...at Pacific Ethanol, whose stock has fallen from about $15 to about $3. Pacific Ethanol's gross margin dropped from 11 percent in 2006 to 7.1 percent in 2007 partly because of higher corn costs. Aventine Renewable's one-year chart shows a precipitous fall in stock price from $20 to $4. And a Wall Street analyst recently noted that it faced a potential cash shortfall. When it reported quarterly earnings last week, Aventine said that its average sales price per gallon rose from the first quarter of 2007 enough but not enough to outweigh the rise in corn. And thanks to the high price of energy (it takes energy to produce energy), the cost of converting corn into ethanol rose more than 10 percent per gallon during the same time period. So, between the first quarter of 2007 and the first quarter of 2008, Aventine's operating margins shrunk from about 6.5 percent of sales to 4.7 percent of sales. And MGP Ingredients said profit margins in its distillery products unit fell to 2 percent in the fourth quarter of 2007, down from 22 percent in the final quarter of 2006.The U.S. industry has grown from 3.4 billion gallons of capacity in 2004 to 6.5 billion in 2007. Today, some 134 plants with a capacity of 7.23 billion gallons are in operation, and another 77 with 6.2 billion gallons of capacity are under construction. Capacity has more than doubled since 2004, and, once all the plants in the works are completed, it will nearly double again. But with demand for gasoline declining nationwide, and with ethanol an imperfect substitute for gasoline (not all vehicles can use it; the distribution network isn't fully built out), producers aren't always able to dictate prices to the marketplace. As for the bottom line, processors and distributors of agricultural commodities—from Kraft to Morton's Steakhouse—are being pinched by rising costs of grains and energy, tough competition, and softened demand stemming from the weakening economy. These factors are shrinking margins at every rung of the food-processing business. Ethanol producers are no different than cookie-makers and restaurants in this regard. After all, their biggest inputs include an agricultural commodity (corn) and energy.While environmentalists have warned that the rapid growth of ethanol posed a danger to sustainability, the alarm may be somewhat misplaced. Oil has topped $122 a barrel and could be heading to $150. But the ethanol bubble has already popped. The recent poor results from ethanol producers is far more likely to hinder further development than any change in government policy.http://www.slate.com/id/2190878/
5/8/2008 10:12:02 PM
why not try hemp seed oil for bio-diesel and hemp cellulose for ethanol?wait no, I forgot -- legal hemp would send the wrong message to kids [Edited on May 8, 2008 at 10:27 PM. Reason : ok ok, enough about hemp -- though, it could significantly help save the planet]
5/8/2008 10:22:22 PM
what about that algae that produces oil?
5/9/2008 12:10:39 AM
switchgrass would be the solutionhttp://bioenergy.ornl.gov/papers/misc/switgrs.html
5/9/2008 12:13:15 AM
How bout harnessing ocean currents to run turbines?
5/9/2008 1:31:32 AM
^ no, we already have lots of other options to get electricity at 30 cents per kWh
5/9/2008 7:10:48 AM
how bout we outlaw SUV's and make everyone drive toyota prius?[Edited on May 9, 2008 at 7:12 AM. Reason : that would drive down gas prices a lot at least]
5/9/2008 7:12:19 AM
Well, it takes a around gallon of gasoline to create a gallon ethanol fuel. Gasoline also has a higher heating value than ethanol to begin with....does that answer your question?
5/9/2008 9:30:25 AM
hemp seeds for biofuels makes no sense since there isn't enough lipid content in the hemp to make it worth anyone's time.
5/9/2008 9:47:30 AM
(not an expert on this)^really?
Soy 20Canola/rapeseed 40Sunflower 55Castor 45Safflower 40Hemp 30Copra (Dry Coconut) 60Peanuts/Groundnuts 50Palm Kernel 50Corn 7Mustard 40Flaxseed 45Jatropha seed 40Jatropha kernel 55Algae 15 to 40
5/9/2008 10:08:13 AM
for the labor put into for growing, harvesting, crushing, and converting hemp seed, the end result is not good. And those number are wrong. Algae has a higher content than that.
5/9/2008 10:23:17 AM
oh well(I'd buy a hemp car)
5/9/2008 10:29:11 AM
Algae is the only even conceivable biofuels solution to the gas problem.But don't hold your breath.
5/9/2008 10:38:36 AM
Algae has it's only problems. Mainly the water content makes deriving the oils harder to do than with rapeseed or soy.
5/9/2008 11:09:35 AM
how do you move ethanol from the refinery to the 'gas' stations? pipelinesoh no wait you cant move ethanol through pipelines, you have to transport it in trucks that run on gasoline
5/9/2008 11:11:13 AM
^Is that because they don't want it mixing with gasoline, or do the physical properties of ethanol prevent it from being moved through pipelines?
5/9/2008 11:14:29 AM
^^those trucks do not run on gasoline, they run on diesel. A problem that could be fixed if they ran on biodiesel.
5/9/2008 11:15:47 AM
^^physical properties i think^either way, the point is its less efficient to transport over long distances than gasoline, diesel, etcso when directly comparing gasoline to ethanol and the emissions, etc, you must consider the additional tranport "cost"]
5/9/2008 11:23:59 AM
The biofuels industry is being looked at in terms of local production to satisfy local needs, instead of the current system of shipping it all throughout the world. The reason why oil has relied upon pipelines is that in terms of availablity it is extremely limited geographically. Ethanol and biodiesel production are not.
5/9/2008 11:32:17 AM
5/9/2008 11:49:03 AM
the reason why ethanol is failing is because it is a stupid ideathank god its happening quickly
5/9/2008 11:49:36 AM
5/9/2008 12:08:24 PM
5/9/2008 1:52:12 PM
you people have missed the point entirely....by the time you harvest the corn, ship it to the plant, and make it into ethanol, you have already used more gasoline than ethanol produced on a volume basis....and that gallon of ethanol produced will not do as much work as the gallon of gas needed to produce it.
5/9/2008 4:31:55 PM
5/9/2008 5:04:32 PM
Switchgrass does have a much higher energy content than corn, and I've heard several people suggest it as an alternative. It will likely happen in the next 5-6 years and put an ease to high corn prices and biofuel troubles.But it also has its drawbacks as well. Corn can be dried and stored much easier than switchgrass. There is less volume to deal with as well. If we 'switch' to switchgrass and sargot and those kind of plants, biofuel manufacturing plants will need to be more in numbers and more spread out, so you don't wind up with high transportation costs. Even then, it's probably not worth it.
5/9/2008 7:02:17 PM
5/9/2008 8:17:50 PM
Ethanol Producers:
5/9/2008 9:25:45 PM
Biofuels are a great idea... in the way they're implemented in some areas. In parts of japan, recyclers in large cities convert used cooking oil from the insane number of tempura places that change their oil with each frying (if they're good.) The converted biolfuels are locally availible and require minimal shipping from the raw sources, to the manufacturer, to the filling stations. These locally created biolfuels incur less transportation costs than traditional fuels. You could have small scale production of corn ethanol to fuel the farm equipment at a... farm that grew corn. Smaller scale local development of biofuels-principally from waste products- makes a shit ton more sense than dumping massive amounts of food into the system and pretending it's not more expensive and more polluting in the end.
5/10/2008 12:47:13 AM
stop driving and get a fuckin bike
5/11/2008 5:10:16 PM
5/12/2008 5:37:20 PM
Ethanol blend poses challenges for boaters
7/20/2008 3:29:15 AM
lol wackoshave you studied what pwcs and 2 stroke boats do to the environment?you might as well just pour gasoline and oil into your local waterway
7/20/2008 3:38:23 AM
there are more four strokes afloat now than two strokes, but don't let that deter you from your argumentmarine engine manufacturers have been pushed throughout the 90's and 00's to produce clean burning enginesand so, Evinrude has been producing their E-Tec 2 strokes for a few years now and it's an amazing motor that runs cleanhttp://www.evinrude.com/en-US/Mercury also has their optimax line of 2 strokes which burn clean as wellhttp://www.mercurymarine.com/engines/outboards/optimax/in addition, the ethanol is messing up a lot of the four strokes in addition to the older engines (there was a big article in NC sportsman magazine a few months ago about it)but you're not advocating the use of ethanol anyway are you...cause I thought that was already determined to be a waste of resources which is causing problems worldwide[Edited on July 20, 2008 at 8:45 AM. Reason : !]
7/20/2008 8:32:03 AM
Ethanol = so dumbThe only method that has proven to be cost effective without subsidies is Brazilian sugar cane -- which we have huge quotas/tariffs on. Awesome. Go USA.
7/20/2008 4:42:50 PM
b/c corn is the wrong fucking thing to make it fromswitchgrass ftmfw, you can grow that shit anywhere.[Edited on July 21, 2008 at 12:30 AM. Reason : ^ not for long, bone up on your trade info.... WTO ruling not in our favor...]
7/21/2008 12:27:34 AM
7/21/2008 1:51:51 AM
I think people knew. This is just a for votes in mid-america. Also, it sounds great that were going to alternative fuels. I mean, right? People are morons and politics will always be shady. Nothing to do about it though.
7/21/2008 2:02:49 AM
7/21/2008 10:33:39 AM
7/21/2008 11:48:38 PM
Some guys bass boat really does wonders for National Security.Also, the folks complaining about biofuels sound like the livery industry complaining about the automobile.[Edited on July 22, 2008 at 10:31 AM. Reason : .]
7/22/2008 10:27:36 AM
7/22/2008 10:36:45 AM
Why not just have nuclear powered cars?http://www.teslamotors.com
7/22/2008 10:37:40 AM
tesla roadster
7/22/2008 10:44:59 AM