In the News

Ethanol Producer Magazine

Oct 19, 2015

By Bob Dinneen

Even a casual observer of the nightly news is more than likely aware that the presidential election season is under way. Right now, the political chatter is just an obnoxious buzz. As we get closer to 2016, the buzz will grow and get much louder.  And, by this time next year, it will have transformed itself into a full-blown cacophony of sound bites and advertisements.

As an unabashed political junkie, I get a particular thrill when the political chatter reaches its fever pitch and the intense national policy debates take center stage. In the age of the 24-hour news cycle it is often difficult to discern substance from superficiality. But it is imperative for those of us in the biofuels industry to pay close attention to what the presidential candidates are saying about how they would deal with the nation’s energy policy, in general, and the renewable fuel standard (RFS), in particular. In this effort, we are aided by the phenomenal job America’s Renewable Future has done in educating the candidates about agriculture and biofuels so that we have a pretty clear picture of where each of the presidential candidates stand on the RFS.

So far, of the 18 candidates running for president from both parties, only one has indicated unadulterated opposition to the RFS. Not surprisingly, it’s Big Oil’s senator from Texas, Ted Cruz.  Perhaps even he will come along, however, as he recognizes how out of step he is with voters who realize the RFS is lowering gas prices, reducing carbon emissions and making us more energy secure.  But it is certainly notable that every other candidate for president has expressed some level of support for our nation’s most successful energy policy. 

But listen closely; there are many degrees of support among the candidates.  Some simply recognize the importance of the government keeping its promises and would end the RFS in 2022, whether there is a level playing field and consumer access for ethanol or not.  Others support the RFS exclusively as a means to replace corn ethanol with what they believe will be better biofuels from cellulose, a false choice that diminishes the potential of both.  America deserves a president who understands that the RFS has been a tremendous success and will fully and faithfully implement the program because of its tremendous economic, energy and environmental promise.

Look for those candidates, and there are several, who support the RFS without qualification, who understand that this important program is driving innovation in both corn and cellulose technologies, that it is providing consumers with real relief at the gas pump, that it is re-energizing America’s Heartland, and that it is providing no small measure of defense against the dual national security threats of oil dependence and global warming. 

I certainly intend to keep my ears open to hear what the candidates are saying, and I will keep my eyes open to read what they are writing. It is imperative that we pay attention to the political chatter as we steadily move into 2016, but it is equally important that we are able to slice through that chatter and listen closely to what the candidates are saying with respect to how they plan on approaching our nation’s energy policy. Our future depends on it.

Read the original story here : Slice Through The Political Chatter This Election Season

 

Ethanol Producer Magazine

October 16, 2015

By Holly Jensen

Forty DuPont employees signed a letter sent recently to Sen. Pat Tommey, R-Penn., making it clear they oppose his efforts to modify the renewable fuel standard (RFS) in any way.  Tommey was unsuccessful at recent efforts to add an amendment to a bill about crude oil export, which would have eliminated the RFS corn-ethanol blending targets. 

“As Pennsylvania residents, registered voters and DuPont biofuels employees that support science driven innovation to solve some of the world’s most serious challenges, we absolutely oppose your efforts to repeal the corn ethanol mandate in the RFS and any other legislative initiatives to repeal or modify the RFS,” the letter said. It was signed by DuPont’s James Collins, executive vice president, William Feehery president, and Jan Koninckx global business director of biorefineries, and 37 other DuPont employees.

The letter went on to say that proposals to modify the RFS undercut the existing biofuels industry as well as prevent investments in advanced biofuels like cellulosic ethanol. “These new technologies are not dependent on additional sources of food-based feedstocks and will significantly reduce the environmental footprint of the U.S. transportation sector,” the letter said.

The company works within the entire supply chain for biofuels, from seed corn, crop protection and enzymes for first and second generation ethanol. In late October, DuPont will hold a grand opening celebration at its 30 MMgy cellulosic ethanol plant in Nevada, Iowa. The company’s joint venture with BP is Butamax, a project to develop biobutanol.

The letter touched on job creation, economic development and state and federal tax contributions, by the U.S. ethanol industry, pointing to an economic impact report releases by Fuels America.

“The existing biofuels industry has had a significant impact on an improved agriculture economy and ethanol is less expensive than gasoline, reducing gas prices,” the letter said.

Investments in the industry comes with many benefits, DuPont said, such as jobs, reduced environmental impact and positive impacts to the economy and national security, due to decreased reliance on foreign oil. “To realize these benefits, rather than gift these investments to China and Brazil, businesses and investors need stable and predictable policies,” the letter said. “We implore you to reconsider your stance on the RFS and work with us to create the right incentives for the biofuels industry to move beyond current technologies.”

Read the original story: DuPont Employees Write Letter to Tommey, Defend RFS

Renewable Fuels Association

October 16, 2015

The Renewable Fuels Association (RFA) released the following statement regarding a notice posted by the Office of Inspector General (OIG) of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) that it intends on investigating the lifecycle impacts of the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS).

“For years RFA has been asking the EPA to update their analysis of the RFS’s impacts on greenhouse gas emissions so we welcome this review, as it will give the public a clearer picture of the climate benefits that ethanol is producing today” said RFA President and CEO Bob Dinneen. “Lifecycle analyses conducted by the Department of Energy and others since the final RFS rule was implemented have shown that grain ethanol produced today reduces greenhouse gas emissions by 30 percent compared to fossil fuels — even when hypothetical land use emissions are taken into account. And, the EPA has recently approved nearly 50 petitions from grain ethanol producers for its efficient producer program, with each petition requiring careful lifecycle analysis based on actual production data. These results show that the RFS is doing what it was intended to do, and is a potent weapon in reducing greenhouse gas emissions.”

See original statement: RFA Says EPA Probe Will Prove RFS is Getting Results

Ethanol Producer Magazine

Oct 16, 2015

By Holly Jessen

Growth Energy and the Renewable Fuels Association responded to a report that came out of the University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture Oct. 15, which called for reforming the renewable fuels standard (RFS).

“Clearly this study was published with an agenda and without regard to the facts,” Tom Buis, co-chairman of Growth Energy said in a statement. “It is misleading, inaccurate and runs counter to a large body of expert research. Slapping a new title on this previously discredited research won’t change the facts, and those who published this study clearly have little interest in doing anything other than maintaining the status quo of our dangerous addiction to foreign oil and fossil fuels.”

“Over the past decade the Renewable Fuel Standard has proven time and time again why it is our nation’s most successful energy policy,” said Geoff Cooper, RFA senior vice president. “Its impact on our nation’s energy security, economy, and environment is unmatched.”

He went on to highlight benefits to consumers. “At the end of the day, the biggest winner, with respect to the RFS, has been our nation’s consumers who have been given more affordable choices at the pump, and have also been provided with a safe, clean source of home-grown energy,” Cooper said.

Both Cooper and Buis highlighted the ties to the petroleum industry by the organization that commissioned the study. TheAmerican Council for Capital Formation, according to its website, has policy goals of “strong capital formation, a balanced regulatory regime, and cost effective environmental policies.” ACCF is a member of theSmarter Fuel Future coalition, which seeks to reform the RFS. Other members include groups representing manufacturers of snowmobiles and motorcycles, food retailers, dairy farmers, the poultry industry and more.

The 55-page report included a graph from University of Minnesota research, which showed corn ethanol increases emissions of pollutants compared to gasoline. Thatstudy was strongly critiqued by the ethanol industryfor multiple reasons, including the fact that the results contradicted the most recent DOE GREET model. In addition,testing this summer by the Urban Air Initiativeshowed gasoline with no ethanol content had higher toxic emissions. 

Cooper pointed out that multiple analyses by groups such as the U.S. DOE, University of Illinois, International Energy Agency, Life Cycle Associates and others have shown that ethanol does reduce greenhouse gas emissions, when compared to petroleum. “A recent study by the University of Illinois-Chicago’s Energy Resource Center concluded that the proposal by the EPA to decrease ethanol use by 1.6 billion gallons in 2015 could increase CO2 emissions by 4,520,000 metric tons for that year, which is the equivalent of putting nearly 1 million additional passenger vehicles on the road,” he added.

Daniel De La Torre Ugarte, one of the UT authors, mentioned that corn ethanol has been presented as a bridge to advanced biofuels. “However, the reality is clear that this policy has been a bridge to nowhere,” he said.

Not so, said Buis. “There is an inextricable link,” he said, “between first generation corn based ethanol and next generation fuels such as cellulosic ethanol.”

He referenced areport by Third Way, a centrist think tank, which concluded the same. Abengoa, Poet-DSM and Quad County Corn Processors, all companies also involved with the corn ethanol industry, account for more than 80 percent of total U.S. cellulosic ethanol capacity, the Third Way report said. Once DuPont starts up its cellulosic ethanol facility (a grand opening is set for the end of October) that number goes up to 88 percent. 

Buis called the renewable fuels industry a win-win for the United States. “We are creating jobs and revitalizing rural economies, as well as improving our environment and decreasing our dependence on foreign oil – all while providing consumers a choice and savings at the pump,” he said. “Biofuel producers are working to meet the energy needs of America, while Big Oil is desperate to maintain their 90 percent monopoly on the motor fuels market and are willing to do anything to protect their bottom line, profits and the status quo.”

Read the original story here : Industry Slams Report That Calls For RFS Reform

Globe Gazette

By Erin Murphy

October 14, 2015

The advocacy group America’s Renewable Future has been active on the caucus trail, attempting to generate support from candidates and voters for the federal Renewable Fuel Standard, which requires a certain percentage of ethanol in the nation’s fuel supply.

“It’s something that’s really important to our economy and to our future,” said Patty Judge, a former Iowa lieutenant governor and a co-chair of America’s Renewable Future.

Iowa produces nearly one-third of the nation’s ethanol and nearly half of Iowa’s corn goes into ethanol production, according to the Iowa Corn Growers Association.

Iowa’s renewable fuels industry, which includes biodiesel production, supports 47,000 jobs and accounts for $5 billion of the state’s gross domestic product, according to the Iowa Renewable Fuels Association.

But Iowa’s ethanol industry could take a hit if the president lowers the fuel standard or joins Congress in repealing it.

Enter America’s Renewable Future, which is doing what it can to ensure the next president will support the standard.

“I think America’s Renewable Future has put together a very strong organization, and I’m really happy to lend a little time to it because I believe this is a critical issue, not just in a presidential election year but all the time for Iowa,” Judge said. “I’m very pleased at the strong organization that we’ve been able to put together and the fact that we have been able to work in a bipartisan way to push the question of the RFS to presidential candidates.”

The group is a coalition of companies, organizations and individuals who support the fuel standard. Its state chairman is Eric Branstad, the son of Gov. Terry Branstad. The co-chairwomen are Judge and Annette Sweeney, a former state legislator.

The group is informing and pressing presidential candidates while also talking to voters, encouraging them to support candidates who support the standard.

The group’s website, americasrenewablefuture.com, includes a section with candidates’ comments on the fuel standard.

The candidates’ support for the fuel standard vary from full throat to temporary blessing with an eventual phase-out, to repeal.

Polling front-runners Hillary Clinton, a Democrat, and Donald Trump, a Republican, have said they would support the fuel standard.

At the other end of the spectrum, Republican Ted Cruz wants to do away with it.

That frustrates Sweeney, a Republican, who said Cruz is being “really close-minded on this issue.”

Sweeney and Judge said some candidates have shown a willingness to soften their position on the fuel standard.

“We want to try to educate candidates, and it’s not surprising that many of them come into Iowa with almost no knowledge of the role of renewable fuels, particularly the role the RFS plays in maintaining that," Judge said. "So there’s a lot of education that has to go back to the candidates and the candidates’ staff members.

“This is not a mandate. It is not a subsidy. It is simply saying we have a market share here. This is an education process, and we’ll keep at it.”

Read the original story, "Ethanol Group's Goal: Elect a Pro-RFS President"

Springfield News - Leader 

Oct 10, 2015

By Deidre Shesgreen

WASHINGTON — Former Missouri Sen. Jim Talent has joined a pitched battle to protect the ethanol industry from a two-pronged political attack in Washington, a showdown that pits Show-Me State farmers against an array of powerful interest groups.

At issue are federal rules requiring ethanol and other alternative fuels to be added to America’s gasoline supply, which has been a boon to corn farmers in Missouri and other Midwestern states.

But the ethanol mandates, which are supposed to increase every year under a 2005 law that Talent helped craft, are a bane to the oil industry, which is committed to killing the requirements.

The fight has scrambled the usual party lines in Washington, where oil and gas lobbyists have aligned with environmental advocates, hunger activists and fiscal watchdog groups in an effort to repeal or gut the 2005 requirements. On the other side, the powerful farm lobby and the biofuel industry are working with Midwestern lawmakers to preserve the so-called Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS).

Sens. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., and Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., have repeatedly badgered the Environmental Protection Agency to ramp up its implementation of the RFS, saying the agency has been too slow and lax in setting targets.

Talent, a Missouri Republican who served in Congress for 11 years before losing re-election in 2006, entered the fray last week, when he helped launch a new advocacy group called Americans for Energy Security and Innovation. Talent said the group is funded by biofuel companies and investors, but he declined to provide any more detail.

“We’re not hiding the fact that these are biofuel (firms)” that have an economic stake in the issue, Talent said. But he said the new group, organized as a nonprofit under the IRS code, is not required to disclose its members or its funding.

The biofuel industry approached him, he said, because “they knew it was kind of my baby.” The new group will run TV ads and try to mobilize supporters, Talent said, with the goal of shaping public opinion and influencing the political debate.

Congress created the Renewable Fuel Standard in 2005 and then expanded it in 2007, as part of a broader effort to curb greenhouse gas emissions and reduce America’s reliance on imported oil. The law requires specific quantities of alternative fuels — such as ethanol — to be blended into fuel for cars, trucks and other vehicles. The EPA is charged with crafting the exact RFS, with the agency setting annual hikes in the amount of alternative fuels added to regular gasoline.

Supporters of the RFS say it has sparked innovation and job creation in the biofuel industry, reduced greenhouse gas pollution and scaled back U.S. dependence on foreign oil.

“We think consumers benefit, our farmers benefit, and our economy as a whole benefits by keeping (fuel-related jobs) in the United States instead of exporting them to countries that don’t like us very much,”said Gary Marshall, CEO for the Missouri Corn Growers Association.

Missouri is the 10th top corn producing state in the country, growing 500 million bushels a year. And the state ranks 12th in ethanol production capacity, with six facilities that turn corn and other grains into ethanol.

“It’s had the effect of strengthening family farms and without price supports,” Talent said.

But critics say the ethanol requirements are a sop to the agriculture industry that skew the free market and do not help the environment.

“This is the government using corporate welfare to shower money on a favored industry and then send the bill to the general public,” Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., said in February, when he unveiled legislation to repeal the corn ethanol provision in the RFS.

He was joined by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, a California Democrat, who said the ethanol requirement drives up the cost of food and gas, damages car engines and hurts the environment.

“If the mandate continues to expand toward full implementation, the price of corn will increase,” Feinstein said. “Americans living on the margins simply can’t afford that.”

That bill has attracted the support of a strange-bedfellows list of interest groups — from the American Petroleum Institute, the oil and gas industry’s lobby arm, to Friends of the Earth, a liberal environmental group. The oil industry says the current fuel-supply infrastructure can’t handle increasing amounts of ethanol. Environmental groups say ethanol has turned out to be as harmful as, or more hamful than gasoline, in terms of greenhouse gas emissions, land use and farm runoff.

“There are few things worse for the environment than gasoline, but corn ethanol is one of them,” Emily Cassidy, a research analyst at the Environmental Working Group, an advocacy group, said earlier this year when the EPA unveiled its latest renewable fuel targets.

Those targets were a small victory for opponents of the standards, because the EPA lowered the amount of ethanol required to be added to gasoline, saying the targets set by Congress were no longer realistic given changes in production and consumption.

In a rule that will be finalized next month, the EPA called for requiring refiners to blend 17.4 billion gallons of renewable fuels in 2016, much of it from corn, but 3.4 billion gallons would come from advanced biofuels such as cellulosic ethanol made from grasses and wood chips. The figure was well below the 22.3 billion target set by Congress. EPA officials also proposed 16.3 billion gallons for the current year, less than the 20.5 billion set by Congress.

Blunt and others have objected to EPA’s move, accusing the agency of sidestepping Congress’ intent and creating uncertainty in the biofuels market. EPA officials say they have the legal authority to lower the numbers Congress intended, noting, among other things, that higher-ethanol blends such as E15 and E85 have not been widely accepted.

The oil industry hailed the EPA’s decision, saying the vast majority of cars and trucks on the road today can’t handle fuel with higher concentrations of ethanol than what is already available today — 10 percent ethanol and 90 percent gasoline.

“That’s what we call the blend wall,” said Bob Greco, a top official at the American Petroleum Institute.

But Moore, the Missouri Corn Growers Association’s CEO, said the blend wall is a fiction that “exists only in the minds of the oil industry.”

He said the real reason they have objected to more ethanol is because it will cut demand for gasoline.

“You’re trying to take 10 percent of the market, or more now, from the wealthiest, most influential business in the world,” he said. “So obviously that creates problems.”

He and others are fighting the EPA’s decision. Lower demand for ethanol will cause corn prices to drop, Moore said, dealing an economic blow to farmers in Missouri and other big corn-producing states.

Talent said the fuel standards are “under attack” by both the Obama administration and in Congress, prompting the need for the new group, Americans for Energy Security and Innovation. Talent, who is also a military expert with the American Enterprise Institute, said he will not register to lobby on the RFS. And he declined to outline the group’s specific plans, saying more details would be coming soon.

But Talent clearly plans to use his conservative credentials and his political savvy to sway the debate, and he said he would be specifically trying to counter the idea that the ethanol mandates amount to government favoritism for a special industry.

“The purpose of the RFS was not to create a market so much, but to protect the market that was already developing against manipulation by the oil cartel, so they couldn’t strangle it before it had a chance to grow,” Talent said. “That’s a message that will resonate I hope and believe with conservatives.”

Read the original story here : Ex- Sen. Talent Revs Up Fight Over Whether Ethanol Must Be Added To Fuel

Ethanol Producer Magazine

Oct 8, 2015

By Susanne Retka Schill

In continuing pressure on the administration and U.S. EPA to not weaken the renewable fuels standard (RFS), the National Corn Growers Association and National Farmers Union released a white paper showing the impact of the RFS on farm income, which is now projected to decline 26 percent this year from the 2013 peak.

The paper cites a Congressional Research Service report that called the lack of annual renewable fuel volume standards for 2014 and 2015 a key uncertainty that was “crucial in determining how the U.S. agricultural economy will fare.” USDA projects 2015 net cash income will decline $35 billion from 2013 highs. “The net farm income projection for 2015 at $58.3 billion is down over 50 percent compared with the record $123.7 billion level achieved in 2013 and is the lowest since 2006.”  

In a media call the morning of the release, Roger Johnson, President of the National Farmers Union said, “The EPA’s proposed rule and the uncertainty around it have frozen investment in rural communities and sources of income for farmers in the advanced and cellulosic biofuels industry at a crucial time. Already, the new industry has suffered a $13.7 billion shortfall in investment because of uncertainty around the RFS. That cuts off a long-term potential for supplemental farm income, and causes job loss in rural communities. The economic and environmental benefits of advanced biofuels cannot be realized without a strong RFS.”

President of the National Corn Growers Association Chip Bowling said, “Our country’s farmers and biofuels producers have met the challenges of the RFS, investing in renewable fuel production and creating jobs in rural America that can’t be outsourced to other countries. Thanks to the RFS, we are helping to reduce foreign oil dependence with clean, secure American-made renewable fuel. However, the EPA’s weakened proposed rule has hurt farm income across the country – the USDA has projected net cash income for American farmers and ranchers to decline by 26 percent this year. Now is not the time to break our commitment to America’s farmers. It’s time to put forth a strong RFS so we can continue moving our country forward and bolster farm income in our rural communities.”

In the question period following the prepared statements, both leaders acknowledged that the uncertainty around the RFA is not the only reason farm income is declining, although Johnson stressed, “it is a significant factor.” Bowling pointed out, however, that the boost in farm income starting in 2005 has widely been credited to corn ethanol. He added that he farms near an ethanol plant that shut down recently, with an immediate drop in the basis—basis being the price differential between the nearby futures corn price and a local cash quote.

Growth Energy cochairman Tom Buis commended the two agricultural organizations “for bringing this issue to the forefront to ensure that communities across rural America can continue to grow and prosper.” He reinforced the key message from NCGA and NFU. “Farm income has already declined this year and the proposed reduction of the RVOs under EPA’s proposed RFS rule will only further drive down farm income, putting a severe strain on America’s rural economy. The past several years of inaction by EPA have resulted in significant uncertainty among producers, stifling growth, innovation and the necessary investment to move toward next generation fuels from the farm.”

Read the original story here : NFU, NCGA : RFS Uncertainty Drives Down US Farm Income

Oct 6, 2015

Syngenta 1

Minnetonka, - Syngenta today announced that, to date, it has reached agreements with 16 ethanol plants to use Enogen grain. Together, the plants have a combined production capacity of more than 1 billion gallons. Syngenta is in discussions with a number of other ethanol plants, as well, with plans to continue its expansion. Enogen® corn enzyme technology is an exclusive in-seed innovation from Syngenta and the industry’s first and only biotech corn designed specifically to enhance ethanol production.

Enogen was grown on approximately 225,000 acres in 2015, and that number is expected to top 400,000 acres next season, demonstrating the continued commercial success of this technology. According to Jack Bernens, head of Enogen for Syngenta, the robust alpha amylase enzyme found in Enogen corn hybrids helps an ethanol plant dramatically reduce the viscosity of its corn mash and eliminate the need to add a liquid form of emzyme.

“This breakthrough viscosity reduction can lead to unprecedented levels of solids loading, which directly contributes to increased throughput and yield, as well as critical cost savings from reduced natural gas, energy, water and chemical usage in ethanol plants,” Bernens said. “Growers who plant Enogen corn benefit as well – they earn an average premium of 40 cents per bushel.”

Enogen is rapidly gaining popularity because of the value it delivers and the opportunity it provides corn growers to be enzyme suppliers for their local ethanol plants. Assuming an average yield of 165 bushels an acre, Enogen corn is expected to generate approximately $26 million of additional revenue for local growers in 2016 through per-bushel premiums. Furthermore, numerous trials have shown that Enogen hybrids perform equal to or better than other high-performing corn hybrids.

“The agreements we have in place with a steadily increasing number of plants will enable them to source alpha amylase directly from growers and keep enzyme dollars in those local communities,” Bernens added. “This is what truly sets Enogen corn apart from other technologies designed to enhance ethanol production. It adds significant incremental value at the local level for communities that rely on their ethanol plant’s success.”

Go to www.enogen.net to learn more about Enogen.