LILBOURN, Mo., Oct. 9, 2008

Biofuel Plants Feel Pinch Of Bad Economy

Rising Crop Prices, Funding Shortages Stunt Growth Of Once-Burgeoning Industry

  • By 2007, corn and soybean prices charged upward, cutting into the profit margin for biofuels and leaving some plants without enough cash to operate. Photo

    By 2007, corn and soybean prices charged upward, cutting into the profit margin for biofuels and leaving some plants without enough cash to operate.  (CBS)

  • Interactive Alternative Energy

    Learn about the types of renewable energy that are used in the U.S. and the regions of the country considered to be most suitable for each kind.

  • Section Living Green

    Global warming is giving nuclear power a new claim to clean.

(AP)  It's one of the newest buildings in this small agricultural town. Aligned between two city water towers, the 120-foot long biodiesel plant gleams in the sun. The paint on its sign hasn't even chipped.

But weeds have begun to encroach on the Great River Soy biodiesel plant, which produced just 94,000 gallons over two weeks before it ran out of money and was shuttered.

It's a scene that has been repeated throughout the United States: Clovis, N.M.; Nevada, Mo.; Hartsburg, Ill.; Lamoni, Iowa; Evansville, Wis.; Greybull, Wyo.; Rock Port, Mo.; Belle Fourche, S.D. All were supposed to have biofuels plants operating or under construction by now. None do.

This week, another ethanol plant, in Pratt, Kan., declared bankruptcy. Prospects for another in San Pierre, Ind., have grown dim.

Hopes ran high in many small towns amid an explosive interest in biofuels and a rush to build large plants. Unseen by planners, however, was the coming spike in crop prices and a financial meltdown unlike any that America has seen since the Great Depression.

Wall Street has been reshaped, banks have vanished and with them, the money to hold over nascent projects like the Great River Soy plant.

An Iowa ethanol company said last week that with money drying up, it had scrapped plans for a 110 million gallon ethanol plant in the state capital.

Quote

It was a perfect storm of opportunity for the ethanol industry, and a perfect combination of every single element that they have counted on turning against them.

David Swenson
Iowa State University
In Missouri alone, more than a dozen ethanol and biodiesel companies sought state regulatory approval in 2006 to recruit investors for projects in South Dakota, Nebraska, Minnesota, Illinois, Indiana and Iowa. Two years later, as many companies have failed or stalled as have finished their projects.

"The market just exploded and got so crowded," said Kerry Rose, the president of Ozark Ethanol, which has abandoned plans for a plant near the Kansas border.

"We had been working on it for going on three years, and then, dozens of people were popping up everywhere and everyone wanted a plant," he said. "Things were just too good for a time."

Investors watched as profits rolled in at biofuel plants in 2005, when hurricanes Katrina and Rita cut off gasoline supplies and prices jumped.

"It was a perfect storm of opportunity for the ethanol industry, and a perfect combination of every single element that they have counted on turning against them," said David Swenson, a researcher at Iowa State University. "The infrastructure isn't there and wholesale patriotic demand for ethanol didn't materialize."

There were ominous signs for the industry even before the Wall Street meltdown.

By 2007, corn and soybean prices charged upward, cutting into the profit margin for biofuels and leaving some plants without enough cash to operate.

Plant operators in Lilbourn said doubling soybean prices wiped out cash reserves just as the first batch of biofuel was produced.

"We couldn't see where it would ever pay off," said Don King, the president of Great River Soy's board of directors.

Mayor Dale Ray said that at least the town, which donated the land, doesn't have to mow and weed the property, but it was hoping for about a dozen jobs paying $13 an hour.

In the southeast Missouri town of about 1,000, open stores on the main drag are the exception.

In addition to the donated land, the plant received about $28,000 in state incentive payments. The plant's investors also received $924,000 in tax credits over two years.

The company tried to sell the plant for $6.5 million, but an auction has been scheduled for next month.

Many other projects never got off the ground, with investors pulling back cash.

Still, there is an even greater push for alternative energy after a summer energy shock that sent gasoline prices over $4 per gallon.

And with commodity prices dropping, construction for some stalled biofuels plants has restarted.

Cole Gustafson, a bioproducts specialist at North Dakota State University, said that the biofuels industry has gone through several stages.

"Now it's kind of at a standstill as it goes from a mature industry into almost a new kind of industry," Gustafson said.

Dave Durham, president of Show Me Ethanol, which opened in Carrolton, Mo., earlier this year, said he doesn't envy companies trying to get off the ground now because "the investor pool is not near what it was."

"I think the economics of the ethanol industry became a lot more realistic," Durham said.

Lilbourn is hoping for a second chance. Police regularly patrol the vacant biodiesel plant. And city leaders expect the gravel parking lot to be busy someday.

"Someone will eventually buy this plant and probably start up," Ray said. "It was just an economic situation. Nobody swindled anything; nobody took anything extra. It was strictly economics."

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Video and Galleries from Living Green

Add a Comment
by octavianfdlr October 9, 2008 1:36 PM PDT
Isn''t that amazing. Loads of naysayers (back when the reason for biofuels was Global Warming) said that it wouldn''t work: it takes more fuel to make biofuel than you get out. Now, with fuel prices at an all-time high, the cost of the raw materials for the biofuel plants have risen too high for the plants to break even. It''s almost as if the naysayers knew what they were talking about.

Gee -- do yuh think?
Reply to this comment
by stevenn635 October 9, 2008 4:38 PM PDT
ETHANOL IS CRASHING!
The EU is putting severe restrictions on ethanol and the US congress will probably be reducing its mandate next year. Why? Simply put: tropical deforestaion and increased global warming. See video at a href=http://www.ethanol-lie.com/ www.ethanol-lie.com /a
Reply to this comment
by seafang October 9, 2008 6:45 PM PDT
Well I hope they all go bankrupt soon, and then get back to doing what they know something about; growing food.
Any species that converts food production resources (including massive amounts of water) into a fuel that is just going to get burned up, just doesn''t deserve to survive.

Bio-fuels are just about the most inefficient way of collecting solar energy that you could imagine. Subisdies just hide the loss factors includign the energy loss. Biofuels and global warming will go the way of the dinosaur when this winter''s cold sets in.
Reply to this comment
by 5errr October 9, 2008 7:32 PM PDT
neat stuff!
Reply to this comment
by sandmancan October 9, 2008 9:34 PM PDT
I wish people would stop whining about how bio-fuels sent the cost of food through the roof. The fact is nothing could be further from the truth and reflects just how little is understood about the industry. Bio-diesel uses the oil from the plant. After that is extracted the remaining 80% is food grade protein pure enough for human or livestock consumption. Put 2 and 2 together and you have a protein commodity market awash in extra foodstuffs. The fact is that when food prices were climbing the Grocery Manufacturers Association member''s profits soared on average 100%. But don''t take my word for it. www.biodiesel.org/resources/pressreleases/gen/20080522_gmanr1.pdf I use 100% bio-diesel in my ''95 F350 whenever I can find it because I think a 78% reduction in lifecycle green house gases is the right thing to do.
Reply to this comment
  • MOST POPULAR
  • Viewed
  • Commented
Latest News
Featured Blogs