in those days was whether to produce food or fuel (food vs. fuel).  It was the politics … Continue reading →

Posted in economics, firm, macro | Tagged alternative use, drought and floods, energy, feed, food price, food vs. fuel, fuel, livestock, markets, Patrick Westhoff, price of food dominates alternative use markets, soybean meal, soybean oil, substitution, The Economics of Food, waste, wealth effect | Leave a reply

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Mark Jenner, PhD
Biomass Rules
Greenville, IL 62246
c. 618.223.9331
e. biomassrules@gmail.com

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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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