Thursday, November 5, 2009

Farm Groups Push Biodiesel Tax Incentive

WASHINGTON-(Farm Progress)--The biodiesel tax incentive is set to expire on December 31, 2009. The tax incentive is vital to the U.S. biodiesel industry and its extension is a top priority, reports the American Soybean Association.

If the biodiesel tax incentive is allowed to expire, the production and use of biodiesel in the U.S. will come to a halt, argues ASA. The economics of biodiesel at this stage will simply not work absent the federal tax incentive. ASA lobbyists say it is still unclear when, or if, Congress will act on tax legislation that addresses the biodiesel tax incentive.


Senators Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., and Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, have introduced S. 1589, the Biodiesel Tax Incentive Reform and Extension Act of 2009. This bill would extend the credit for five years and restructure it as a production excise tax credit. ASA has asked its members to contact their Senators to ask them to add their name as a cosponsor of S. 1589. Senator Dick Durbin, D-Ill., has already agreed to co-sponsor the bill.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Big Boys Developing Biofuel

DECATUR, Ala.-(BeyondFossilFuel.com)--Two important energy developments have come about last month.

ExxonMobil, which is the largest oil company in the world, is devoting $600 million to the development of biofuels from algae. Half of the funds will go to a bioengineering startup called Synthetic Genomics Inc., founded by bioresearch pioneer J. Craig Venter
.

DuPont Co. and British Petroleum will be partnering to make butanol which is a heavy alcohol made from biomass. Biomass is fermented to make the butanol. This has huge advantages over ethanol which is primarily made from corn. Biomass is basicly waste organic material that unlike corn is not consumed by people and animals making the feed stock tremendously cheaper. Unlike ethanol, butanol is compatible with the existing infrastructure of gasoline pipelines, trucks, pumps and tanks. Butanol is not subsided like ethanol.

Why Oil Still Has a Future

NEW YORK-(Wall Street Journal)--On Aug. 28, 1859, in the backwoods of northwest Pennsylvania, the first successful oil well went into production in the United States, ushering in an energy revolution that would make whale oil obsolete and eventually transform the industrial world. Yet 150 years later, even as demand increases in developing countries, oil’s position in the global economy is being questioned and challenged as never before.

Why this debate about the single most important source of energy—and a very convenient one—that provides 40% of the world's total energy? There are the traditional concerns—energy security, diversification, political risk, and the potential for conflict among nations over resources. The huge shifts in global income flows raise anxieties about the possible impact on the global balance of power. Some worry that physical supply will run out, although examination of the world's resource base—including a new analysis of over 800 oil fields—shows ample physical resources below ground. The politics above ground is a separate question.

But two new factors are now fueling the debate. One is the way in which oil has taken on a second identity. It is no longer only a physical commodity. It has also become a financial asset, along with stocks, bonds, currencies and the rest of the world's financial portfolio. The resulting price volatility—from less than $40 in 2004, to as high as $147.27 in July 2008, back down to $32.40 in December 2008, and now back over $70—has enormous consequences, and not only at the gas station and in terms of public anger. It makes it much more difficult to plan future energy investments, whether in oil and gas or in renewable and alternative fuels. And it can have enormous economic impact; Detroit was sent reeling by what happened at the gas pump in 2007 and 2008 even before the credit crisis. Such volatility can fuel future recessions and inflation.

That volatility has become an explosive political issue. British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and French President Nicolas Sarkozy recently called in these pages for a global solution to "destructive volatility," although they added that there are "no easy solutions."

The other new factor is climate change. Whatever the outcome of the upcoming mammoth United Nations climate-change conference in Copenhagen this December, carbon regulation is now part of the future of oil.

But are big cuts in world oil usage possible? Both the U.S. Department of Energy and the International Energy Agency project that global energy use will increase almost 50% between 2006 and 2030—with oil still providing 30% or more of the world's energy.

The reason is something else that is new—the globalization of demand. No longer are the growth markets for petroleum to be found in North America, Western Europe and Japan. The United States has already hit "peak gasoline demand."

The demand growth has now shifted, massively, to the fast-growing emerging markets—China, India and the Middle East. Between 2000 and 2007, 85% of the growth in world oil demand was in the developing world. This shift continues: This year, more new cars have been sold in China than in the United States. When economic recovery takes hold, what happens in emerging countries will be the defining factor in the path for overall consumption.

There are two obvious ways to temper demand growth—either roll back economic growth, or find new technologies. The former is not acceptable. Thus, the answer has to lie in technology. The challenge is to find alternatives to oil that can be economically competitive—and convenient and reliable—at the massive scale required.

What will those alternatives be? Batteries and plug-ins and other electric cars—today's favorite? Advanced biofuels? Natural-gas vehicles? The evolving smart grid, which can integrate plug-ins with greener electric generation? Or advances in the internal combustion engine, increasing fuel efficiency two or three times over?

In truth, we don't know, and we won't know for some time. For now, however, it is clear that the much higher levels of support for innovation—and large government incentives and subsidies—will inevitably drive technological change.

For oil, the focus is on transportation. After all, only 2% of America's electricity is generated by oil. Until recently, it appeared that the race between the electric car and the gasoline-powered car had been decided a century ago, with a decisive win by the gasoline-powered car on the basis of cost and performance. But the race is clearly on again.

Yet, whatever the breakthroughs, the actual impact on fuel use for the next 20 years will be incremental due to the time it takes to get large-scale mass production up and running and the massive scale of the global auto industry. My firm, IHS CERA, projects that with aggressive sales volumes and no major bumps in the road (unusual for new technologies), plug-in hybrids and pure electric vehicles could constitute 25% of new car sales by 2030. But because of the slow turn-over of the overall fleet, gasoline consumption would be reduced only modestly below what it would otherwise be. Thereafter, of course, the impact could grow, perhaps very substantially.

But, in the U.S., at least for the next two decades, greater efficiency in the internal combustion engine, advanced diesels, and regular hybrids, combined with second-generation biofuels and new lighter materials, would have a bigger impact sooner. There is, however, a global twist. If small, low-cost electric vehicles really catch on in the auto growth markets in Asia, that would certainly lower the global growth curve for future oil demand.

As to the next 150 years of petroleum, we can hardly even begin to guess. For the next 20 years at least, the unfolding economic saga in emerging markets will continue to make oil a global growth business.

Friday, August 14, 2009

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

VeraSun Asset Sale Draws Plenty of Bidders

WASHINGTON-(Farm Progress)--Wire reports issued late Tuesday report that Archer Daniels Midland Co. bid on some of bankrupt VeraSun Energy Corp.'s ethanol plants, but in the end didn't buy. ADM declined to say which of the 17 VeraSun facilities it bid on.

A VeraSun spokesperson apparently didn't disclose results of the auction, which began Monday and continued into Tuesday because the event drew multiple bidders - according to reports. A report on the auction is expected in the bankruptcy court later today.

Valero Energy Corp., an independent refiner, placed a public bid for five assets, but there's no word on the results of that effort.

VeraSun filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy last October, as the result of what many observers call a poorly executed risk management strategy. The assets for sale in the effort have drawn a lot of interest due to their low price. The floor bid for assets from Valero were about 50 cents per gallon of ethanol production capacity - which is about a quarter of the plants' original production cost.

In a separate press report, there's word that ADM is also looking at purchasing the Brazilian ethanol group Unialco, along with a mill belonging to Da Mata. ADM has not commented to the media on this move, but at least one shareholder at Unialco says a memorandum of understanding has been signed in that deal.

A potential Brazilian ethanol capacity purchase would still face the import tariff stumbling block of a 54-cent-per-gallon charge. Some observers say the news of the ADM move may be wishful thinking for Unialco shareholders.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Another Ethanol Producer on Financial Ropes

WASHINGTON-(Farm Progress)--Ethanol maker Aventine Renewable Energy Holdings, Pekin, Ill., says this week that it has defaulted on some debt payments and could be seeking Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, according to wire service reports.

Shares for the company fell to 12 cents on the news, and the company reports it is working to raise more capital. In addition, it is seeking equity financing or a buyer for all or part of the company, but will choose bankruptcy if those efforts fail.

VeraSun, a larger ethanol maker, slipped into bankruptcy last fall. The challenge is shrinking ethanol margins as gasoline prices have fallen. And despite the renewable fuel standard, the price for the renewable fuel hasn't kept pace with production costs.

The company reported a fourth-quarter loss of $36.9 million compared to a profit of $3.3 million a year earlier. The company reports it does not have the cash to make a $15 million interest payment, or to pay more than $24 million it owes a builder for plant construction. Sales at the company rose $537.2 million.

Monday, March 16, 2009

Interior Secretary Orders Renewable Energy Projects

WASHINGTON-(Farm Progress)--Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar has issued a Secretarial Order making the production, development and delivery of renewable energy top priority for the Department of the Interior. While signing the order, the Secretary said, "With job losses continuing to mount, we need to steer the country onto a new energy path. One that creates new jobs, and puts America out front in new, growing industries.

The order also establishes an energy and climate change task force that will identify specific zones on U.S. public lands where Interior can facilitate a rapid and responsible move to large-scale production of solar, wind, geothermal, and biomass energy. Salazar said they will assign a high priority to identifying renewable energy zones and completing the permitting and appropriate environmental review of transmission rights-of-way applications.

Interior manages one fifth of the country's landmass, over 1.7 billion offshore acres, and lands with some of the highest renewable energy potential in the nation. Interior's Bureau of Land Management has identified about 21 million acres of public land with wind energy potential in the 11 western states and about 29 million acres with solar energy potential in the six southwestern states. There are also 140 million acres of public land in western states and Alaska that have geothermal resource potential.