Brace for rough ride on ethanol
The dimensions of the ethanol industry’s economic woes are only beginning to become clear.
It’s not a pretty picture.
Nebraskans — especially farmers and communities tied to the success of a local plant — are facing months and possibly years of uncertainty.
Omaha investment banker Mark Lakers of Ag and Food Associates LLC predicted this week that the number of bankrupt ethanol plants — currently at 16, will jump to 40 by early next year.
Nebraska, which has 24 ethanol plants, ranks second in ethanol production.
“The plants developed in the last three to five years are most at risk,” Lakers said at a lending conference in Des Moines.
Latest in a series of negative developments was the announcement that Aventine Renewable Energy is suspending construction on an ethanol plant near Aurora.
Last month, VeraSun, the nation’s second-largest ethanol producer, filed for bankruptcy. The company operates plants at Ord and Albion. Advanced BioEnergy, which operates a plant at Fairmont, defaulted last month on a $10 million loan.
The industry has been buffeted by volatile, powerful forces, driving home the point of how closely the state is tied to the global economy.
One large factor was the spike this summer in corn prices. VeraSun locked into futures contracts on corn prices in July, near record highs. When prices fell, VeraSun lost an estimated $200 million. BioFuel Energy lost about $46 million in the same fashion.
Another big factor was the plunge in the price of ethanol, which is linked to the price of oil. In July, ethanol was selling for nearly $3 a gallon. Now it is selling for almost $1.50 a gallon.
The net result is that ethanol producers have been losing money for the past six months, Lakers said at the American Bankers Association.
Also putting the squeeze on the ethanol industry was the worldwide credit crunch. One reason Aventine shut down construction at its Aurora plant was to preserve its cash.
Fortunately for the communities who have a stake in the eventual rebound of the ethanol industry, political support for ethanol remains strong.
The government, which has provided $20 billion in subsidies to the industry over the past decade, has mandated that the nation use 15 billion gallons of renewable fuel annually by 2015, more than currently produced.
Best of all, President-elect Barack Obama is a long-time supporter of ethanol. Obama even supported boosting the renewable fuel mandate to 60 billion gallons by 2022.
As long as political support continues, there’s good reason to predict that the ethanol industry will eventually recover from its current travails. But over the next few months and years, consolidation and shakeout in the industry could be brutal.

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comforting wrote on November 19, 2008 6:14 am:
This week wrote on November 19, 2008 8:34 am:
From wrote on November 19, 2008 8:40 am:
Nelly wrote on November 19, 2008 9:13 am:
ted wrote on November 19, 2008 9:15 am:
Powered By Capitalism wrote on November 19, 2008 10:04 am:
reted wrote on November 19, 2008 10:42 am:
Ted in Omaha wrote on November 19, 2008 1:15 pm:
Ethanol cannot be transported via pipelines because of its corrosive properties. And this is good for cars because...? "
Kevin wrote on November 19, 2008 1:32 pm:
Sorry for the off subject rant. Blast away. "
Chris P. wrote on November 19, 2008 3:33 pm:
to Kevin wrote on November 19, 2008 3:50 pm:
Consider this... wrote on November 19, 2008 4:40 pm:
For another perspective I suggest the following Forbes article. Not only does it show one of the "conmen" at work, it does show that some plants are doing okay in this environment. Any industry that has gone through a massive growth spurt will thin the herd when the market starts to constrict. Companies that have done a poor job of managing risk are going to fail. It has little to do with the viability of ethanol itself. If you were to follow that logic then one would believe there is no future in cars or banking.
http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2008/1124/052.html "
amazing wrote on November 21, 2008 12:21 pm:
RE Ted from Omaha wrote on November 21, 2008 7:46 pm:
Douglas wrote on November 21, 2008 7:56 pm:
Not an expert like all of you wrote on December 3, 2008 1:14 am:
I wish this guy could explain to us the extra steps involved in converting the starch into sugar.
I know I don't have the vast knowledge that he has of the processes but here is how I see it.
Corn is delivered to the plants by trucks that can haul around 56,000 lbs of corn.
Sugarcane is also delivered by trucks, but due to the bulk of the cane only about 10,000 lbs can be hauled by 1 truck thats about 5.5 loads of cane per 1 load of corn. Can we figure that into the fossil fuel useage of corn vs cane. Those trucks don't run on ethanol.
Corn is sent through hammermills crushing it into a flour which exposes the starch.
Cane is wetmilled which means it is soaked in water to make a slurry sugarwater.
Both cane and corn stach have to be heated and have enzymes added to make the starch or sugar available for use by the yeast during fermentation. Most commonly used enzyme is alpha amylase which converts complex sugars or staches into dextrins.
During fermentation more enzymes are added which break the longer chain dextrins down into dextrose which can be converted into ethanol heat and co2.
After fermentaion the distilation processes are the same.
The difference between Brazils sucess with ethanol and ours is the fact that Brazil has a true free market trade system. Small producers sell their ethanol directly to the stations that are pumping it. While ethanol produced here is sold to a marketing company. the marketing company sells it to an oil company who blends it with gasoline. The oil company sells it to a storage facility. The storage facility sells it to a gas station. Then the gas station sells it to you. Everytime the product changes hands someone makes money which costs the end consumer. "