A little help from my friends...
The mini-blizzard in the Midwest knocked down out Internet towers, and it was kinda sad how Jan and I clutched our backup access (via smartphones) while it was being fixed. Meanwhile the computerized mixer on the church sound system also crashed and that is my responsibility, so I've been occupied.
Christmas cookie consumption also played a part.
But some readers offered these interesting tidbits.
From Kevin in Ontario, this bizarre story of gaming the RFS...
.by Canadians!!
Bioversel Trading hired CN Rail to import tanker loads of biodiesel
to the U.S. to generate RINs, which are valuable in the U.S. because of a
"greening" policy regulating the petroleum industry. The EPA's
"Renewable Fuel Standard" mandate that oil companies bring a certain
amount of renewable fuel to market, quotas they can achieve through
blending biofuel with fossil fuel or by purchasing RINs as offsets.
Because
RINs can be generated through import, the 12 trainloads that crossed
into Michigan would have contained enough biodiesel to create close to
12 million RINs. In the summer of 2010, biodiesel RINs were selling for
50 cents each, but the price soon fluctuated to more than $1 per credit.
Once "imported" to a company capable of generating RINs, ownership of
the biodiesel was transferred to Bioversel's American partner company,
Verdeo, and then exported back to Canada. RINs must be "retired" once
the fuel is exported from the U.S., but Bioversel says Verdeo retired
ethanol RINs, worth pennies, instead of the more valuable biodiesel
RINs. Bioversel claims this was all perfectly legal.
However, one of the companies Bioversel approached to be the
‘importer of record’—Northern Biodiesel Inc. of Ontario, N.Y. —
discovered that the same fuel was going back and forth across the border
and the same gallons were being used to repeatedly generate new RINs
under their company’s name. The company called the EPA and also sent a
letter that would become an open letter to the biodiesel industry,
accusing Bioversel of “trying to perpetrate a fraud against NBI and the
Renewable Fuel Standard program.”
The EPA, which has a buyer beware policy for oil companies that buy
RINs, did not act immediately, and the industry has been begging for it
to play the role of sheriff on this case and others. The EPA won’t
comment on continuing investigations, but insiders said the case is
still under investigation. [More of a great investigative story]
Ah yes, ethanol - The American farmer's ACORN. What can I say, except I am shocked -
shocked, I tell you - our mild-mannered neighbors to the north would take advantage of a dismally market-distorting subsidy program just like they were 'Mericans.
However, due to changes in the RFS, there may be more "Dakota shuffles" in the future.
The 2012 drought led to significant increases in corn prices and a
slowing in domestic ethanol production and exports. For the first time
since the RIN system was established, it is estimated that 2012 net RIN
generation will not exceed the non-advanced ethanol mandate, and RIN
stocks carried over from previous years will be used for mandate
compliance. This was reflected in 2012 ethanol RIN prices, and
illustrates how the design of the system can be used by obligated
parties to respond to variability in the economics of ethanol blending.
Current estimates indicate continued flexibility for corn-for-ethanol
demand to meet the 2013 non-advanced mandate, but at lower levels than
in previous years due to estimated stock use in meeting the 2012
mandate. [More]
They are not the only neighbor to benefit from this intricate mandate.
So what is driving the large ethanol imports from Brazil? The answer is found in the details of the U.S. Renewable Fuels Standards (RFS).
Brazilian sugarcane ethanol production qualifies as an "advanced"
biofuel under the RFS greenhouse gas (GHG) calculations. (See our earlier post
for further details.) This means that the relevant economic comparison
is between Brazilian ethanol and other biofuels that qualify for the
advanced component of the RFS. Since the corn-based ethanol has a less
favorable GHG reduction rating, it only qualifies as a "renewable"
biofuel, and therefore, cannot compete with Brazilian ethanol or other
advanced biofuels to fulfill the advanced mandate. To date, the only
other biofuel that has been produced in quantity and qualifies to meet
the advanced component of the RFS is biomass-based biodiesel. This
means the relevant economic comparison is whether U.S. produced
biodiesel or Brazilian produced sugarcane ethanol is the cheapest source
for fulfilling obligations under the advanced RFS.
Recent price data reveals that Brazilian ethanol is by a wide margin
the cheaper of the two alternatives. For example, consider a U.S.
energy producer that is faced with this data on gasoline and diesel
blending economics on November 29, 2012:
where CBOB is conventional gasoline blendstock, E100 is 100 percent
anhydrous ethanol shipped to a Gulf terminal from Brazil (same as
before), ULS is ultra low sulfur diesel, and B100 is 100 percent
biodiesel. One final conversion must be done to make a fair comparison.
Since biodiesel is worth 1.5 gallons of ethanol in the RFS math, we
need to divide the net profit for diesel blending by 1.5 to arrive at a
net profit of -1.05/1.5 = $-0.70 per gallon. This makes biodiesel
almost twice as expensive as imported Brazilian ethanol when it comes to
meeting the advanced RFS mandate. And that is the reason why Brazilian
ethanol imports are surging into the U.S. during recent months. They
will continue to do so until the non-biodiesel part of the 2012 advanced
mandate is met (about 500 million gallons total) but will not be higher
since blenders are still taking a loss on each gallon of Brazilian
ethanol imported. [More]
Meanwhile, back here in the home country, the impact of our
inability to spin straw into ethanol means we have only piddling amounts of advanced biofuels to meet the mandate. But what about biodiesel, the Great Hope of soybean producers?
The biofuels era that began in 2006 helped propel corn and other crop
prices to a new higher level that has been sustained for nearly six
years. One might be tempted to conclude that this new era is coming to
an end as corn consumption for ethanol levels out and corn production
begins to catch up. Instead, it actually appears that the new era of
higher crop prices could be extended well into the future as a result of
the RFS for advanced biofuels that in all likelihood can only be met
with a rapid expansion in biodiesel production. To gain some
perspective on the potential size of this expansion, consider our
projection of 3.113 billion gallons of biodiesel production in 2015.
This would require about 23.5 billion pounds of feedstock when total
consumption of fats and oils in the U.S. currently totals about 28
billion pounds annually. Consumption of tallow and grease, another
biodiesel feedstock, is thought to be near 10 billion pounds per year.
At the projected level for 2015, biodiesel would account for over 60
percent of fats and oils consumption from all sources. This compares to
about 20 percent in in 2012. The new price era, then, would not be
extended by rising corn demand, but by rising vegetable oil demand.
Whether this scenario actually is realized depends crucially on the
evolution of biofuels policy here in the U.S. and energy policies in
Brazil. We will be monitoring these issues closely in the future. [More]
But if we make much of that from soya, what about the rising global demand for soyoil?
Global demand for vegetable oils for food and biofuel use is expected
to increase by an additional 23 million tons by 2016; however supply is
expected to struggle to keep up with the demand, according to a new
report from Rabobank.
According to the report, “Finding the Food-Fuel Balance,"
vegetable oil stocks reached a 38-year low in 2012 due in large part to
constraints, such as land availability and adverse weather. For the past
four years, the world’s stock-to-use ratio for vegetable oils has been
on a declining trend and will reach a low of 7.5% in 2013, a level not
seen since the mid 1970s. The decline is largely down to supply’s
inability to keep up with rising demand. Production shortfalls in recent
years have resulted in a draw-down of stocks that is unlikely to be
reversed in the near future. [More]
Now add in the migration of the Corn Belt north, and maybe the smart move in my part of the world is to plant a heckuva lot of beans on those CoC acres instead of continuing to pound our head against the production barriers that are more serious than we thought when triple-stacks gave us a couple of penalty free yields.
[From Ron]
Corn’s new appeal to Canada’s prairie farmers is based on two things:
climate change and price. Growing seasons in the prairie
provinces—which border Minnesota, North Dakota, and Montana—have
lengthened about two weeks to up to 120 days in the past half-century.
The mean annual temperature is likely to climb by as much as 3C (6F) in
the region by 2050, according to Canadian researchers.
A
temperate climate and longer growing season are ideal for corn. An acre
of farmland produces more corn than wheat, making corn the more
profitable grain, while the higher yields drive up land values as well.
Corn
has long grown in southern Ontario’s mild climate, but for Canadians to
be big players in the crop at a new order of magnitude, they must plant
in the vast farmland of the prairie provinces. Farmers planted a record
121,400 hectares (300,000 acres) of corn in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and
Alberta this year.
Global corn demand has outstripped supplies
three of the last four years. That shortfall, along with the more
hospitable growing weather and the introduction of seed varieties from Monsanto (MON) and DuPont (DD)
that make plants mature faster, is transforming Canada’s grain mix,
says Danny Blair, a professor of geography at the University of
Winnipeg. “The winters have warmed and shortened dramatically,”
accompanied by more rainfall that allows for earlier planting and
greater soil moisture that helps crops.
Global warming will
increase the frequency of drought and erratic rainfall even in Canada,
says Blair, who notes that the weather creates more opportunities for
Canadian agriculture, despite the risks. The anticipated boom in corn is
encouraging U.S. agribusiness giant Cargill to invest in grain storage
in Canada, according to Chief Executive Officer Gregory Page. The
prospect of new demand from Canadian corn farmers is pushing DuPont
Pioneer, a seed division of DuPont, to improve its short-season crop
varieties, says John Soper, the company’s vice president of crop
genetics research and development. [More]
It is in-your-face developments like new yield patterns that will change attitudes about global warming, certainly not mere science. And I think those minds who have the freedom to actually to contemplate the implications without cognitive dissonance from their political catechism will enjoy a distinct business advantages.
Rolling all these ongoing developments into 2013, add the incredible political turmoil in the US, include the ongoing drought, and we have the possibility of a year that makes 2012 seem tame.
This also mean incredible rewards for those who step up to the challenges, IMHO.
Just hope they don't farm near me...