1 / 36

Dry-Grind Ethanol Production: Economic Sensitivity

Dry-Grind Ethanol Production: Economic Sensitivity. Douglas G. Tiffany Research Fellow University of Minnesota. Today’s Discussion. Work arose from “Factors Associated with Success of Fuel Ethanol Producers” written w/ Vernon Eidman Funding: USDA Rural Development

faith-hull
Download Presentation

Dry-Grind Ethanol Production: Economic Sensitivity

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Dry-Grind Ethanol Production: Economic Sensitivity Douglas G. Tiffany Research Fellow University of Minnesota

  2. Today’s Discussion • Work arose from “Factors Associated with Success of Fuel Ethanol Producers” written w/ Vernon Eidman Funding: USDA Rural Development MN Ag. Experiment Station • 1) Briefly establish key factors in dry-grind ethanol production • 2) Demonstrate economic sensitivity of this technology in this market

  3. Dry-Grind Technology • Dry-Grind Plants-- now 67% of U.S. production--simpler process, lower capital costs, but refinements are occurring. • Ethanol from corn has a positive energy balance. (1.34 – 1.51) • USDA, Argonne Lab, • Michigan State University, Ag. Canada

  4. Ethanol Dry-Grind • Grind bushel of corn (56 lb.), add water, make mash, cook to kill bacteria, expose starch • Add enzymes for flow & to convert starch to sugar • Introduce Yeasts in Batch Fermenters---- produce beer---- distill the ethanol • Products: • ethanol– (2.75 gal.) requires heat to distill • DDGS- (18 lbs.) generally requires drying • CO2-- ( 18 lbs. ) food grade • 150 bushel corn yields 413 gallons of ethanol per acre, 2700 pounds of DDGS

  5. Project Goals & Methods • Goal: Describe and Quantify Factors of Success in Dry-Grind Ethanol Production • Steps in Research • Conduct Interviews of Plant Personnel & Bankers—to Learn Factor Inputs, etc. • Develop Spreadsheets to Measure Plant Profits • Interpret Results • Advise Farmers/Investors, Bankers Policymakers

  6. Dry Grind Revenue Categories (5 yr.)* • Ethanol Sales 80% • DDGS Sales 19% • CO2 1% • MN Subsidy -0- • Total 100%

  7. Five Key Factors & Baseline Levels • Corn Price---- $2.20 per bushel • Ethanol Price---- $1.15 per gallon • Nat. Gas Price----$4.50 per dekatherm • Ethanol Yield---- 2.75 gal.(anhyd)/bushel • Capacity Factor of Nameplate----1.20

  8. Model Predicts Addl. Value of Higher Total Fermentables in Corn • Increase Total Fermentables by 4% • Equals $909,450 for typical dry-grind plant; or $.067 per bushel ground. • Increase Total Fermentables by 6% • Equals $1,338,436 for typical dry-grind plant; or $.086 per bushel ground.

  9. Factors of Lesser Importance & Their Baseline Conditions • Capital Costs ----------$1.50/gallon denatured • Percentage of Debt----60% of Cap. Cost • Interest Rate------------7.0% • DDGS Price------------$80.00 per Ton • Electrical Price---------$.06 per kWh • Fed., State, or Local Subs/Incent.----0-

  10. Conclusions: Sensitivities • Favorable economics with low corn prices, high gasoline prices, low natural gas prices, low interest rates. • Corn Price--- Zero profits above $2.43 per bu. • Ethanol Price--- @$1.15--- profits of $.15/ bu., @$1.35--- profits of $.56/ bu. • Natural Gas Price rise to ($6.85) from baseline levels of $4.50/ dekatherm wipes-out profits. • Ethanol Yield per Bushel —very important • 2.75 gal./bu (typical today) • 2.36 gal./bu--- wipes out profits

  11. Plant Manager Observations--Technical • Improved Enzymes and Yeast in last two years • Tolerance to Alcohol % (13.5%-now 19.7%), • Tolerance to Higher Temps (can tolerate 100 degrees F. for 2-3 hours and still recover) • Faster fermentation times - 45-50 hours possible • 60%-40% split in Yeast Propagation Strategies - 60% “continuous yeast propagators” - many batches in same tank; antibiotics used - 40% batch yeast, make fresh batches from purchased yeast • Expect to process most of fiber in corn kernel with improved cellulases in the future

  12. Research Topics: Derive More Revenue or Cut Costs of Stillage • DDGS • Improvement in DDGS Attributes • Efforts to “Brand” and Standardize DDGS • Educate Users, Develop Markets • Development of Yeast Extract Products to Reduce Antibiotic Use in Livestock • Utilization of Liquid Stillage or Syrup • Utilization of DDGS as Biomass Fuel • Better Storage, Utilization of Wet DDGS

  13. Technology Changes Pending • Quick-Germ Technology– uses more enzymes, depends on favorable sale of corn oil (Univ. of Illinois) • Quick-Fiber Technology—offers opportunity for greater through-put, but altered DDGS product characteristics ( Univ. of Illinois) • Continuous vs. Batch Fermentation with stripping of ethanol--- USDA, ARS • Pervaporation—use of membranes to filter ethanol from broth (USDA, ARS)

  14. Conclusions: Dry-Mill Production • Found Sensitivity of Dry Mill Ethanol Production to Various Factors; Historical Volatility of Returns • High Volume, often low margin business; however, some times of excellent returns have been modeled and also reported • Processing business demanding superior management of sensitive microbes, quality control • Major efforts to conserve energy in operations • Expect this technology to evolve and improve further until major improvements in ligno-cellulosic processes are able to make that technology more competitive.

  15. Contact Information • dtiffany@dept.agecon.umn.edu (612) 625-6715 • Spreadsheet:http://www.agmrc.org/energy/info/ ethanolsuccess.xls • Original paper: www.apec.umn.edu/staff/dtiffany/ staffpaperp03-7.pdf

More Related