Corn use for ethanol production could double this year from 2005 levels, sucking up nearly 32% of the corn crop, and high corn prices will signal at least an 8.5 million crop acreage shift to corn, according to the 2007 Briefing Book for Congress compiled by the Food & Agriculture Policy Research Institute (FAPRI) out of the University of Missouri. FAPRI's report was recently released in Washington, DC. Other message points include high crop prices mean higher net income for grain farmers while translating into higher feed costs cutting into the profits of livestock producers. The price of producing pork, FAPRI said, is expected to increase six cents a pound or 16% on higher feed costs driven by ethanol demand for corn. The FAPRI Briefing Book is available at http://www.fapri.org/.