Center for Advanced BioEnergy Research, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

State's ethanol surge to level off, expert says

The Star Press.com (Indiana)

Will we now see a similar rush to build ethanol plants that convert corn stalks to fuel?
By SETH SLABAUGH • seths@muncie.gannett.com • September 11, 2008

ALEXANDRIA -- After the opening of three new Indiana ethanol plants between now and late October -- plus another one next year -- the corn ethanol surge in this state will level off, a Purdue University expert predicts.

"It all adds up to a billion gallons of ethanol production (capacity annually)," ag economist Chris Hurt told farmers during a Purdue Ag Outlook meeting on Wednesday. "That's what the governor talked about two years ago. So, wow, we're a big part of it."

Scheduled to begin producing ethanol in the near future are POET, North Manchester; Indiana Bio-Energy, Bluffton, and Cardinal Ethanol in Randolph County, followed next summer by Aventine Renewable Energy in southwestern Indiana near Evansville.

That will bring to a dozen the total number of ethanol plants in Indiana. They will require 350 million bushels of corn -- about 35 percent of Indiana's total corn crop -- to operate at capacity.

Nationally, ethanol production capacity is approaching 10 billion gallons a year, and is expected to exceed 13.5 billion gallons next year. The federal government has mandated the use of 15 billion gallons of corn ethanol by 2015.

Read the full story

No comments: