Biofuels maker Codexis Inc. has filed for a $100 million initial public offering on Nasdaq.
This blog post from the Wall Street Journal says the San Francisco-based company develops microbes that turn plants into sugars for ethanol and biodiesel production. Shell has a 20 percent stake in Codexis, a company that tried an IPO back in September 2008, but had to back off when the market crashed:
Will Codexis timing be any better this time around? There are still plenty of potholes.
The beauty of an IPO filing is that the company must file all sorts of risk factors laying out exactly what can go wrong. And in the biofuels business, that’s quite a lengthy list. Codexis (and its lawyers) cite: its sugar daddy Shell could decide it wants to stop bankrolling R&D efforts; “the development of technology for converting sugar derived from non-food renewable biomass sources into a commercially viable biofuel is still in its early stages, and we do not know whether this can be done commercially or at all”; “there are no commercial scale cellulosic biofuel production plants in operation. There can be no assurance that anyone will be able or willing to develop and operate biofuel production plants at commercial scale or that any biofuel facilities can be profitable”; new infrastructure is needed, such as rail lines; tax credits and other government subsidies could disappear; falling oil prices will pole axe revenue; fears of genetic engineering could pinch the company; and there might not be enough feedstock to turn into biofuels.
So is it time to get your Codexis stock now? Well, it all depends on your comfort level with risk. After all, it is a company headquartered on San Francisco’s earthquake zones.


California’s Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger along with MTV’s “Pimp My Ride” will be celebrating Earth Day with a green episode. The show to be aired on April 22 will focus on a 65 Chevy Impala that will be converted to use biodiesel. The Impala will be equipped with an 800 horsepower diesel engine that will run on biodiesel converting it into one ultra clean machine.
A combination of more affordable wind turbines and more government incentives will make wind power more attractive to businesses, which should mean more will adopt the green energy source in the coming year … that assessment from the American Wind Energy Association.
The food-versus-fuel debate gets a bit of a twist as an algae-biodiesel maker decides it will make fuel AND food.
The winner of a trip for two to the Minnesota Viking game at Soldier Field in Chicago has been announced. Derek Willow plans to take his brother-in-law to the Vikings game against the Chicago Bears on December 28. Willow is the proud winner of the “Vikings Road Trip, Fueled By E85″ contest sponsored by the
The Vikings teamed up with ALAMN earlier in the season to bring awareness of E85 to their fans. They gave away free parking at the home games and the grand prize of a trip to Chicago ends their season promotion.
The
“The LCFS erects new regulatory obstacles to ethanol, frustrates the federal Renewable Fuel Standard, and threatens the nationwide market for domestic ethanol,” says a 
A Minnesota company is proposing to build a massive wind farm in Lake Michigan, but some of the residents of Michigan, which has some of the highest unemployment rates in the country, still aren’t pleased about the project that would bring green energy and jobs to the economically distressed region.
A North Dakota ethanol plant is truly exploring the concept of value-added products. The Blue Flint Ethanol refinery in Underwood, ND, will extract oil from the corn it turns into ethanol to turn that oil into biodiesel.