Estimating the substitution of distillers’ grains for corn and soybean meal in the U.S. feed complex

Hoffman, LA; Baker, A

HERO ID

10318569

Reference Type

Technical Report

Year

2011

Language

English

HERO ID 10318569
Year 2011
Title Estimating the substitution of distillers’ grains for corn and soybean meal in the U.S. feed complex
Authors Hoffman, LA; Baker, A
Publisher Text USDA Economic Research Service
City Washington, DC
Abstract Corn-based dry-mill ethanol production and that of its coproducts—notably distillers’ dried grains with solubles (DDGS)—has surged in the past several years. The U.S. feed industry has focused on the size of this new feed source and its impact on the U.S. feed market, particularly the degree that DDGS substitute for corn and soybean meal in livestock/poultry diets and reduce ethanol’s impact on the feed market. This study develops a method to estimate the potential use of U.S. DDGS and its substitutability for corn and soybean meal in U.S. feed rations. Findings demonstrate that, in aggregate (including major types of livestock/poultry), metric ton of DDGS can replace, on average, 1.22 metric tons of feed consisting of corn and soybean meal in the United States. Over time, DDGS may substitute for less corn and more soybean meal as the share of beef cattle consumption of DDGS declines slightly (although increasing in absolute terms), with offsetting share increases in dairy cattle, swine, and poultry. Feed market impacts of increased corn use for ethanol are smaller than that indicated by the total amount of corn used for ethanol production because of DDGS.
Report Number FDS-11-I-01
Url https://www.ers.usda.gov/webdocs/outlooks/36471/12563_fds11i01_2_.pdf?v=6754.7
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English