View
2
Download
0
Category
Preview:
Citation preview
U.S. Ethanol Market and Policy Update
June 15, 2017
.Renewable Fuels Association
© 2017 Renewable Fuels Association. All Rights Reserved.
• Trade association representing U.S. ethanol producers
• Mission: “Drive expanded production and use of American-made renewable fuels and co-products worldwide”
• Founded in 1981• Offices in Washington D.C., St.
Louis, Kansas City, and Detroit• Member producers include large
bioenergy companies and agribusinesses as well as small farmer-owned co-ops and LLCs
• Associate members include vendors, suppliers, supporters, etc.
About the Renewable Fuels Association (RFA)
Today’s Ethanol Industry• 212 installed production facilities
– 199 in operation– 13 idle
• Installed facilities have “nameplate” capacity to produce 16.1 BG annually– Actual production capacity is likely ≈ 16.4 BG
• Actual production in 2016 was 15.33 BG– 96% capacity utilization
• Feedstock breakdown for installed facilities:Plants Capacity (MG) % of Cap.
Corn 182 15,102 93.8%Corn/sorghum/wheat/barley 14 869 5.4%Food/beverage waste 10 30 0.2%Cellulosic biomass 6 92 0.6%
U.S. Ethanol Plants Locations
“Capacity Creep”
Company/Plant City State New Capacity (MGY)
Completion Date
Marquis Energy Hennepin IL 145 2Q16Western NY Energy Medina NY 13 4Q16Siouxland Ethanol Jackson NE 20 1Q17The Andersons Albion MI 65 2Q17Badger State Monroe WI 28 2Q17Tharaldson Ethanol Casselton ND 12 2Q17Commonwealth Agri Energy Hopkinsville KY 10 2Q17KAAPA Ravenna Ravenna NE 30 3Q17POET Groton SD 13 3Q17Pine Lake Corn Processors Steamboat Rock IA 10 3Q17Al-Corn Clean Fuel Claremont MN 70 2Q18Bushmills Ethanol Atwater MN 35 2Q18ICM Colwich KS 50 2Q18Ringneck Energy* Onida SD 80 2Q18
Little Sioux Corn Processors Marcus IA 30 2Q18Elite Octane* Atlantic IA 120 3Q18
POET Marion OH 68 3Q18TOTAL 799
*Greenfield construction
1Q13 1Q14 1Q15 1Q16 CurrentTotal Nameplate (MGY) 14,837 14,880 15,077 15,694 16,062
Plants 211 210 213 214 212
Avg. Nameplate (MGY) 70.3 70.9 70.8 73.3 75.8
506 MGY
293 MGY
+7.7%
+8.3%
+1 plant
© 2017 Renewable Fuels Association. All Rights Reserved.
How is our ethanol used?Ethanol Supply/Demand 101
2016 Ethanol S/D Million gals.Beginning Stocks 907Imports 36Production 15,330TOTAL SUPPLY 16,273
E10 Blending 14,059E15/E85/EFF Blending 349Exports 1,045TOTAL DEMAND 15,453
Ending Stocks 820
7%
2%91%
Exports E15/E85/EFF E10
U.S. ethanol blending is up 1.7% versus year-ago; blend rate above 10.0% in 8 of last 10 months
Does not include EIA “adjustment” for certain blending below the rack and other blending outside of EIA survey
Source: EIA
11.0
11.5
12.0
12.5
13.0
13.5
14.0
14.5
15.0
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Bill
ion
Gal
lons
4-Week Average U.S. Ethanol Blending (Annualized)
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
9.5%
9.6%
9.7%
9.8%
9.9%
10.0%
10.1%
10.2%
10.3%
10.4%
Jan-14 Jul-14 Jan-15 Jul-15 Jan-16 Jul-16 Jan-17
Monthly U.S. Average Ethanol Content of Finished Gasoline
© 2017 Renewable Fuels Association. All Rights Reserved.
Sales of E15 and E85 are expanding as infrastructure buildout continues• E15 and E85 retail infrastructure expansion is
accelerating due to:• USDA Biofuels Infrastructure Partnership (BIP)
grant program• Ethanol industry grant programs• RFS RIN values• LCFS credit values (California)
• Major retail chains are adopting E15 and E85. Many stations are high-volume sites
• 900-1,000 stations expected to be selling E15 by the end of 2017
• E15 legally approved for 90% of current fleet• All major automakers approve E15 in new vehicles
(except Nissan, Mazda & Mercedes)
• EPA RVP regulations remain a key barrier• 25 million FFVs on the road (≈10% of fleet)
Source: RFA, E85prices.com, DOE
12 3885
182
574
781
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017YTD
U.S. Retail Stations Offering E15
3,017 3,0333,197
3,356
3,595
3,904
2,500
2,750
3,000
3,250
3,500
3,750
4,000
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017YTD
U.S. Retail Stations Offering E85/EFF
© 2017 Renewable Fuels Association. All Rights Reserved.
2017 Renewable Fuel Standard• EPA put the RFS “back on track” with final rule for
2017 RFS requirements
• Published prior to statutory deadline of Nov. 30, 2016
• Restored conventional renewable fuel requirement to statutory level of 15 billion gallons
• YTD Cellulosic and Advanced Biofuel RIN generation well behind the pace needed to meet RVOs (but excess Biodiesel RINs can cover Advanced shortfall)
• YTD Biodiesel and Conventional Renewable Fuel RIN generation generally on necessary pace to meet RVOs
• RIN stocks at 1.6-1.8 billion entering 2017 compliance year
RFS Conventional Renewable Fuel Requirement
© 2017 Renewable Fuels Association. All Rights Reserved.
2018 Renewable Fuel Standard• EPA’s proposed rule for 2018 RFS requirements
will be released very soon– Still time to meet statutory deadline of Nov. 30, 2017 for final rule if
proposal is released for public comment by mid-June– Expect conventional renewable fuel requirement to remain at statutory
level of 15 billion gallons– Expect very modest (100-200 MG, 2-4%) increase to total advanced
biofuel standard
• We do not expect the 2018 proposed rule to address petitions related to moving the RFS point of obligation– EPA proposed to deny the PoO petitions in Nov. 2016– Agency accepted public comments on the proposed denial– Final decision is pending
© 2017 Renewable Fuels Association. All Rights Reserved.
RFS Politics• Oil companies continue to push for repeal or reform of RFS• Reform focus is increasingly shifting to post-2022• House Energy & Commerce holding roundtable discussions to solicit
input on reform concepts, gauge appetite for modifications• Several “messaging bills” introduced in House to reform or repeal—
none expected to leave committee– H.R. 1315/1314 (Goodlatte)– H.R. 776/777 (Sensenbrenner)– H.R. 119 (Burgess)
• Support for RFS is bipartisan and falls along geographical lines• 41 Senators on record last summer supporting RFS and opposing
legislative repeal or reform• No meaningful legislative action on RFS is expected in near term• President Trump continues to voice support for RFS and ethanol• Administrator Pruitt committed to abide by the statute and
Congressional intent in implementing RFS• Agriculture Secretary Perdue strong supporter of RFS
© 2017 Renewable Fuels Association. All Rights Reserved.
Securing RVP Parity for E15• EPA regulations limit RVP of gasoline to 9.0 psi in the
summertime in conventional gasoline areas (2/3 of the country)– E10 has RVP of 9.9-10.0 psi when made with 9.0 psi CBOB– E15 has RVP of 9.8-9.9 psi when made with 9.0 psi CBOB
• In 1989, EPA gave E10 a 1 psi “waiver,” creating an effective RVP limit of 10.0 psi for E10 only (Congress codified in 1990)
• EPA does not apply the same 1 psi waiver to E15• Retailers cite the RVP disparity as the top reason for not
selling E15• S. 517 (Fischer) would extend 1 psi waiver to E15 and other
blends above E10– EPW hearing June 14; bill mark-up in late July
• Administrator Pruitt has also stated that EPA is evaluating how and whether it can administratively apply the 1 psi waiver to E15
© 2017 Renewable Fuels Association. All Rights Reserved.
Demand growing for U.S. ethanol exports
0 200 400 600 800 1000
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
Jan-Apr2017
Million Gallons
U.S. Ethanol Exports by RegionAll OthersNorth AmericaEU-28South AmericaMiddle EastNorth AfricaSoutheast AsiaSouth AsiaEast Asia
474.8
1,045.4
823.1
839.1
731.5
Source: DOC
616.6
80604020
020406080
100120140
Jan-
13
Mar
-13
May
-13
Jul-1
3
Sep-
13
Nov
-13
Jan-
14
Mar
-14
May
-14
Jul-1
4
Sep-
14
Nov
-14
Jan-
15
Mar
-15
May
-15
Jul-1
5
Sep-
15
Nov
-15
Jan-
16
Mar
-16
May
-16
Jul-1
6
Sep-
16
Nov
-16
Jan-
17
Mar
-17
Mill
ion
Gal
lons
Monthly U.S. Ethanol Exports and ImportsExports Imports Net Exports
© 2017 Renewable Fuels Association. All Rights Reserved.
Biofuel mandates, smog concerns, octane value driving demand for U.S. ethanol exports
Canada(20%)
Brazil(40%)
Peru(3%)
Nigeria (2%)Philippines (7%)
S. Korea (2%)
Rest of World(4%)
India(15%)UAE
(5%)
Top markets for U.S. ethanol exports in Jan-Apr 2017
Mexico(2%)
• High sugar prices relative to corn in 4Q16 and 1Q17 resulted in significant increase in U.S. ethanol exports to Brazil
• Exports to China have ceased in 2017 in response to increased tariff rates
• YTD exports to India, Philippines, UAE up in 2017 vs. 2016
• Nearly 50 countries have renewable fuel mandates, targets, or goals.
• Octane value and oxygen content (smog reduction) also driving export demand.
• Still 2+ BG of MTBE blended worldwide.
• 2017 exports expected between 1.1-1.3 BG
Source: DOC
Canada(25%)
Brazil(26%)
Mexico(3%) Nigeria
(2%)
Philippines (5%)
S. Korea (4%)Rest of World(5%)
India(8%)
UAE(2%)
Top markets for U.S. ethanol exports in 2016
China (17%)
Peru(4%)
© 2017 Renewable Fuels Association. All Rights Reserved.
Recommended