us fuel ethanol industry – a current snapshot presented by greg krissek september 26, 2007

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US Fuel Ethanol Industry – A Current Snapshot Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007

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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. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: US Fuel Ethanol Industry –  A Current Snapshot   Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007

US Fuel Ethanol Industry –

A Current Snapshot

Presented by

Greg Krissek

September 26, 2007

Page 2: US Fuel Ethanol Industry –  A Current Snapshot   Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007

As of January 2007

In operation (113) 5.48 bgy

Construction (65) 5.35 bgy

Page 3: US Fuel Ethanol Industry –  A Current Snapshot   Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007

What we’ve been expecting - Ethanol Production Growth in the U.S. through 2008

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

80 82 84 86 88 90 92 94 96 98 00 02 04 06 08

Year

Bil

lio

n g

all

on

s p

er

yea

r

ICM Contribution

Ethanol Industry

Average growth = 2950 mmgy gal./yr.

Average growth = 770 mmgy gal./yr.

Average growth = 75 mmgy gal./yr.

Requires ~ 4 billion bushels of corn

Page 4: US Fuel Ethanol Industry –  A Current Snapshot   Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007

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

Page 5: US Fuel Ethanol Industry –  A Current Snapshot   Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007

Kansas Update

Page 6: US Fuel Ethanol Industry –  A Current Snapshot   Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007

Source: American Coalition for Ethanol

Page 7: US Fuel Ethanol Industry –  A Current Snapshot   Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007

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

Page 8: US Fuel Ethanol Industry –  A Current Snapshot   Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007

Price Difference: Ethanol Spot Minus Regular Unleaded Chicago Spot Market ($/gallon)

-1

-0.5

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

1/3

/19

95

6/2

3/1

99

5

12

/15

/19

95

6/7

/19

96

11

/27

/19

96

5/2

2/1

99

7

11

/11

/19

97

5/7

/19

98

10

/27

/19

98

4/2

2/1

99

9

10

/12

/19

99

4/6

/20

00

9/2

8/2

00

0

3/2

3/2

00

1

9/1

8/2

00

1

3/1

4/2

00

2

9/5

/20

02

2/2

8/2

00

3

8/2

0/2

00

3

2/1

7/2

00

4

8/9

/20

04

2/3

/20

05

7/2

7/2

00

5

1/2

0/2

00

6

7/1

4/2

00

6

1/8

/20

07

Source: Chicago Board of Trade

Page 9: US Fuel Ethanol Industry –  A Current Snapshot   Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007

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

Source: Chicago Board of Trade

10/06 Begin winter contracts prices narrow

4/07 Begin summer contracts prices invert

Price relationship $.25/gal or higher

CBOT Ethanol vs NYMEX RBOB

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

1.2

1.4

1.6

1.8

2

2.2

2.4

2.6

2.8

3

3.2

3.4

3.6

3.8

4

4.2

4.4

4.6

$/g

al

Ethanol

RBOB

Page 10: US Fuel Ethanol Industry –  A Current Snapshot   Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007

Today nearly fifty percent of U.S. gasoline is blended with ethanololine is blended with ethanol

3860

1991

5920

US MOTOR GASOLINE with and without ETHANOL, Jun-07, Total of 11770 Million Gallons

Reformulated gasoline (RFG) total, 98.7 percent with ethanol

Conventional gasoline with ethanol (mainly E-10)

Conventional gasoline without ethanol

Outside the RFG areas and the Midwest, lacking rail delivery, lacking ready retail sites, and with many state-level regulatory issues

Mainly in the Midwest, delivered truck and rail.

Mainly the northeastern US and California (mandated to replace MTBE), delivered by rail unit trains and truck.

PRX_EthanolPrdn, GTB-07-08r, Sep-05-07

Source: Pro Exporter Network

Page 11: US Fuel Ethanol Industry –  A Current Snapshot   Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007

Current Demand (6.2 BGY) and Potential Growth (8.6 BGY) of U.S. Ethanol Usage to E10 – June 2007

PADD 1RFG –

1.7 BGYVoluntary –300 MGY

New E10 – 3.8 BGY

PADD 2RFG - 500 MGY; Voluntary 1.6 BGY

New E10 – 1.7 BGY

PADD 3RFG - 700 MGY; Voluntary 40 MGY

New E10 – 1.5 BGY

PADD 4 RFG – 50 MGY; Voluntary 80 MGY

New E10 – 370 MGY

PADD 5RFG – 1.0 BGY

Voluntary 200 MGY New E10 – 1.2 BGY

Source: ProVista Renewable Fuels Marketing

Page 12: US Fuel Ethanol Industry –  A Current Snapshot   Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007

Beyond E10 - E85 and FFV’s – over 30 models available today

Page 13: US Fuel Ethanol Industry –  A Current Snapshot   Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007

FLEX FUEL (E85) VEHICLES FLEX FUEL (E85) VEHICLES

0

1,000,000

2,000,000

3,000,000

4,000,000

5,000,000

6,000,000

7,000,000

8,000,000

9,000,000

2000 2002 2004 2006 Proj 2008 Proj

Potential is growing rapidly

Page 14: US Fuel Ethanol Industry –  A Current Snapshot   Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007

Kansas Biofuels Stations

Page 15: US Fuel Ethanol Industry –  A Current Snapshot   Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007

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

Page 16: US Fuel Ethanol Industry –  A Current Snapshot   Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007

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

Page 17: US Fuel Ethanol Industry –  A Current Snapshot   Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007

Process Optimization

Starch ● Ethanol ● Chemicals

Grits ● Food Gluten

● Feed/Food

Fiber ● Ethanol

Germ ● Corn Oil

Carbon Dioxide ● Food ● Sequestration

Page 18: US Fuel Ethanol Industry –  A Current Snapshot   Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007

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

Page 19: US Fuel Ethanol Industry –  A Current Snapshot   Presented by Greg Krissek September 26, 2007

Questions?Greg Krissek 316-977-6549 [email protected]

Western Plains Energy - Campus, KS