1 / 22

Let’s Talk About Ethanol

Let’s Talk About Ethanol. Chad Hart Center for Agricultural and Rural Development Iowa State University E-mail: chart@iastate.edu October 2, 2007 ISU Farm Management Field Specialist In-Service Program Ames, Iowa. Ethanol Explosion. Source: Renewable Fuels Association.

Download Presentation

Let’s Talk About Ethanol

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Let’s Talk About Ethanol Chad Hart Center for Agricultural and Rural Development Iowa State University E-mail: chart@iastate.edu October 2, 2007 ISU Farm Management Field Specialist In-Service Program Ames, Iowa

  2. Ethanol Explosion Source: Renewable Fuels Association

  3. Renewable Fuels Standard Source: Renewable Fuels Association

  4. Ethanol Industry Snapshots Source: Renewable Fuels Association

  5. Ethanol – State by State

  6. Historical Corn Utilization

  7. Where Are We Headed? • Based on construction announcements for ethanol plants, by the end of 2010, ethanol production capacity could exceed 14.5 billion gallons • Announced biodiesel capacity exceeds 2.5 billion gallons

  8. Ethanol – State by State

  9. Projected Corn Utilization

  10. Oil Futures As Of 10/1/2007

  11. Nearby Corn Futures

  12. Corn Futures As Of 10/1/2007

  13. Historical Ethanol Margins

  14. Projected Ethanol Margins

  15. Comparing Futures Prices

  16. 10 Observations about Ethanol • Ethanol production growth has exceeded expectations • Growth has exceeded forecasts and has put the U.S. on pace to far exceed the RFS • But the industry is approaching another barrier point (10% of gasoline usage) • Gasoline prices are likely to remain high enough to support ethanol

  17. 10 Observations about Ethanol • Ethanol margins can remain positive over a wide corn price range • Corn prices are likely to remain higher than usual • Given positive margins, ethanol plants will be competitive for corn at higher prices

  18. 10 Observations about Ethanol • To maintain all corn usage demands, the U.S. will need to dramatically expand corn acreage • Other countries will response to higher corn prices as well • With heightened demand and thin stocks, the corn market will be more volatile

  19. 10 Observations about Ethanol • Cellulosic ethanol has tremendous promise, but it will be several years before cellulosic ethanol truly impacts the energy markets • The merging of the energy and agricultural sectors will force substantial changes in both sectors

  20. Basis in 2005

  21. Basis in 2006

  22. Basis in 2007

More Related