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US Fuel Ethanol Industry – A Current Snapshot Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007. U.S. Ethanol Plants. As of January 2007. In operation (113) 5.48 bgy. Construction (65) 5.35 bgy. What we’ve been expecting - Ethanol Production Growth in the U.S. through 2008.
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US Fuel Ethanol Industry – A Current Snapshot Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007
U.S. Ethanol Plants As of January 2007 In operation (113) 5.48 bgy Construction (65) 5.35 bgy
What we’ve been expecting - Ethanol Production Growth in the U.S. through 2008 Requires ~ 4 billion bushels of corn Average growth = 2950 mmgy gal./yr. Average growth = 770 mmgy gal./yr. Average growth = 75 mmgy gal./yr.
What others have been projecting - Ethanol Production Growth in the U.S. 2008-09 • Renewable Fuels Association – 9/14/07 • 129 operating plants – 6.8 BGY capacity • 85 construction projects – 6.6 BGY capacity • Pro Exporter – 8/20/07 • capacity as of: • 12/31/07 - 8.5 BGY • 6/30/08 - 10.5 BGY • 12/31/08 – 11.5 BGY
Current Congressional Activity for Energy Legislation • Senate • Approved legislation with new RFS starting at 8.5 BGY in 2008 and growing to 36 BGY in 2022 (advanced biofuels after 15 BGY in 2015) • Increased CAFÉ provisions but unable to approve a tax title • House of Representatives • Approved energy legislation without a fuels title (no RFS) • No provision for CAFÉ • Awaiting low carbon standard legislation • White House • 2007 State of Union address called for 35 BGY by 2017 • Substantive, procedural and calendar issues slowing process- and next is the election cycle
With EPAct of 2005, the Price Relationship of Ethanol is now to RBOB Gasoline: currently inverted (ethanol price below RBOB) even with high crude oil prices 10/06 Begin winter contracts prices narrow 4/07 Begin summer contracts prices invert Price relationship $.25/gal or higher Source: Chicago Board of Trade
Today nearly fifty percent of U.S. gasoline is blended with ethanol Source: Pro Exporter Network
Current Demand(6.2 BGY) and Potential Growth(8.6 BGY) of U.S. Ethanol Usage to E10 – June 2007 PADD 4 RFG – 50 MGY; Voluntary 80 MGY New E10 – 370 MGY PADD 2 RFG - 500 MGY; Voluntary 1.6 BGY New E10 – 1.7 BGY PADD 5 RFG – 1.0 BGY Voluntary 200 MGY New E10 – 1.2 BGY PADD 1 RFG – 1.7 BGY Voluntary – 300 MGY New E10 – 3.8 BGY PADD 3 RFG - 700 MGY; Voluntary 40 MGY New E10 – 1.5 BGY Source: ProVista Renewable Fuels Marketing
FLEX FUEL (E85) VEHICLES Potential is growing rapidly
The Face of Investors is Changing • 1995 - 2005 – Farmer-owned cooperatives and LLC’s • Pool of investors able to raise more capital to build larger plants • Reduced risk • Plant able to ride out market fluctuations because of corn-delivery agreements with farmer/investors • Today - Larger investors • Market stabilization draws big investors • Potential returns • Take advantage of economy of scale • Banks being selective
Energy Prices Lead Plant Designers to Evaluate Alternative Energy Sources • Land Fill Gas • Corn fiber • Biomass • Ag Residue • Solid waste • Wood chips • Waste steam … but reliability, consistent availability, conversion technology and cost are crucial
Industry Challenges and Opportunities • Challenges • Tight margins for ethanol plants • Fuel terminal infrastructure and distribution shortfalls • Vehicle engine technology • Battling in the court of public opinion • Opportunities • Low prices cure low prices • Blender pumps and high blend fuels • Political support remains strong • Additional feedstocks
Questions? Greg Krissek 316-977-6549 gkrissek@icminc.com Western Plains Energy - Campus, KS