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Category Archives: analytics

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Mining the 2022, Census of Agriculture – What the Function

Biomass Rules Posted on September 5, 2024 by Mark JennerSeptember 5, 2024

The first federal census of agriculture was conducted in 1840.  It has been conducted for 184 years.  The oldest hardcopy of the US Census of Agriculture in the Biomass Rules collection is from 1982.  We have been reading and analyzing … Continue reading →

Posted in analytics, economics, science, What the Function | Tagged 2022 Census of Agriculture, categories, data mining, Excel, IF(), IFNA(), ISBLANK(), LEN, mining the 2022 Census of Agriculture - what the function, nested functions, numeric values, RIGHT(), text string, TEXTBEFORE(), TRIM(), USDA, what the function | Leave a reply

Long-Run Illinois Land Values – What the Function?

Biomass Rules Posted on August 16, 2024 by Mark JennerAugust 16, 2024

Ok. This is certainly overkill, but I can’t stop sharing. There was a lot of interest in the last post, Midwest Land Prices Only Increase in the LONG View.  But it gets EVEN cooler. Two of the lines in this … Continue reading →

Posted in analytics, economics, science | Tagged ag economic, exponential trend, functional forms, Illinois, intercept, interest, land values, long-run, long-run Illinois land values - what the function, magic, models, slope, time value of money, what the function | Leave a reply

Midwest Land Prices Only Increase in the LONG View

Biomass Rules Posted on August 12, 2024 by Mark JennerAugust 16, 2024

Ten years ago, while working for University of Missouri – Extension, I had the privilege of joining a curriculum development team on estate and farm transfers.  We developed the idea of a case, or at least believable story, to go … Continue reading →

Posted in analytics, economics, science | Tagged appreciation, depreciation, exponential growth, Illinois, inflation, inflation-adjusted, land, land in farms, long view, Midwest land prices, Midwest land prices only increase in the long view, Missouri, NASS, National Ag Statistics Service, only increase, USDA | Leave a reply

Two Data Points Do Not a Trendline Make

Biomass Rules Posted on July 22, 2024 by Mark JennerJuly 22, 2024

Economic information these days, influenced by election-year passions, spawned economic claims that do not represent actual underlying economic trends.  This post looks at the compelling nature of authentic data that does not have any meaningful forecasting value. Biomass Rules is … Continue reading →

Posted in analytics, economics, policy, science | Tagged $/MMBTU., authentic analyses, biofuel, commodities, demand, economy, feedstocks, fossil, fuels, inflation, not a trendline, perfect competition, retail prices, supply, two data points, two data points do not a trendline make | Leave a reply

Morphing Waste to Revenue – Breaking Free of Old Views

Biomass Rules Posted on July 1, 2024 by Mark JennerJuly 1, 2024

Once again, strolling back to the future, this matrix of biomass products was created 20 years ago.  It still relevant and ties together the preceding themes nicely on a different level. Outputs are dependent on the inputs, or, y = … Continue reading →

Posted in analytics, economics, science | Tagged breaking free, byproducts, inputs, morphing waste, morphing waste to revenue - breaking free of old views, multiple markets, old views, outputs, products, revenue, services, system of equations, Technology, y=f(x) | Leave a reply

Demand for Corn Stocks to Use – Real Adventures in Economics

Biomass Rules Posted on March 27, 2024 by Mark JennerApril 30, 2024

Most economic demand today manifests itself in report charts and news as a change over time. But traditional economic supply and demand curves do not have time in them (price x quantity). Demand drives any economy, but it doesn’t look … Continue reading →

Posted in analytics, science | Tagged after corn ethanol, before corn ethanol, corn stocks to use, demand, demand for corn stocks to use - real adventures in economics, elastic, grain merchandizing, inelastic, Kansas State University, price, real adventures in economics, reduced substitutes, supply and demand, University of Illinois | Leave a reply

Local, the Uneasy Substitute to Global

Biomass Rules Posted on March 25, 2024 by Mark JennerApril 25, 2024

As a quantitatively trained, free-market economist, I had been shaped to believe buying ‘local’ was a preference that was not cost-effective. But as I grew into a manure visionary and biomass systems economist, bulky and wet materials of limited value … Continue reading →

Posted in analytics, Biomass Rules, science | Tagged bioenergy, bulky, change, competitor, export, externality, global, import, livestock, local, local food, local the uneasy substitute to global, low-value, manure, opportunity cost, supply chain, systems, uneasy substitute, Word Bank | Leave a reply

Adding Value to Benefits, Not Readily Monetizable

Biomass Rules Posted on March 25, 2024 by Mark JennerApril 25, 2024

What? This is what biomass systems economists do. We add value to goods and services in value attributes that go beyond having a price in dollars. Most of my economist colleagues are brilliant price analysts. I am a manure visionary … Continue reading →

Posted in analytics, science | Tagged adding value, adding value to benefits, adding value to benefits not readily monetizable, asset, attributes of value, benefits, biomass systems, difficult-to-monetize, energy, greenhouse gas, life cycle, model, non-price economist, not monetizable, offset, performance metrics, water, welfare | Leave a reply

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Recent Posts

  • Cultivating Fuel on Farms and the Growth of the US Farm Digester Industry
  • Just a Kid in a ‘Biogenic Methane’ Candy Store
  • Lessons of Living Shared with Simpson University Macroeconomic Students
  • Eight Percent of US Farms Are Associated with Renewable Energy
  • 2022 Census of Agriculture Farm Typology Volume 2 Has Arrived

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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