Biofuels Archives - Alternative Energy Stocks https://altenergystocks.com/archives/category/biofuels/ The Investor Resource for Solar, Wind, Efficiency, Renewable Energy Stocks Fri, 15 Apr 2022 23:23:13 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.0.9 Advantage Biodiesel http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2022/04/advantage-biodiesel/ http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2022/04/advantage-biodiesel/#respond Fri, 15 Apr 2022 23:23:13 +0000 http://www.altenergystocks.com/?p=11156 Spread the love        By Tom Konrad, Ph.D., CFA Because of rising fertilizer prices, farmers are planting more soybeans than corn.  Soybeans are a legume, meaning that they can fix their own nitrogen in the soil, meaning that they need less nitrogen fertilizer, the price of which is spiking due to rising natural gas prices.  Corn, in […]

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Soybean field in Clark County, Wisconsin. Photo by Jeff the quiet, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons

By Tom Konrad, Ph.D., CFA

Because of rising fertilizer prices, farmers are planting more soybeans than corn.  Soybeans are a legume, meaning that they can fix their own nitrogen in the soil, meaning that they need less nitrogen fertilizer, the price of which is spiking due to rising natural gas prices.  Corn, in contrast, needs more nitrogen than most other crops.  

High gas prices are rising because of Putin’s war on Ukraine, which is also preventing Ukrainian farmers from planting this year’s wheat crop, while sanctions are likely to disrupt wheat supplies from Russia as well.

Corn and (to a lesser extent, wheat) are both major feedstocks for ethanol, so investors hoping that ethanol producers will benefit from rising gasoline prices (also caused by the war) may be disappointed.  

Agricultural disruptions will likely raise the prices of all agricultural commodities, including soy oil, but the large soy planting in the US will moderate this effect on soy oil.   Since soy oil is a common biodiesel feedstock, biodiesel producers will see a relative benefit compared to ethanol producers, who are more reliant on corn.

In short, investors looking to biofuels to benefit because of high oil prices should focus on biodiesel producers, rather than producers of ethanol.

ABOUT: Tom Konrad Ph.D., CFA is the Editor of AltEnergyStocks.com and the manager of the Foundation Green Income Fund.

DISCLOSURE: None.

DISCLAIMER: Past performance is not a guarantee or a reliable indicator of future results.  This article contains the current opinions of the author and such opinions are subject to change without notice.  This article has been distributed for informational purposes only. Forecasts, estimates, and certain information contained herein should not be considered as investment advice or a recommendation of any particular security, strategy or investment product.  Information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but not guaranteed.

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A Disappointing Supreme Court Biofuel Decision. Why It’s Not Over Yet http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2021/06/a-disappointing-supreme-court-biofuel-decision-why-its-not-over-yet/ http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2021/06/a-disappointing-supreme-court-biofuel-decision-why-its-not-over-yet/#respond Mon, 28 Jun 2021 16:27:40 +0000 http://www.altenergystocks.com/?p=11053 Spread the love        By Jim Lane The case Last week’s decision stems from a May 2018 challenge brought against EPA in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit by the Renewable Fuels Association, the National Corn Growers Association, National Farmers Union, and the American Coalition for Ethanol, working together as the Biofuels Coalition. The […]

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By Jim Lane

The caseSupreme Court courtroom

Last week’s decision stems from a May 2018 challenge brought against EPA in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit by the Renewable Fuels Association, the National Corn Growers Association, National Farmers Union, and the American Coalition for Ethanol, working together as the Biofuels Coalition. The petitioners argued that the small refinery exemptions were granted in direct contradiction to the statutory text and purpose of the RFS and challenged three waivers the EPA issued to refineries owned by HollyFrontier Corp. and CVR Energy Inc.’s Wynnewood Refining Co.

The case is HollyFrontier Cheyenne Refining, LLC v. Renewable Fuels Association, 20-472 and the high court heard oral arguments in April. The case involved exemptions given to units of HollyFrontier Corp (HFC) and CVR Energy Inc (CVI). Reuters reports that at issue in the case was whether the EPA impermissibly exempted units of HollyFrontier and CVR Energy in 2017 and 2018 when they had not received continuous prior extensions of an initial exemption.

In January 2020, the Denver-based 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found that the EPA exceeded its authority “because there was nothing for the agency to ‘extend.’” According to the Circuit Court ruling, “the statute limits exemptions to situations involving ‘extensions,’ with the goal of forcing the market to accept escalating amounts of renewable fuels over time.” The refineries appealed to the Supreme Court, and the federal government, under Biden, switched sides to favor the biofuel supporters.

The SCOTUS decision

The 6-3 ruling overturned a lower court decision that had faulted the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for giving refineries in Wyoming, Utah and Oklahoma extensions on waivers from the Clean Air Act’s renewable fuel standard requirements even though the companies’ prior exemptions had expired, according to Reuters. Bloomberg reported that the justices rejected arguments that the EPA’s exemption power is limited to only a handful of refineries that have received uninterrupted annual waivers from the Renewable Fuel Standard.

Interestingly, Conservative Justice Amy Coney Barrett joined liberal justices Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan, in dissenting from the decision.

What this means

It’s no secret that President Biden supported biofuels and was “expected to issue fewer waivers and force more refineries to satisfy annual biofuel quotas by either blending plant-based alternatives into their products or buying compliance credits from other companies that have. However, the new precedent will give future administrations wide clearance to exempt oil refineries from annual blending quotas,” according to Bloomberg. And let’s not forget that small refinery waivers surged under former President Trump which didn’t make biofuel producers happy.

But it’s not over yet. The Renewable Fuels Association points out that “While the Supreme Court failed to affirm a portion of the Tenth Circuit decision, the Biofuels Coalition pointed out that the appellate court also ruled that EPA’s exemption decisions must reconcile the agency’s consistent findings that all refineries recover the costs of compliance with the RFS, and that EPA may only use hardship caused by the RFS to justify granting exemptions. Despite today’s Supreme Court decision, EPA must still resolve those other aspects of the Tenth Circuit ruling.”

Reactions from the Industry

Disappointment for sure, but a huge sense of optimism too. Reminds us of the Tubthumping song lyrics, “I get knocked down, but I get up again, You are never gonna keep me down” from Chumbawamba.

Let’s hear from those involved directly first. The Renewable Fuels Association sent this statement on the SCOTUS decision from the Biofuels Coalition involved in the lawsuit:

“A coalition of renewable fuel and farm groups expressed “extreme disappointment” in today’s U.S. Supreme Court decision overturning a 2020 appellate court ruling that struck down three improper small refinery exemptions granted by previous EPA administrators. However, because certain elements of the appellate court ruling were left unchallenged and were not reviewed by the Supreme Court, the groups remain optimistic that the Biden administration will discontinue the past administration’s flagrant abuse of the refinery exemption program.

“Nearly a year and a half ago, the Tenth Circuit handed down a unanimous decision that was ultimately adopted by the very agency we took to court in the first place,” coalition members said. “While we are extremely disappointed in this unfortunate decision from the Supreme Court, we will not stop fighting for America’s farmers and renewable fuel producers. Further, we are optimistic that other elements of the Tenth Circuit decision, which were not reviewed by the Supreme Court, will compel the Biden administration and EPA’s new leadership to take a far more judicious and responsible approach to the refinery exemption program than their predecessors did.”

Irrespective of today’s decision, the Biofuels Coalition thanked President Biden and EPA Administrator Regan for taking swift action to rein in the previous administration’s mismanagement of the small refinery exemption program. After carefully reviewing the issue, new EPA leadership in February reversed the agency’s previous position and announced support for the Tenth Circuit decision. In April, EPA decided to revoke three last-minute refinery exemptions granted the day before President Biden’s inauguration; and in May, EPA announced it would cooperate with a Government Accountability Office investigation into the past administration’s adjudication of small refinery exemptions.

As of today, 70 small refinery exemption petitions remain pending with EPA, for the compliance years 2011-2020.”

So what do others in the industry have to say about this?

Growth Energy CEO Emily Skor told The Digest, “The Supreme Court disagreed with the lower court’s view of extensions, but today’s decision does nothing to change the 10th Circuit’s ruling that exemptions cannot be granted when refiners cannot properly trace their hardship to compliance with the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS),” said Skor. “In the past, the biofuel industry has looked to the courts to halt abuse. Today, new leaders at the Environmental Protection Agency have shown a willingness to defend the RFS, most recently by reversing three improperly granted exemptions. We look forward to working with the Biden administration to keep a lid on exemptions, further strengthen the RFS, and fast-track our progress toward decarbonization. Engine smart and earth kind biofuels are vital to achieving the nation’s climate goals.”

Michael McAdams, President of the Advanced Biofuels Association said, “We are greatly disappointed by the Supreme Court’s ruling to overturn the 10th Circuit decision with regard to small refinery exemptions. Frankly, the Court got this one wrong. We do not expect, however, that this decision will impact the current Administration’s view on using SREs moving forward.”

Kurt Kovarik, National Biodiesel Board’s Vice President for Federal Affairs, said, “The Supreme Court decision is dismaying because it leaves uncertainty about when EPA may offer exemptions to small refineries. These exemptions harm biodiesel and renewable diesel producers when they reduce demand for advanced biofuels. EPA has provided multiple ways for refiners to meet the Clean Air Act’s RFS requirements, including an outsized bank of reserve RIN credits. The agency must issue the 2021 RFS rules as soon as possible and ensure that RFS volumes it sets are met, with full accounting for any small refinery exemptions in plans to grant.”

Doug Durante, Executive Director, Clean Fuels Development Coalition told The Digest, “Between the courts, the oil industry, and EPA chipping away at the RFS it only underscores that we need to create new demand beyond the confines of the RFS, which frankly may continue to shrink. Ethanol’s highest value is as an octane additive and to reduce the carbon in gasoline by replacing aromatics. The pending re-write of the fuel economy rule is a perfect opportunity to do that and the ethanol industry needs to make that case, as we are doing through the High Octane Low Carbon Alliance.”

Iowa Renewable Fuels Association Executive Director Monte Shaw said, “We are extremely disappointed the Supreme Court didn’t uphold the 10th Circuit Court ruling on eligibility to request RFS refinery exemption extensions. I am not a lawyer, but it sure seems like the 10th Circuit Court got it right when they determined that a refinery can’t extend something it no longer has. However, it is important to remember this case only applied to one of the three major findings from the 10th Circuit Court. Today’s decision allows refiners to apply to extend RFS exemptions that have lapsed. But this case did not impact the 10th Circuit’s ruling that refiners must still prove economic harm directly related to compliance with the RFS. Just as importantly, the 10th Circuit also found that EPA cannot use RIN costs as a cause of economic harm while simultaneously admitting RIN costs are recovered in the refiner’s crack spread. As the Biden EPA has pledged to follow the 10th Circuit Court ruling, today’s decision allows refiners to request an RFS exemption extension, but it does not make it easier for refiners to actually receive one. We fully expect the Biden EPA to keep their commitment to the RFS and to apply the 10th Circuit Court standards relating to economic harm, and as a result, to deny the vast majority of RFS exemption extension requests that are pending or that will be submitted in the future.”

Speaking of Iowa, the Iowa Biodiesel Board’s Executive Director, Grant Kimberley, said they were “extremely disappointed” too and “We believe today’s ruling opens the door for oil refiners to intentionally circumvent the RFS. However, the Supreme Court did not consider nor overturn the economic harm arguments decided in the 10th Circuit, and the EPA is still bound by them. The only question is how many refiners can seek exemptions each year and at what point in the year—or ‘at any time’—they can be granted. The EPA must consider only whether the Renewable Fuel Standard itself causes ‘disproportionate economic harm’ to a small refinery requesting exemption; and the EPA must consider its own evidence that refineries recoup the costs of RFS compliance. As green energy becomes a national priority, we are hopeful that the Biden EPA will keep its commitment to the RFS, fulfilling the promise that a green future depends on a stable and strong biofuels industry.”

Steve Roberts, Director, Opportune LLP, told The Digest, “This is the first of two key decision points expected this summer, with the second being the RFS blending requirements for 2021 and 2022. Additionally, there is a backlog of Small Refinery Exemptions (SREs) to be reviewed and decided upon by the EPA. So, while the SCOTUS ruling provides some clarity for the Small Refiners Exemption, both the biofuel industry and oil refiners are still in a ‘wait and see’ mode, which will continue to drive volatility in the biofuel and RINs markets.”

Former Deputy Undersecretary of Agriculture and now Managing Director of Ocean Park, an Investment Bank that has advised on many biofuels transactions, John Campbell told The Digest, “All eyes will be on EPA’s rulemaking proposal for RVO’s in 2021 and 2022 now that the SRE issue has been settled by the highest court. The 2007 RFS legislation anticipated 150 billion gallons of gasoline demand with traditional corn ethanol at 10% or 15 billion gallons.  Despite gains in E-15 demand the 10% blend wall has been problematic when EPA considers the overall RVO landscape and imipact on RIN prices.  The RFS has served the biofuels industry well but the time has come to consider reform that takes into account new fuel demand realities and increasing need for decarbonization of the liquid fuel supply.”

“Today’s decision still does not resolve the question of regulatory certainty for the Renewable Fuel Standard,” Michael Newman, Chief Operating Officer of Parhelion Underwriting Inc. told The Digest. “A sudden change of policy is an unwelcome surprise in any market and the interests of policymakers, regulators, market participants and the public should be aligned in wanting a stable market with an orderly, gradually rising trend. A sudden drop in value hurts companies holding RIN assets and impacts government revenues that support sustainable projects; a spike in value is passed on to consumers at the gas pump, eroding public support for the program.”

“A possible alternative is a national clean fuel standard, along the lines of California Low Carbon Fuels Standard, to supercede the RFS at the end of 2022,” said Newman. “It is a program with flexibility for how the government’s goals are achieved – including through the purchase of carbon credits generated by electrical vehicle producers, a price cap to fix the ‘price spike’ and a focus on carbon intensity.”

Some other good news

Another hopeful sign was the Senate’s passage of the Growing Climate Solutions Act, legislation that would break down barriers for farmers and foresters interested in participating in carbon markets.

Growth Energy CEO Emily Skor applauded that news and said, “Farmers have already been making big investments in new technology to reduce their carbon emissions. As reducing greenhouse gas emissions is top of mind for the biofuels industry, we are working with our ag partners to use sustainable farming practices to reduce emissions throughout the entire production lifecycle. The Growing Climate Solutions Act will rightly reward farmers nationwide for their efforts to reduce emissions.”

“Our industry truly is from nature and for nature. We thank Senators Stabenow (D-MI) and Braun (R-IN) for their leadership in passing this legislation.”

Former Sens. Saxby Chambliss (R) and Heidi Heitkamp (D), co-chairs of the Bipartisan Policy Center’s Farm and Forest Climate Solutions Task Force, hailed Senate passage of the Growing Climate Solutions Act of 2021.

“The bill provides USDA with clear bipartisan direction to help producers and forest landowners implement practices that capture carbon, reduce emissions, improve soil health, and make their operations more sustainable,” noted former Sen. Heitkamp.

The Growing Climate Solutions Act creates a certification program at USDA to bolster technical assistance and help address challenges that can prevent farmer and forest landowners from fully participating in voluntary environmental credit markets.

“America’s farmers, ranchers, and forest landowners can play a pivotal role in capturing carbon while creating another income stream for their operations. The 92-8 vote in the Senate indicates the strong support for helping producers access new carbon market opportunities,” former Sen. Chambliss said.

And hey, Oregon approved E15 for customers too! Governor Kate Brown signed into law an important measure that will help clean Oregon’s air and reduce their carbon footprint immediately while saving motorists money at the pump. The new law, HB 3051, revises state law to clarify that gasoline sold in Oregon must contain at least 10 percent ethanol and gives retailers the ability to offer higher ethanol blends, like E15, across the state benefitting consumers and the environment.

“We applaud the state of Oregon and Gov. Brown on clarifying that E15 is approved for sale and giving drivers across the state access to a more affordable, better for the environment option at the pump,” said Skor. “Oregon’s approval of E15 comes just weeks after recent news from neighboring Nevada, who enacted legislation to approve E15. We look forward to working with West Coast retailers to offer drivers an engine smart, earth kind fuel.”

The United States House of Representatives doesn’t want to be left out of the good news too! Also on Friday, they voted to utilize the Congressional Review Act to reinstate regulations preventing unnecessary methane leaks in the oil and gas industry, which were rolled back by the Trump administration.

BlueGreen Alliance’s Executive Director Jason Walsh said of the news, “Preventing unnecessary methane leaks is a no brainer; it’s good for workers, communities, the environment, and the economy. Nobody benefited from rolling back this regulation. Reinstating it is the right move. We know that full deployment of existing practices and technologies at new and modified oil and gas facilities will reduce methane emissions in the United States and could create 50,000 jobs over the next ten years. As our nation works to build back from the COVID-19 pandemic, throwing away tens of thousands of good-paying jobs manufacturing and installing the technology needed to stop leaks that are wasteful and unnecessary would be senseless.”

International policy good news

In case you missed this positive piece of news last week, the UK aviation industry launched the first interim decarbonization targets of at least 15% by 2030 and 40% by 2040, having reaffirmed their commitment to net zero by 2050. The new interim targets lay foundations for rapid acceleration of aviation decarbonization in the coming decades, with new data on the impact of Covid-19 on aviation demand. The focus is on ramping up SAF, permanent carbon removal, and new low and zero carbon technologies – such as electric and hydrogen powered aircraft – so that they can become mainstream in the 2030s.

These milestones are reflected on a new chart taking account of the effects of Covid-19 on aviation demand, and complement an ever-growing set of voluntary industry pledges to drive down emissions fast. Importantly, the announcement also kickstarts detailed work to update by the middle of next year the sector’s Decarbonisation Road Map, first published in 2020, that is expected to demonstrate even faster potential to decarbonise aviation through technology innovation.

Another piece of good news is that the Swiss government renewed the GRI partnership to spread sustainability reporting globally. through a new €3.8 million (US$4.6m) program to increase high-quality sustainability disclosure and accountability by organizations in Africa, Hispanic America and South East Asia. The key aims of the four-year Sustainability Reporting for Responsible Business (SRRB) program are to enhance the capacity of companies for reporting; create and improve the environment for transparency and disclosure; and increase the application of corporate sustainability data by stakeholders.

What this means for those in the bio-world is that those three key world regions will have more training, improved access to sustainability professional development, engagement with government on integrating ESG in the public sector, and more programs like those that will further biobased industry in developing markets.

Bottom Line

This is far from good news for biofuels producers in the U.S. but the Senate and House news, Oregon’s bump up in ethanol blending, and other good news like that offers some light in the dark. And like the saying goes, it ain’t over til it’s over, so stay tuned on the other pieces and decisions yet to come from SCOTUS and keep your fingers crossed for more good news next time.

Jim Lane is editor and publisher  of Biofuels Digest where this article was originally published. Biofuels Digest is the most widely read  Biofuels daily read by 14,000+ organizations. Subscribe here.

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Gevo Soars: The Story Behind the Rise http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2021/01/gevo-soars-the-story-behind-the-rise/ http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2021/01/gevo-soars-the-story-behind-the-rise/#respond Thu, 28 Jan 2021 00:16:54 +0000 http://www.altenergystocks.com/?p=10902 Spread the love        by Jim Lane What in the world has gone right with Gevo? For years now, Gevo (Nasdaq:GEVO) has remained true to a vision of low-carbon, advanced renewable fuels, when so many others pivoted away to the world of ABF — Anything But Fuels. Some tried chemicals, cannabis, algae, natural gas, nutraceuticals, vegan foods […]

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by Jim Lane

What in the world has gone right with Gevo?

For years now, Gevo (Nasdaq:GEVO) has remained true to a vision of low-carbon, advanced renewable fuels, when so many others pivoted away to the world of ABF — Anything But Fuels. Some tried chemicals, cannabis, algae, natural gas, nutraceuticals, vegan foods — lately, protein has been all the rage. Gevo was one of the few true believers and paid the price of stock price punishment and near-extinction, for years.

While they weathered a debilitating patent battle with DuPont, until it settled and DuPont imploded. And the collapse of oil prices when the frackers arrived, until many of the frackers imploded. Not to mention the joys of investor impatience as Gevo battled to stabilize their technology at the first commercial deployment in Luverne. The years when no investor believed that carbon prices were here to stay and that low-carbon technology represented a quantum leap in shareholder value creation. The years when the RFS and the LCFS and the Paris climate agreement were unknown to the many and disdained by the few. The years when everything was going electric ‘next year’ and then ‘next year’ and ‘next year’.

Gevo persevered with their technology, and a focus on renewable hydrocarbons, as their stock on a ride through the Valley of Dilution. The company’s many fans stubbornly kept the firm in the upper echelons of the 50 Hottest Companies in the Advanced Bioeconomy. The management kept costs trimmed, laid out a plan for deployment, and waited for the storms to pass. And as was said in Casablanca, “waited and waited and waited.”

The stock dipped to just 49 cents a share last summer, after a series of dilutions, as it assembled a series of impressive offtake agreements, ultimately reaching $1.5B late last summer, and the company raised $50 million in a new share offering. A Praj partnership expanded, and a Koch partnership appeared. The company’s shelf of Whitebox debt was repaid.

And, finally, the stock began to rise as the prospects that Gevo would finally deploy at the scale necessary for thriving, not just surviving, seemed at hand. Gevo announced its Net Zero Project.

Just as the world took notice that all these Net Zero promises coming from companies of late could not be satisfied by a mountain of wind and solar, because those technologies have very small carbon footprints but they are not zero. For every wind and solar project, you need to offset with something carbon negative, and that’s something found in biology. Not to mention, renewable fuel projects can be low carbon, too, even when they are not carbon negative, and the investment returns can look pretty darn good when you sell the resulting fuels into low-carbon markets.

And so, Gevo began to rise, and rise and rise and rise. Back to a dollar a share by November. Four dollars a share in December, and $13.24 a share as of January. A market cap soaring to $2B this past week.

I had a conversation earlier this month with a large investment fund, they were looking for value investments in the renewables space — given how high many of the players had gone. He hadn’t heard of GEVO, which I recommended to his attention. I sure hope he bought it, in volume, the price has doubled since that call.

All of this growth has allowed the company to raise $350 million in a share offering this past week — 43.7 million shares at $8 per. Gevo’s back to being a Wall Street darling after The Wilderness Years, as the 1930s were described with respect to Winston Churchill, who sat in the shadows as unjustly and as long.

Is Gevo back? No, Gevo never left. What’s happened? Those things that Gevo long predicted — a future where renewable fuels would do good, and do well — have come to pass. If they are crowing triumphantly for a few days at their reversal of fortune, we’ll not say a word in criticism, for it has been a long stretch of sailing in the Doldrums, but tomorrow it is back to work.

Net Zero Projects

As Gevo outlined recently, it plans to build Net Zero Projects to produce energy-dense liquid hydrocarbons using renewable energy and Gevo’s proprietary technology. Gevo is currently developing its Net-Zero 1 Project at Lake Preston, South Dakota. Gevo management said they expect Net-Zero 1 would have the capability to produce approximately 45 million gallons per year of liquid hydrocarbons (jet fuel and renewable gasoline) that when burned should have a “net-zero” greenhouse gas footprint as measured across the whole of the lifecycle based on Argonne National Laboratory’s GREET model.

In addition, Net-Zero 1 is expected to produce at least 350,000,000 lbs/yr of high protein animal feed. To reduce and eliminate the fossil resources used in the plant, it is expected to have an anaerobic digestion wastewater treatment plant that is capable of generating enough biogas to run the plant and supply a combined heat and power unit, capable of meeting approximately 30% of the plant’s electricity needs. The remaining 70% of electricity to run the plant is expected to come from wind power. Net-Zero 1 may also obtain renewable natural gas using manure from dairy or beef cows.

Here’s the latest Gevo presentation explaining the what, how, who and when of their deployments and partnerships.

Jim Lane is editor and publisher  of Biofuels Digest where this article was originally published. Biofuels Digest is the most widely read  Biofuels daily read by 14,000+ organizations. Subscribe here.

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Earnings Roundup: Covanta, NFI Group, Green Plains Partners http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2020/08/earnings-roundup-covanta-nfi-group-green-plains-partners/ http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2020/08/earnings-roundup-covanta-nfi-group-green-plains-partners/#respond Tue, 11 Aug 2020 15:49:46 +0000 http://3.211.150.150/?p=10569 Spread the love        by Tom Konrad, Ph.D., CFA Earnings Season Continues Below are three more updates on second quarter earnings which I’ve been sharing with my Patreon supporters.  If you’d like to support my writing and see those thoughts in a more timely manner, consider becoming a patron. becoming a patron. For everyone else, I’m reprinting […]

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by Tom Konrad, Ph.D., CFA

Earnings Season Continues

Below are three more updates on second quarter earnings which I’ve been sharing with my Patreon supporters.  If you’d like to support my writing and see those thoughts in a more timely manner, consider becoming a patron. becoming a patron.

For everyone else, I’m reprinting those thoughts below.

Covanta Earnings
(published August 2nd)

Waste to energy company Covanta Holding Corp (CVA) saw most of its business recovering towards the end of the second quarter.  Management is reluctant to predict if the positive trend will continue into the third quarter and for the rest of the year, but I am optimistic because most of Covanta’s facilities are clustered mostly in the Northeast, where most states have been managing the pandemic relatively well.

The company is coping with lower prices for the scrap metal it sells, and lower demand for its environmental services unit (partially offset by lower operating costs in the division), and  high costs for covid-19 safety measures.

Overall, Covanta seems to be in a good position with a stable business model. Its dividend cut and cost control measures seem more than sufficient to allow the company to deal with  the impact of the pandemic, continue to invest in its growth initiatives, and chip away at its sizable debt.

Green Plains Partners 
(published August 5th)

Investors were pleased with Green Plains’ Partners’ (GPP) second quarter earnings. 

Despite the massive downturn in the ethanol market caused by low gasoline prices and sales, GPP cash flow was basically flat from the year earlier due to its minimum volume commitment with its parent Green Palins, Inc. (GPRE).

With the recent dividend cut, dividend coverage was a very healthy 3.99x.  However, dividend coverage will fall in the third quarter when GPP begins to make amortization payments on its refinanced loan.  Those will amount to $2.5 million a month, lowering distributable cash flow by $7.5 million a quarter to $3.8 million.  Had this amortization already begun, the coverage ratio would have been 1.34 times.

As I discussed in June when the loan was refinanced, Green Plains Partners will not have the leeway to raise its dividend above the current $0.12 per share until the loan is paid off at the start of 2022.  Until then, investors should be satisfied with the current 6% yield and an improving balance sheet as the partnership pays down its debt.

The current 6% yield and the prospects of dividend increases in 2022 seem like more than enough reason to own the stock in the current environment.

NFI Group
(published August 8th)

On July 28th I wrote that I was selling NFI Group (NFYEF, NFI.TO) because “I predict a bumpy road for NFI’s customers as transit and intercity coach ridership plummets in response to Covid.

transit ridershipThe transit bus and coach manufacturer reported earnings on August 6th.  As expected, bus ridership was down more than 50% during the second quarter, and is starting to recover slowly.  Overall, NFI seems to be doing an excellent job navigating the crisis and maintaining liquidity.  Bids from its transit customers remain mostly intact, although its private motor coach (aka intercity bus) orders have virtually dried up.

While the company seems to be doing an admirable job managing the things it can control, it is at the mercy of what it can’t.  Despite the current clouds over its industry, the company has a plan for managing through the crisis. Management believes the industry will recover, and “NFI will become an even more efficient market leader.”

I don’t doubt NFI’s ability to maintain market leadership, cut costs, and pay down debt.  I continue to worry about the long term prospects of transit ridership and intercity bus ridership.  Both will be with us to stay, but I believe that the pandemic will have lasting effects on people’s willingness to use all forms of collective transportation.  In cities, I think the crisis will accelerate the trend towards smaller individual vehicles, like e-bikes and scooters, ride hailing like Uber (UBER) and Lyft (LYFT) and, eventually, small automated individual vehicles which will be available on-demand.

It is this secular change in my long-term outlook for transit that has me selling NFI at a loss today.  If the stock continues to fall, I would definitely consider getting back in at a lower price in a year or two, once the long term prospects for collective transportation become clearer.

Disclosure: Long NFYEF, CVA, GPP, GPRE.

DISCLAIMER: Past performance is not a guarantee or a reliable indicator of future results.  This article contains the current opinions of the author and such opinions are subject to change without notice.  This article has been distributed for informational purposes only. Forecasts, estimates, and certain information contained herein should not be considered as investment advice or a recommendation of any particular security, strategy or investment product.  Information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but not guaranteed.

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10 Clean Energy Stocks for 2020: Updates on GPP, HASI, CVA http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2020/06/10-clean-energy-stocks-for-2020-updates-on-gpp-hasi-cva/ http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2020/06/10-clean-energy-stocks-for-2020-updates-on-gpp-hasi-cva/#respond Fri, 12 Jun 2020 03:25:17 +0000 http://3.211.150.150/?p=10476 Spread the love        by Tom Konrad, Ph.D., CFA Market Decline Last week I warned “The risks in today’s stock market outweigh the possibility of future potential gains.”  Looks like we’re seeing those risks manifest in short order.  The last couple days’ decline have me looking at a few stocks to start adding to my positions again, […]

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by Tom Konrad, Ph.D., CFA

Market Decline

Last week I warned “The risks in today’s stock market outweigh the possibility of future potential gains.”  Looks like we’re seeing those risks manifest in short order.  The last couple days’ decline have me looking at a few stocks to start adding to my positions again, especially MiX Telematics (MIXT) discussed on June 2nd and Green Plain Partners (GPP), discussed below.

Note that this pullback could easily be very early days of a much larger market decline.  We might even see the market fall far enough to test the March lows… any of my buying now is just small amounts, with most of my buying power held in reserve.  As I wrote last month, I balance the level of my buying or selling against my confidence in the valuations of the stocks in question and my predictions of market trends.  Right now I think we’re starting to see some good values in a few stocks again, but I think it’s likely that we will see much better valuations in the weeks or months to come, so I am mostly holding on to my cash and waiting for better values to be created by continued declines.

On the other hand, there’s also a chance that we’ll see an immediate rebound in the next week, which is why I’m doing a little buying now.

The three updates on the individual stocks in the model portfolio which I wrote for my Patreon supporters earlier this week:

Green Plains Partners (GPP) Secures Financing

First published June 8th.

On April 28th, I published Covanta and Green Plains Partners Don’t Let A Crisis Go To Waste about the two companies’ dividend cuts.

The main reason for GPP’s dividend cut was to enable it to refinance and pay down its debt.  I wrote:  “Green Plains Partners needs to replace its revolving credit facility before it matures on July 1st.  Under normal circumstances, I would not be concerned about the prospects of replacing the facility, but this year is not what anyone would consider normal circumstances.  …  GPP has made significant progress in its negotiations with lenders, and that the dividend cut is part of what was needed to get the lenders to agree to extend credit.”

The company completed its refinancing on Thursday, June 4th, something I had predicted would result in “significant stock price gains in the near term” if the refinancing were successful.  As I write on April 8th, GPP is up 78% (total return) from the close on April 28th when I published the above article, compared to an increase of 12% for the S&P 500.

Now that the short term gain has happened, we need to re-assess the value of the stock.  The current $0.48 annual dividend amounts to a 5.3% yield at the current $8.94 stock price.  That is a little low for an MLP.  The other renewable energy MLP I own, Enviva (EVA) currently pays an 8% yield, and it is on more solid financial footing than GPP.  EVA has been raising its quarterly dividend by 1/2 of a cent to 1 cent a quarter, or about 4% on an annualized basis.

GPP has stated that it will be able to raise its dividend after paying down its debt in 18 months.  At that point, it should have the free cash flow to raise its dividend back to the annual $1.90 a share it was paying before the recent cut.  I don’t expect it to return to this dividend immediately, but more likely to increase its dividend slowly and use the retained cash flow for new investments and to build a reputation for long term dividend increases like the reputation Enviva currently enjoys.

A reasonable guess would be that Green Plains Partners will be paying a $1/year annual dividend in 2 years, and will give guidance for 10% annual dividend increases for several years going forward at that point.  If I am right, I would value the stock at somewhere between $12 and $20 in 2 year’s time.  Discounting back two years at 10% minus the current 5.3% yield, I arrive at a current valuation of $11 to $18.

Given that valuation, I will start selling a little of my current (large) position if the stock reaches $11 in the next few months, and continue selling more if it rises from there.  If Green Plains Partners somehow rose above the top of my valuation range (I don’t expect this) in the near term, I would sell my entire holding, with plans to re-acquire if it fell back later.

For now, I’m comfortable holding at $9 and (barring a renewed stock market decline) expect the stock to rise over the next week as investors digest the good news.

Hannon Armstrong (HASI) Update (June 9th)

Sustainable Infrastructure financier Hannon Armstrong has been operating well with a remote workforce since early in the pandemic.  It reported strong first quarter results on May 7th, and is unlikely to suffer more than minor impacts from the coronavirus shutdown.  Nearly all the infrastructure it finances is essential, and Hannon Armstrong is generally quite senior to other suppliers of capital of the projects it finances, so temporary dips in wholesale power prices and the like are unlikely to significantly affect its revenues.

To the extent infrastructure projects are delayed, funding of new project is likely to be lower in the second quarter, and possibly longer, but the bulk of Hannon Armstrong’s income comes from previously financed projects.

In the medium term, the prospects for new infrastructure to finance look very bright, since both Democrats and Republicans are talking about an infrastructure package to boost the economy.  While such a package may not be explicitly targeted towards sustainable infrastructure if the Republicans remain in control, here will inevitably be some sustainable projects that get done and need financing which Hannon Armstrong can provide.

After I added a cash covered put on HASI to the model portfolio at the start of April, the stock has rapidly roared back as the market recognizes the good news outlined above.  With the stock bouncing around $30, I consider Hannon Armstrong to be fairly valued.  As the many cash covered puts I sold in my manage portfolio (GGEIP) with strike prices in the $17.50 to $22.50 range expire over the coming months, I will be looking to replace them if the stock price dips, perhaps as a part of an overall market pullback.

Covanta (CVA) Update (June 10th)

I was fairly bullish on Coventa Hodling Corp’s (CVA) prospects in my April 28th article on its dividend cut.  I expected that the majority of the company’s revenues would be stable because they come from tip fees for residential trash.  I thought other sources of revenue (energy sales, recycled metals, and commercial tip fees would be impacted), but there was some potential upside in the “profiled” waste segment due to additional medical waste caused by the covid-19 pandemic.

Here’s how Covanta broke down the impact in a recent presentation:

In short, I seem to have been broadly correct, although it appears that additional profiled waste from the pandemic may not have been enough to offset losses of profiled waste from other sources.

Looking ahead, Covanta had been spending substantially all of its pre-covid cash flow to pay its $1 annual dividend, which has been cut to $0.32.  I do not expect Covanta to return its dividend to the old level even when the effects of the pandemic are passed, but rather to retain most of the remaining free cash flow to fund its investments and pay down its substantial debt burden.

At the current market price of $9.81 (up 26% from $7.76 on Apr 28th, compared to a 12% rise in the S&P 500) , this amounts to a 3.3% dividend, which I expect Covanta will begin to raise at something like a 5% to 15% annual rate so that it can begin to acquire a reputation for consistent dividend growth.  A 5% dividend growth rate could probably be maintained permanently by also growing revenues and reducing interest expense with the retained cash flow.  I think a 10% dividend growth rate or significant stock buybacks are more likely because the company will have a lot of room to increased the dividend for years because of the recent cut, and long term dividend increases at double-digit growth rates are a reliable way for a company to boost its stock price and use it to raise cheap equity capital.

Based on these expectations, I think a reasonable valuation range for Covanta today is somewhere between $10 and $15 per share, with the higher future dividend growth rates justifying the higher valuations.  Since my expectations are biased towards the higher future dividend growth rates, and the downside of holding the stock while I wait and see seems limited, I’m happy to hold.

Disclosure: Long positions all the stocks mentioned.

DISCLAIMER: Past performance is not a guarantee or a reliable indicator of future results.  This article contains the current opinions of the author and such opinions are subject to change without notice.  This article has been distributed for informational purposes only. Forecasts, estimates, and certain information contained herein should not be considered as investment advice or a recommendation of any particular security, strategy or investment product.  Information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but not guaranteed.

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Covanta and Green Plains Partners Don’t Let A Crisis Go To Waste http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2020/04/covanta-and-green-plains-partners-dont-let-a-crisis-go-to-waste/ http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2020/04/covanta-and-green-plains-partners-dont-let-a-crisis-go-to-waste/#comments Tue, 28 Apr 2020 01:18:00 +0000 http://3.211.150.150/?p=10387 Spread the love        by Tom Konrad, Ph.D., CFA Last week, two of the stocks in my Ten Clean Energy Stocks model portfolio cut their dividends.  Covanta Holding Corp (CVA) dropped its quarterly payout from $0.25 to $0.08 (a 68% cut) while Green Plains Partners (GPP) slashed its quarterly distribution from $0.475 to $0.12, a drop of […]

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by Tom Konrad, Ph.D., CFA

Last week, two of the stocks in my Ten Clean Energy Stocks model portfolio cut their dividends.  Covanta Holding Corp (CVA) dropped its quarterly payout from $0.25 to $0.08 (a 68% cut) while Green Plains Partners (GPP) slashed its quarterly distribution from $0.475 to $0.12, a drop of 74.75%.

Before reducing their dividends, both companies had payout ratios near 100%, meaning that substantially all of their free cash flow was going to pay dividends.  In general, companies are very reluctant to cut their dividends because it is a signal that their management thinks they cannot grow without retaining more cash, and it typically sends the stock price tumbling.

I initially included both in the model portfolio because I believed that there were unlikely to be any near term factors that would force either to cut its dividend.  For Green Plains, I felt that a possible recovery of the ethanol market would lead to substantial capital gains, and that the then 14.3% dividend yield was sufficient compensation for the risk if the ethanol market remained in its then miserable state.  For Covanta, I saw a company with solid growth plans which would likely allow it to increase its cash flow in 2 to 3 years, after which it could start paying down its substantial debt load without having to cut its dividend.

The Coronavirus pandemic changed this calculation: all companies are experiencing business disruption, and dividend cuts for both became priced in when their stock prices fell more than 50%.  Investors’ no longer were concerned that these companies might not be able to maintain their dividends: they knew dividend cuts were coming as a near certainty.

Note: My supporters on Patreon got an early look at this article.  Want to support my work and get previews of my writing?  Join them here.

Differences

While the parallels are obvious, a deeper dive reveals significant contrasts.  Ethanol is a direct competitor for gasoline, so the large drop changed what had already been some of the toughest ethanol market conditions in years into one where even the most efficient producers lose money on every gallon of ethanol they sell.  With ethanol producers shutting down refineries, GPP’s transportation and storage facilities are also seeing less business.

Covanta

Covanta Fairfax
Covanta’s Fairfax facility in Lorton, VA

In contrast, energy from waste firm Covanta’s revenues are much more stable.  Approximately three quarters of Covanta’s revenue comes from tip fees- the money the company is paid by haulers to accept trash.  Of the remaining, most is revenue from electricity sales, plus small slice from the sale of metals recovered from the ash left after incineration.

The majority of Covanta’s trash is residential.  At least in my New York town, the the stay at home order has led to higher residential trash volumes being taken to the transfer station.  Apparently, now that people are spending more time at home, they are taking the opportunity to declutter.  This trend may also be a boon to another recent stock pick, Ebay (EBAY).  If this local increase in trash volume is indicative of the general trend across the Northeast (where the majority of Covanta’s plants are located), the tipping fee portion of its revenues are likely safe.  The company’s medical waste disposal business even offers some potential for upside out of the crisis

Covanta medical waste
A web ad touting Covanta’s ability to safely dispose of medical waste.

While the quarter of Covanta’s revenue which comes from energy and recycling is likely to fall in the short term, the majority of its revenue seems safe.  If the government decides to do an infrastructure program to stimulate the economy as the crisis abates, that should lead to a recovery of the prices Covanta is able to get for its recycled metals.

Green Plains Partners

The Green Plains Partners also can expect its revenues to remain relatively stable despite the miserable state of the ethanol industry.  This is because GPP enjoys take-or-pay arrangements with its parent, Green Plains (GPRE).  As long as GPRE remains solvent, Green Plains Partners’ revenue should remain relatively stable.

GPP
Green Plains Partners rail terminal

With ethanol producers operating at negative margins, and rapidly taking ethanol facilities offline, it would not do to take GPRE’s solvency for granted.  However, the company is relatively well capitalized and has also been taking steps to improve its capital resources.

Green Plains, Inc. suspended its own dividend in mid 2019.  In a presentation to investors on March 4th, the company summarized its efforts to improve its balance sheet.  It realized approximately $780 million in proceeds from asset sales between October 2018 and December 2019.  It used these sales to reduce or deconsolidate debt by nearly $1 billion, and had $270 million in cash on hand.

Other than Green Plains Partners’ revolving credit facility, Green Plains, Inc, does not have significant debt maturing before 2022.  Green Plains Partners needs to replace its revolving credit facility before it matures on July 1st.  Under normal circumstances, I would not be concerned about the prospects of replacing the facility, but this year is not what anyone would consider normal circumstances.

The April 16th press release which announced the dividend cut also quoted Todd Becker, president and chief executive officer of Green Plains Partners: “We believe this decision by our board of directors will strengthen our balance sheet for the benefit of all stakeholders and create long term value for our unit holders.  We are currently working with our existing lender group to extend our credit line which will likely include a change to overall commitment levels and pricing, as well as require principal amortization as part of the transaction. Our goal is to pay off the debt within the next 18 months through this distribution reduction and other actions.”

I take this quote to mean that GPP has made significant progress in its negotiations with lenders, and that the dividend cut is part of what was needed to get the lenders to agree to extend credit.

Given all these factors, it is no surprise that GPP cut its dividend.  However, both GPP and GPRE seem to be doing what it takes to make it through this crisis.  Long term, GPP is likely to come out of this as a stronger company with less debt.

Conclusion

Given the hard times the ethanol industry is experiencing – due both to low price of gasoline (with which it competes) and political favors to oil refiners from the Trump administration, it’s no wonder than Green Plains Partners is trading at about a third of its already-depressed price from the start of the year.  I don’t expect the company to recover its losses, but I expect to see significant stock price gains in the near term if the company announces new financing to replace the expiring revolving credit facility.

In contrast, I am at a loss to explain the full extent of Covanta’s recent decline.  When a stock declines and I can’t explain it, my usual reaction is to buy.  Which is what I am doing.

Disclosure: Long CVA, GPP, GPRE, EBAY.

DISCLAIMER: Past performance is not a guarantee or a reliable indicator of future results.  This article contains the current opinions of the author and such opinions are subject to change without notice.  This article has been distributed for informational purposes only. Forecasts, estimates, and certain information contained herein should not be considered as investment advice or a recommendation of any particular security, strategy or investment product.  Information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but not guaranteed.

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Budget Cut at Methanex http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2020/04/budget-cut-at-methanex/ http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2020/04/budget-cut-at-methanex/#respond Thu, 16 Apr 2020 18:04:33 +0000 http://3.211.150.150/?p=10379 Spread the love        by Debra Fiakas, CFA Initially investors were worried about a few delayed orders as a consequence of the coronavirus outbreak in China.  The global supply chain, of which China is a critical link, would be temporarily interrupted by work stoppages in that country.  As the virus jumped to other countries it became clear that businesses […]

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by Debra Fiakas, CFA

Initially investors were worried about a few delayed orders as a consequence of the coronavirus outbreak in China.  The global supply chain, of which China is a critical link, would be temporarily interrupted by work stoppages in that country.  As the virus jumped to other countries it became clear that businesses all over the world could experience business interruption and that could mean significant earnings erosion. 

Investor alarm spiked as denial and dysfunctional appeared to be the main themes in the U.S. policy response to the situation.  Panic ensued destroying billions in the U.S. capital base.  Bank of America estimates the U.S. economy could shrink by 12% in the second quarter ending June and that for the full year 2020 the U.S. gross domestic product could shrink by 0.8%.  As many as 3.5 million jobs will be eliminated.

Public spending has had to take the place of private capital to stabilize the economy by creating near-term liquidity.  While that might help the unemployed for a period of time, it will not support capital spending in the long term.  Caput will go the projects that investors might have been counting on to drive growth in the years to come.

Methanol producer Methanex (MEOH:  Nasdaq) is among the first to announce a change in capital investment plans.  Last week, Methanex announced the decision to delay a $500 million investment in a methanol plant planned for its Louisiana complex.  The Geismer 3 project was to be built next to the existing Geismar 1 and Geismar 2 facilities.  The third plant will be delayed at least a year and a half.  Management cited unfavorable demand conditions as the reason for the delay. 

Geismar
Site of Planned Geismar 3 Methanol Plant

As far as Methanex is concerned it is not a matter of not having access to capital.  The company has $800 million in cash sitting in it bank accounts after drawing down on an existing credit facility.  Like many operations that facing difficult market conditions, Methanex is tightening its corporate belt.  Not only is the Geismar 3 project on hold, Methanex management trimmed $25 million from its regular capital spending budget as well.

With the brakes on growth investment, shareholders are left hanging to a shaky rung on the ladder.  Is MEOH a hold or a sell?  Expectations are for a loss in fiscal year ending June 2020.   It is a lost year.  The stock is trading at 13.0 times projected fiscal year 2021 earnings, a consensus figure of that has been dramatically reduced over the last two months.  Even after the precipitous sell-off in recent weeks, MEOH is trading at a higher forward earnings multiple than historic levels.

When times are difficult it would seem prudent to remain with companies that have the financial strength to stay the course until recovery comes round.  Methanex management appears to have just taken the steps that will do exactly that  –  reduce spending and fortify the bank account with a bundle of cash!

Neither the author of the Small Cap Strategist web log, Crystal Equity Research nor its affiliates have a beneficial interest in the companies mentioned herein.

This article was first published on the Small Cap Strategist weblog on 4/3/20.  

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Hand Sanitizer: Salvation for Ethanol Producers? http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2020/03/hand-sanitizer-salvation-for-ethanol-producers/ http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2020/03/hand-sanitizer-salvation-for-ethanol-producers/#respond Tue, 24 Mar 2020 14:39:28 +0000 http://3.211.150.150/?p=10344 Spread the love        by Jim Lane If you’ve not heard, NuGenTec is looking for Distillers to help supply Ethanol for Hand Sanitizers in California! We have two automated bottling lines waiting for ethanol to produce 8oz and 16oz gel type hand sanitizers, they write. You can learn more here. And as we reported this morning, Aemetis (AMTX) […]

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by Jim Lane

If you’ve not heard, NuGenTec is looking for Distillers to help supply Ethanol for Hand Sanitizers in California! We have two automated bottling lines waiting for ethanol to produce 8oz and 16oz gel type hand sanitizers, they write. You can learn more here.

And as we reported this morning, Aemetis (AMTX) is one of those companies jumping into the market, even as transport fuel demand falls off, driving fuel ethanol prices into an all-time low range of around $0.70 per gallon.

hand sanitizer

The shortage is real

If you’ve been trying to buy hand-sanitizer, it’s been hard to find. Here in Digestville, we’ve been making our own from 25 percent Aloe Vera and 75 percent rubbing alcohol. Most authorities have emphasized a 2:1 alcohol to Aloe Vera ratio, but Aloe Vera has also been hard to find near Digest HQ. On Friday, a shipment arrived but it was the industrial bags that go in large dispensers at offices and hospitals, not the individual spray bottle variety.

The catalyst

The catalyst? In response to the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB) created exemptions allowing certain alcohol fuel permit holders to sell ethanol (alcohol) for use in the production of hand sanitizers.

Consequently. Aemetis, Inc. said its 65 million gallon per year ethanol plant near Modesto, California has begun shipments of 200 proof alcohol for use in the production of hand sanitizer, which is in a significant shortage created by the worldwide spread of Coronavirus (COVID-19).

“Can’t hand sanitizer save the industry now?”

As an Argus media reporter asked at an emergency RFA online press conference on the coronavirus crisis, “why can’t the whole industry pivot to industrial ethanol production? Why can’t hand sanitizer save the industry now?”

The response from Randy Doyal, CEO, Al-Corn Clean Fuel, based in Minnesota was that there would be less vodka but more hand sanitizer coming in the next week to 10 days.

The good news

As Raymond James’ Pavel Molchanov observed this week, “Just as automakers converted their plants to supply tanks and fighter jets during World War II, and those same companies are now looking at supplying ventilators, many other enterprises amid the COVID-19 crisis are looking for creative ways to address the public health emergency. Here is one that, we admit, we would not ordinarily think about: producing hand sanitizer from corn ethanol.

“Aemetis, an early entrant into this market, points to prospective pricing of $70+ per gallon (yes, really). Amid oil prices at nearly 20-year lows, well below $30/Bbl, it goes without saying that ethanol prices are depressed: currently around $1.00/gallon. Selling into the hand sanitizer market can offer pricing that is 70x higher. Yes, you read that right. To be sure, the economics vary on a site-by-site basis, based on (among other things) proximity to hand sanitizer production facilities. Aemetis (AMTX), which produces ethanol in California, has the advantage of being located on the West Coast, and last week it became one of the first ethanol players to take advantage of the Treasury’s authorization. From our conversation with Aemetis, here is the economic proposition, in general terms… Retail stores are selling hand sanitizer at around $1.50/ oz. Of that, $0.50 goes to the retailer and distribution, $0.20 for packaging, and $0.20 for the compounder. That leaves $0.60 for the ethanol feedstock. With 128 ounces in a gallon, the implied selling price is upwards of $70/gallon.”

Raymond James rates this as as “a textbook ESG business opportunity” for which the economics look very lucrative. “At a time when ethanol prices are ultra-depressed due to the oil price meltdown, this is a fascinating, below-the-radar opportunity for ethanol producers, including Green Plains,” Molchanov writes.

Some market sizing

Hmm. Let’s quickly demolish the thought that this is anything but a small-scale opportunity.

The recommended usage, by the CDC, is 1.5 mL per application. Assuming, say, two usages per day by everyone in the United States, that would add up to around 45 million gallons of sanitizer over the next 6 months. Now, sanitizer is around 1/3 alcohol — so consider the maximum market size to be around 30 million gallons.

That’s US ethanol production for about 17 hours.

Now, we’ve assumed a perfect market. Imperfections abound. Two could make the market bigger, and that’s over application or simply stocking up on extra hand sanitizer. But many more factors could make the market smaller. First, not every person in America may hand-sanitize twice a day – they might wash their hands, do nothing, or the expected usage may not apply to children or people sheltering in place. Also, there are the existing suppliers of industrial alcohols. And, there is the problem of offtake contracting, manufacturing, shipping, retail display contracting and so forth.

And, the more ethanol producers that qualify for this market, the lower the price will go. Not to mention that the entire market is predicated on a waiver granted by the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau. And we know how reliable the US government has been on waivers that are friendly to the US ethanol industry.

To pivot entirely to producing hand sanitizer, every adult in the United States would have to sanitize more than 625 times per day.

Doesn’t mean it’s not a clever, niche opportunity. A 60-million-gallon ethanol plant like Aemetis’ Keyes facility could switch over say 33 percent of its production over the next 6 months or so, and the potential upside is very lucrative. So long as everyone doesn’t jump into the market and crash the price. Which presumably they will.

Donation in the offing

Some producers are simply donating ethanol to support the community.

Today, we hear that two Iowa Renewable Fuels Association members sent the first donated shipment of Iowa ethanol and glycerin to the state of Iowa to be used by Iowa Prison Industries for the production of hand sanitizer during the national shortage. The donation is made by Iowa ethanol producer Absolute Energy and Iowa biodiesel producer Western Iowa Energy. The Iowa Renewable Fuels Association (IRFA) worked with Iowa Prison Industries to secure the shipment of these products and other necessary ingredients. Templeton Rye is also providing distilled water for the project. The finished product will be distributed free of charge by the state of Iowa for priority use.

Reaction from the stakeholders

“Aemetis is moving quickly to help address the significant demand for hand sanitizer products in light of the COVID-19 pandemic during this time of national emergency,” said Andy Foster, President of Aemetis Advanced Fuels Keyes, Inc. “As the WHO and CDC strongly recommend the use of hand sanitizer products to help prevent the spread of Coronavirus, Aemetis is utilizing our ethanol production capability to address the current shortage of hand sanitizer by increasing the supply of high-proof alcohol used in the manufacturing of sanitizer products,” said Foster.

Jim Lane is editor and publisher  of Biofuels Digest where this article was originally published. Biofuels Digest is the most widely read  Biofuels daily read by 14,000+ organizations. Subscribe here.

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Trump Administration Flip-Flops On Oil Refinery Waivers Again, Farm Groups Protest Again http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2020/03/10330/ http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2020/03/10330/#respond Mon, 09 Mar 2020 18:54:47 +0000 http://3.211.150.150/?p=10330 Spread the love        by Jim Lane In Washington, what must have become a weary if vigilant posse of the nation’s biofuel and farm advocates are out on the hustings again this week, over a fresh attack on the US Renewable Fuel Standard, this one led by officials in the Trump Administration, if a story reported by […]

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by Jim Lane

In Washington, what must have become a weary if vigilant posse of the nation’s biofuel and farm advocates are out on the hustings again this week, over a fresh attack on the US Renewable Fuel Standard, this one led by officials in the Trump Administration, if a story reported by Bloomberg stands up against scrutiny.

What has been described as a “misinformation campaign spearheaded by Senator Ted Cruz” is seeking to overturn a unanimous court decision that would halt the Environmental Protection Agency’s abuse of Small Refinery Exemptions (SREs) under the Renewable Fuel Standard.  

The backstory

In a unanimous panel, the Tenth Circuit held that EPA abused its discretion in granting SREs to three small refineries in 2016 because the statute allows the agency only to grant an extension of exemptions that have been continuously extended and in effect since 2011. In the case of these three refineries, there were no previous exemptions to “extend.” The Court also held that EPA exceeded its authority by granting SREs that were based in part on economic hardship unrelated to RFS compliance. Finally, the Court ruled that even if EPA had the authority to grant the SREs, its decision was nonetheless arbitrary and capricious because EPA failed to address its own analysis that refineries recover their RFS compliance costs.

The Whole Darn Story

We covered the controversy and the Tenth Circuit’s actions in Hardship Relief:  Tenth Circuit strikes down three small oil refinery waivers in win for renewable fuels.

corn
The National Corn Growers Association is among the groups lobbying against an appeal of the 10th Circuit court ruling on Small Refinery Exemptions (SREs).

Statements from the stakeholders

The following joint statement was issued by the National Corn Growers Association, the Renewable Fuels Association, the American Soybean Association, the National Farmers Union, Growth Energy, the American Coalition for Ethanol, the National Biodiesel Board, the Iowa Renewable Fuels Association, and Fuels America.

“The president needs to understand that Ted Cruz doesn’t care about this administration or families across the heartland who are counting on the White House to keep its promises. Just days ago, thousands of farmers rallied behind Secretary Perdue, who expressed his confidence that we had finally reached the end of a long and painful fight against EPA demand destruction. Tearing open that wound, against the advice of rural champions and the president’s own advisors, would be viewed as a stunning betrayal of America’s rural workers and farmers. We cannot stress enough how important this decision is to the future of the rural economy and to President Trump’s relationship with leaders and voters across the heartland. Ted Cruz comes back year after year with the same lies about refinery profits, disproven over and over by economists, the EPA, and even by Big Oil. We urge the president to stand up now against this misguided effort to torpedo the rural recovery.”

BIO VP for Industrial and Environmental section, Stephanie Batchelor, added:

“It’s very unfortunate to hear the administration has chosen to go in this direction,They are doubling down on policies that have already been determined illegal and will be reaffirmed by the courts. This delay will only increase the pain biofuel producers and farmers are already feeling; further undermining innovation and investment in sustainable fuels.”

The Iowa Corn Growers Association chimed in.

“If EPA appeals this case, the EPA is not doing their job or following their mission to protect human and environmental health. Instead the EPA is involved in politics and their decision not to follow the Court’s direction to implement the RFS law as intended and allow oil companies to abuse the use of RFS waivers. The abuse will allow less renewable fuels that are proven to have benefits to human health and our environment,” says ICGA President Jim Greif and farmer from Monticello, Iowa. “Ethanol is a renewable fuel that is clean burning and homegrown. In addition, the RFS provides market access for corn farmers and the ethanol industry to provide just ten and up to fifteen percent of the fuel supply in the U.S. To say we are frustrated and disappointed is an understatement. As we prepare for spring planting and a new growing season, we need market assurances and access rather than the continued fight we are faced with and having to defend the law and Court’s decision to follow the RFS.”

The Bottom Line

The appeal is going to have to be taken up by the US Supreme Court, since this was a 10th Circuit Court of Appeal decision, and 1.1 percent of all cases are granted a writ of certiorati by the Supreme Court. And, these are in cases where there is judicial controversy — such as disagreements between two federal judicial circuits.

It takes four justices to bring the Supreme Court into the picture — to some extent, we might see this as a delaying tactic by the Trump Administration, since the ruling does not appear to be particularly, as the phrase goes, “cert worthy”.

Jim Lane is editor and publisher  of Biofuels Digest where this article was originally published. Biofuels Digest is the most widely read  Biofuels daily read by 14,000+ organizations. Subscribe here.

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Biofuel Industry Reacts To EPA New Renewable Fuel Standard http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2019/12/biofuel-industry-reacts-to-epa-new-renewable-fuel-standard/ http://www.altenergystocks.com/archives/2019/12/biofuel-industry-reacts-to-epa-new-renewable-fuel-standard/#respond Thu, 26 Dec 2019 15:58:07 +0000 http://3.211.150.150/?p=10195 Spread the love        Yay or Nay for EPA? RFS Volumes out for 2020, Biodiesel for 2021 – What’s the reaction from industry? by Jim Lane What’s the reaction from industry? Coal for Christmas? Should Santa bring coal for EPA’s stocking this year? Do the biofuels and agriculture industries think the EPA just put coal in their stocking? […]

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Yay or Nay for EPA? RFS Volumes out for 2020, Biodiesel for 2021 – What’s the reaction from industry?

by Jim Lane

lump of coal

What’s the reaction from industry? Coal for Christmas?

Should Santa bring coal for EPA’s stocking this year? Do the biofuels and agriculture industries think the EPA just put coal in their stocking? Is it thumbs up or thumbs down from biofuel industry advocates on last week’s U.S. Environmental Protection Agency renewable fuel volumes? What about the exempted volumes?

The Ruling – Rotten or Respectable?

First, a bit on the EPA ruling that establishes the required renewable volumes under the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) program for 2020, and the biomass-based diesel volume for 2021. Here are the numbers from EPA:

Final Volume Requirements
  2019 2020
Statutory Volumes
2020
Proposed Volumes
2020
Final Volumes
2021
Final Volumes
Cellulosic biofuel (billion gallons) 0.42 10.50 0.54 0.59 n/a
Biomass-based diesel (billion gallons) 2.1 ≥1.0 n/a 2.43 2.43
Advanced biofuel (billion gallons) 4.92 15.00 5.04 5.09 n/a
Renewable fuel (billion gallons) 19.92 30.00 20.04 20.09 n/a

a All values are ethanol-equivalent on an energy content basis, except for BBD which is biodiesel-equivalent.

The key elements of the EPA action are as follows:

  • “Conventional” biofuel volumes, primarily met by corn ethanol, will be maintained at the 15 billion gallon target set by Congress for 2020.
  • Cellulosic biofuel volumes for 2020, and thus advanced biofuel volumes, will increase by almost 170 million gallons over the 2019 standard.
  • Biomass-based diesel volumes for 2021 will be equivalent to the standard for 2020, still more than double the statutory requirement.
  • EPA will closely examine the labeling requirements for E15 fuel and move forward with clarifying regulations as needed.

According to the EPA press release:

Through this rule, EPA has modified the RFS program by projecting small refinery relief to ensure that these final volumes are met, while adjudicating small refinery relief when appropriate. As proposed, we are finalizing a projection methodology based on the 2016-2018 annual average of exempted volumes had EPA strictly followed the Department of Energy (DOE) recommendations of 770 million Renewable Identification Numbers (RINs) in those years, including granting 50 percent relief where DOE recommended 50 percent relief. This is our general approach to adjudicating Small Refinery Exemption (SRE) petitions going forward, beginning with 2019 SRE petitions and including 2020 SRE petitions and beyond, we are committed to following the DOE recommendations. By proposing effectively 15.8 billion gallons for 2020 we will ensure meeting our target of 15 billion gallons.

“Through President Trump’s leadership, this Administration continues to promote domestic ethanol and biodiesel production, supporting our Nation’s farmers and providing greater energy security,” said EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler. “President Trump committed to our nation’s farmers that biofuel requirements would be expanded in 2020. At the EPA we are delivering on that promise and ensuring a net of 15 billion gallons of conventional biofuel are blended into the nation’s fuel supply.”

EPA has modified the way RFS obligations are determined to better ensure that these volumes are met, while still allowing for relief for small refineries consistent with the direction provided by Congress under the statute. By proposing effectively 15. 8 billion gallons we will net out at 15 billion.

More information can be found on the EPA website here.

Reactions from the Industry

Ok, so now that we know the numbers, what’s the reaction? Sure, there are increases in the volumes but is it enough?

Overall consensus is no, not even close. But it’s not just the volume numbers that have folks up in arms – it’s the small refinery exemptions. The EPA is counting only half of the exempted volumes actually granted over the past three years.

Just a taste of what they are saying:

The EPA is playing games…

They blew it…

They’ve missed the mark…

Disappointed, frustrated, and quite frankly angry…

This is not what we agreed to in that meeting on Sept. 12 or Oct. 4…

Trust has been lost…

EPA has decimated demand for more than 4 billion gallons of renewable fuel…

We’ve gone from promises of a giant package to the reality of a lump of coal…

Stifles investment in green energy breakthroughs…

Leads to more uncertainty for renewable fuels…

We will keep holding EPA’s feet to the fire…

I don’t think the White House truly understands the depth of discontent in farm country…

Here’s more on what key players in the biofuels industry had to say:

Growth Energy asks EPA to take further action

“While the final rule provides an uptick in federal biofuel targets and signals an intent to account for demand lost to oil refinery exemptions, Growth Energy stressed that the agency must enforce those volumes by accounting for exemptions accurately and that EPA Administrator Wheeler must take additional steps to uphold the administration’s October 4th commitments to rural America.”

“President Trump pledged to deliver certainty and stability for America’s farmers and biofuel producers by restoring integrity to the RFS,” said Growth Energy CEO Emily Skor. “While we’re encouraged that EPA is finally taking steps to follow the law and account for biofuel demand lost to secretive oil refinery exemptions, this rule leaves important work unfinished.

“Integrity is restored to the RFS only if the agency accurately accounts for exemptions it will grant. The rule uses an accounting formula based on Department of Energy recommendations, which EPA has a poor track record of following. All eyes will now be on EPA’s next round of refinery exemptions and future targets, which will signal whether Administrator Wheeler is truly committed to ending demand destruction.

“Additionally, Administrator Wheeler must act swiftly to break down remaining market barriers to E15 as promised in the October 4th EPA announcement. When the RFS is working as intended and government has eliminated market access barriers, drivers across the nation will able to take full advantage of the administration’s move to unleash sales of E15 year-round.”

National Biodiesel Board disappointed with lack of growth in 2020 RFS volumes

The NBB said that the EPA rule blocks growth for the biodiesel industry and Kurt Kovarik, NBB’s VP of Federal Affairs, said, “EPA’s final rule for the 2020 RFS volumes is simply out of step with Congressional intent and President Trump’s promises. This week, Congress and the president are extending the biodiesel tax incentive through 2022 and sending an unmistakable signal that they support continued growth of biodiesel and renewable diesel. At the same time, EPA Administrator Wheeler is doing everything he can to block that growth.”

Kovarik continued, “Despite his statement to the press, Administrator Wheeler’s method for estimating future small refinery exemptions does not provide assurance to the biodiesel and renewable diesel market. The best estimate of future exemptions is an average of the 38 billion gallons exempted over the past three years. Even if EPA had included that estimate, though, there is nothing in today’s rule to ensure that the agency will get these exemptions under control.”

BIO says EPA’s rules are leading to more uncertainty, stifles investment in green energy

“Unfortunately, this final rule from EPA does not alleviate concerns we had when the draft rule was published earlier this year,” said Stephanie Batchelor, VP of BIO’s Industrial and Environmental Section. “The lack of growth for advanced and cellulosic biofuels, and the failure to fully reallocate the gallons lost from the drastic expansion of small refinery exemptions, will continue to stifle investment in green energy breakthroughs. This final rule will have a long-lasting negative impact on the country’s renewable fuels industry as we’ve already seen plants close because of the agency’s manipulation of the policy to date.”

Iowa Biodiesel Board says biodiesel flatlined in final rule and future small refinery exemptions underestimated

Grant Kimberley, executive director of the Iowa Biodiesel Board, said, “The EPA rule does not provide positive signals to a market longing for assurance. EPA’s actions have already decimated demand for more than 4 billion gallons of renewable fuel, including biodiesel and renewable diesel. With this final rule, the agency has once again declined to uphold the integrity of a federal law meant to encourage the use of renewable fuels in America, siding with oil company interests at the expense of family farmers. Ten biodiesel producers have closed their doors or drastically cut production due to loss of demand.”

“In addition to our discouragement over lack of growth, the industry does not have confidence in EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler’s plan for estimating future small refinery exemptions, based on EPA’s past actions. There is no assurance these exemptions will be brought under control or properly accounted for. Meanwhile, we stand ready to meet continued sustainable growth of several hundred million gallons every year.”

Iowa Renewable Fuels Association says EPA rule fails to restore RFS integrity, Trump turns back on previous promises

President Trump turned his back on certainty for farmers and failed to keep the September 12 deal,” stated Iowa Renewable Fuels Association (IRFA) Executive Director Monte Shaw. “Instead of certainty, we are essentially being told to trust the EPA to uphold the RFS in the future even though for the past three years the EPA has routinely undermined the program. Every farmer and biofuel supporter I have talked to is deeply disappointed, frustrated, and quite frankly angry. I don’t think the White House truly understands the depth of discontent in farm country.”

In order to remove EPA discretion from the process, biofuels supporters united behind a plan to account for SREs using a three-year rolling average of actual refinery exemptions granted. President Trump agreed to this plan in a September 12 Oval Office meeting with Midwestern elected officials, including Iowa’s Governor and Senators. Today, however, President Trump sided with EPA’s alternative plan which relies on using a three-year rolling average of U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) recommendations for SREs, which EPA has routinely ignored and is under no legal obligation to follow.

“IRFA today called upon the EPA to immediately post DOE recommendations – past, present and future – on their SRE website dashboard,” stated Shaw. “Market participants must have faith in the process and must know whether or not EPA is following the DOE recommendations. Further, to prevent any entity from gaming the system, this information should be made public to all market participants at the same time. In just a few months, EPA will begin adjudicating the 2019 compliance year SREs. It will be their first opportunity to demonstrate good faith and we’ll be watching very, very closely.”

Click here to see IRFA’s full letter to the EPA.

American Coalition for Ethanol calls RFS rule a failure to uphold President’s biofuel deal

American Coalition for Ethanol (ACE) CEO Brian Jennings said, “Over the course of the past few months, we’ve gone from promises of a ‘giant package’ to the reality of a lump of coal. To say we are disappointed is an understatement. While it was well understood this rulemaking would not make farmers and the ethanol industry ‘whole’ for the damage EPA has done by abusing the small refinery exemption provision of the RFS, we were led to believe the rule would represent a step in the right direction, an opportunity to account in a meaningful way for refinery waivers.

“We are forced yet again to continue defending the RFS and fighting EPA’s mismanagement of the program in the third branch of government, but this is another painful reminder our industry needs to go on offense with a new plan to increase demand on ethanol’s low carbon and high octane advantages.”

National Corn Growers Association’s President, Kevin Ross, said, “The Administration has chosen to move forward with a final rule that corn farmers believe falls short of adequately addressing the demand destruction caused by EPA’s abuse of RFS refinery waivers. While using the DOE recommendations to account for waivers is an improvement over the status quo, it is now on corn farmers to hold the Administration to their commitment of a minimum of 15 billion gallon volume, as the law requires. We will use future rulemakings and other opportunities to hold the EPA accountable.”

Renewable Fuels Association’s President and CEO, Geoff Cooper, “After EPA’s overwrought abuse of the SRE program in recent years, agency officials had a chance to finally make things right with this final rule—but they blew it. EPA’s rule fails to deliver on President Trump’s commitment to restore integrity to the RFS, and it fails to provide the market certainty desperately needed by ethanol producers, farmers, and consumers looking for lower-cost, cleaner fuel options. While the final rule is an improvement over the original proposal, it still does not guarantee that the law’s 15-billion-gallon conventional biofuel blending requirement will be fully enforced by EPA in 2020.”

POET’s Senior Vice President of External Affairs and Communications, Kyle Gilley, said “Today was a missed opportunity to finally restore clarity to the ethanol and grain markets, but more opportunities lie ahead in 2020. With these 2020 RVO levels now finalized, our near-term focus shifts to implementation of the remainder of the President’s critical biofuels package: ensuring 15 billion gallons means 15 billion blended, deploying an infrastructure package, changing the pump label, and reforming the fuel survey.”

Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley said, “Once again, EPA is playing games and not helping President Trump with farmers. An agreement was reached on September 12 in an Oval Office meeting between several Midwest leaders, President Trump and other members of his Administration. This does not reflect what we agreed to in that meeting.”

“The magic words from the Oval Office meeting were three-year rolling average based on hard data and actual waived gallons. Abiding by this would have solved all the problem’s EPA has created.”

Iowa Senator Joni Ernst said, “Throughout this process, I, along with Senator Grassley and Governor Reynolds have made it crystal clear that Iowa’s farmers and biofuel producers need certainty that EPA will follow the law. After shaking hands in the Oval Office this fall, EPA had an opportunity to restore the broken trust of farmers and to follow through on the president’s commitment, but it appears they’ve missed the mark…again. We were guaranteed a deal in September, and we were assured of that same deal in October, yet EPA rolled out, and has now finalized, a different proposal. It’s no wonder trust has been lost.

“We will keep holding EPA’s feet to the fire to ensure they truly uphold the RFS, the law, as intended and fully implement the other critical aspects of this rule.”

U.S. Rep. Collin Peterson (D-MN), Chairman of the House Agriculture Committee, said, “At a time when our agriculture economy is struggling, the EPA has ripped 4 billion gallons of ethanol out of the market and impacted corn prices and rural communities. We also have yet to see the other things that were promised to the biofuels industry and corn farmers to get more ethanol into the market via infrastructure incentives and policies related to higher ethanol blends.”

RNG Coalition welcomes EPA’s biofuel targets

On the other hand, the Coalition for Renewable Natural Gas (RNG Coalition) said they welcomed the EPA cellulosic biofuel targets for 2020, but they are certainly not in the majority among the biofuel and agriculture industries.

“The RFS has helped spur the remarkable growth of America’s RNG industry. We welcome today’s final rule providing for a 41% percent increase in the program’s cellulosic biofuel target, and we appreciate the Administration’s willingness to promote the expanded production and use of cellulosic biofuels,” stated Escudero.

Jim Lane is editor and publisher  of Biofuels Digest where this article was originally published. Biofuels Digest is the most widely read  Biofuels daily read by 14,000+ organizations. Subscribe here.

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