Commodity Price Volatility in the Biofuel Era: An Examination of the Linkage between Energy and Agricultural Markets

51 Pages Posted: 28 Feb 2011 Last revised: 22 Jun 2023

See all articles by Thomas W. Hertel

Thomas W. Hertel

Purdue University - Center for Global Trade Analysis; Center for Robust Decisionmaking on Climate & Energy Policy (RDCEP)

Jayson Beckman

U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) - Economic Research Service (ERS)

Date Written: February 2011

Abstract

Agricultural and energy commodity prices have traditionally exhibited relatively low correlation. However, recent increases in biofuel production have altered the agriculture-energy relationship in a fundamental way. This increase has drawn on corn previously sold to other uses, as well as acreage devoted to other crops. The US RFS envisions a further boost of ethanol production to 15 billion gallons per year, which might be expected to further strengthen the linkages. We estimate that, in the presence of a binding RFS, the inherent volatility in the US coarse grains market will rise by about one-quarter. And the volatility of the US coarse grains price to supply side shocks in that market will rise by nearly one-half. Under a high oil price scenario, rather than the RFS binding, the binding constraint is likely to be the blend wall. With a binding blend wall, we see similar, although somewhat smaller, increases in market volatility. If both the RFS and the blend wall are on the verge of being binding, then our results suggest that US coarse grains price volatility in response to corn supply shocks would be 57% higher than in the non-binding case, and world price volatility would be boosted by 25%.

Suggested Citation

Hertel, Thomas W. and Beckman, Jayson, Commodity Price Volatility in the Biofuel Era: An Examination of the Linkage between Energy and Agricultural Markets (February 2011). NBER Working Paper No. w16824, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1770378

Thomas W. Hertel (Contact Author)

Purdue University - Center for Global Trade Analysis ( email )

Department of Agricultural Economics
1145 Krannert Building
West Lafayette, IN 47907-1145
United States
765-494-4199 (Phone)
765-494-9176 (Fax)

Center for Robust Decisionmaking on Climate & Energy Policy (RDCEP) ( email )

5735 S. Ellis Street
Chicago, IL 60637
United States

Jayson Beckman

U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) - Economic Research Service (ERS) ( email )

355 E Street, SW
Washington, DC 20024-3221
United States

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