MGPUB Announces Flex Fuel Video Contest

Joanna Schroeder

The Maryland Grain Producers Utilization Board (MGPUB) has launched its Drive Flex Fuel video contest to kick off its 2016 Maryland Drive Flex Fuels advertising campaign. Winning-worthy videos will be 30 seconds and educate and encourage drivers to choose ethanol fuels including E15 and E85 at the pump as well as to purchase flex fuel vehicles (FFVs) when they are next in the market to buy a car. Top videos will be used in public advertising campaigns to create awareness about ethanol fuels and FFVs.

MGPUB says they are looking for creativity, attention-grabbing features, and the use of multiple topics or themes. Submissions must be original works and may not contain copyrighted material, or any material that is proprietary to a third party. The first place winner will be awarded $5,000, 2nd place winner receives $1,000 and third place $500. There is also a $500 award for the most viewed video on YouTube by December 15, 2016.


A few facts from MGPUB to get you started.

  • Nationwide there are more than 18 million FFVs on the road and around 700,000 in Maryland.
  • FFVs can use any blend of ethanol up to E85, 85 percent ethanol and 15 percent gasoline. There are nearly 40 E85 stations in Maryland today and growing and half of these stations will also offer E15, an ethanol fuel blend approved for all cars and light trucks 2001 or newer.
  • FFV drivers using E85 reduce harmful air pollutants including nitrogen oxides, toxins, particulate matter and CO2.
  • Greenhouse gas emissions are reduced by 34 percent as compared with regular gasoline.
  • Ethanol increases horsepower while reducing fuel injector build-up.
  • Ethanol is American-made and replaces 600,000 barrels of oil per day.
  • Fueling with ethanol blends at the pump helps support 400,00o American jobs as well as Maryland’s farmers.

Click here for more information about the Drive Flex Fuel video contest and ethanol-blended fuels.

E15, E85, Education, Ethanol, Video

Western Plains Energy Joins RFA

Joanna Schroeder

Western Plains Energy has joined the Renewable Fuels Association (RFA). The ethanol facility is located in Oakley, Kansas and produces 50 million gallons per year of ethanol from both corn and grain sorghum. The ethanol refinery produces more than 400,000 tons per year of wet distillers’ grains.

Western Plains Energy“We are thrilled to announce that Western Plains Energy has joined our organization,” said Renewable Fuels Association President and CEO Bob Dinneen. “The hardworking farmer-owners of the company are not just providing consumers with ethanol, the lowest cost, cleanest-burning and highest octane source in the world, they’re producing distillers’ grains, a high-value byproduct that adds income and boosts the local economy. The U.S. ethanol industry is helping to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, lower food and fuel costs and provide greater energy security for our nation. We welcome Western Plains Energy to the RFA Board of Directors and look forward to their input towards the association’s policy and marketplace agenda.”

Western Plains employs 48 people and went into production in 2004.

“The Western Plains Energy team is pleased to join the Renewable Fuels Association,” addedd Western Plains Energy CEO Derek Peine. “We look forward to RFA’s advocacy efforts and technical expertise to ensure the U.S. ethanol industry continues to grow, and to Western Plains Energy’s continued contribution in supporting Kansas agriculture and in making the U.S. more energy independent.”

Ethanol, Ethanol News, RFA

BioenergizeME Infographic Challenge Winner Is…

Joanna Schroeder

Screen Shot 2016-06-01 at 11.12.42 AMAnd the BioenergizeME Infographic Challenge Winner is…Smithtown High School located in St. James New York. The students beat their competitors with the winning infographic entitled, “Cellulosic Ethanol: Fueling the Future”. The student team won the Director’s Prize for Excellence in Content, Design and Social Media Promotion and have been invited to present their infographic during the Bioenergy Technololgies Office’s (BETO) Bioenergy 2016 conference taking place July 12-14 in Washington, D.C.

The BioenergizeMe Infographic Challenge is a contest for high school students with the goal of the teams learning about bioenergy and sharing what they have learned through social media channels. During the social media portion of the challenge, the infographic received more than 21,000 unique pageScreen Shot 2016-06-01 at 11.14.46 AM views during 11 days.

The Smithtown High School students’ infographic, which received more than 1,000 views, details the process for the conversion of cellulosic feedstocks into ethanol and presents the associated benefits and considerations, including scientific, social, and economic impacts. BETO judges said the team demonstrated a thorough understanding of their chosen research topic and created an engaging visual representation of the conversion process.

BETO also recognized the top ten finalists from the Challenge’s social media campaign and selected the first and second place runners up: First runner up: “Algae as a Biofuel” from Smithtown High School East in St. James, New York; and Second runner up: “Energy from Biomass” also from Smithtown High School East in St. James, New York.

advanced biofuels, algae, Biodiesel, Cellulosic, Education, Ethanol

#RFS Comment Period Opens

Joanna Schroeder

Screen Shot 2016-06-01 at 10.25.02 AMThe comment period for the latest proposed Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) for years 2017 & 2018 has opened. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s proposed 2017 Renewable Volume Obligations (RVOs) proposal would reduce corn ethanol volumes by approximately 200 million gallons while other categories were slightly raised, but not yet at statue levels. The comment period goes through July 11, 2016, but for those interested in being heard in person, and the EPA is hosting a public hearing in Kansas City, Missouri June 9, 2016.

Now that the comment period is open, the National Corn Growers Association (NCGA) is urging farmers, consumers and the ethanol industry to begin submitting comments right away. The corn farmer organization has created a webpage explaining EPA’s proposal. The site includes various drafts of comments that can be customized by the sender as well as a link to an email address to which the comments should be sent. NCGA is also calling on the industry to apply to testify during the EPA hearing and for strong attendance as a means to get the message heard that this proposal will hurt rural America.

“We are very clear to EPA about what we want,” said NCGA President Chip Bowling. “It is simple: EPA should follow the statute. For farmers and others in rural America, this new EPA proposal means low corn prices and ethanol plant and industry cutbacks. And for everyone else, it means higher gas prices and dirtier air.”

biofuels, corn, EPA, Ethanol, NCGA, RFS

NFU & NDFU Defend #RFS

Joanna Schroeder

The National Farmers Union (NFU) and the North Dakota Farmers Union (NDFU) have responded to comments made by U.S. Representative Kevin Cramer (R-ND) suggesting that the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) should be allowed to expire in 2022. The two farmer organizations noted that the #RFS has a positive impact on rural economies, especially those in Rep. Cramer’s home state of North Dakota. For several years, North Dakota saw a major oil fracking boon. Although the industry has peaked and since declined, fracking continues in the state.

National Farmers Union logoNFU and NDFU send a letter to Rep. Cramer encouraging him to consider biofuels’ critical contribution to U.S. energy independence, national security, and the nation’s rural economies. The ethanol industry “adds more than $300 million annually to North Dakota’s economy and $42.4 billion to the U.S. Gross Domestic Product,” the groups state in the letter. However, the groups note, in recent years the RFS has not been able to perform to its full potential due to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) setting biofuel volumes lower than required by statue for several years in a row.

“In light of these setbacks, volume obligations beyond 2022 are even more important, since ethanol refiners will need to make up for lost time to overcome the unfair and monopolistic chokehold on consumer transportation fuels,” the organizations write in the letter.

NDFU logoWith the recent downturn in the farm economy, the organizations say there were especially troubled by Rep. Cramer’s advice to presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump. Allowing the RFS to expire fails to align with Mr. Trump’s previous acknowledgement of the benefits of fair access to markets for ethanol.

“From the farm to the gas pump, the RFS has created opportunities for farmers, local economies and consumers across the country. Unfortunately, undercutting volume obligations has created an unbalanced market, favoring branded oil companies over the American farmer and the rural consumer,” said NFU President Roger Johnson. “I encourage Representative Cramer to support family farmers and rural communities and reconsider his position on allowing the RFS to expire.”

Read the full letter here.

biofuels, Ethanol, RFS

ICM’s SMT Technology Proven Process

Joanna Schroeder

ICM_2-color_logoVRTIMC says its Selective Milling Technology (SMT) has proven its success. Today the technology is installed at nearly 15 percent of U.S. ethanol plants and has enabled ethanol plants to produce more than 300 million gallons of ethanol since its installations. ICM says the SMT process has collectively produced more than 45 million gallons of ethanol per year as well as a collective increase of more than 30 million pounds of corn oil per year. ICM cites that at current values for both products, SMT has collectively generated more than $85 million in additional revenue for these ethanol facilities.

ICM President Chris Mitchell said, “We continue to focus our efforts on developing solutions that deliver value-added product streams to the renewable energy industry. We believe our competitive advantage comes from providing our customers with technologies that deliver immediate returns for them coupled with our expanding platform technologies that we continue to launch.”

ICM explains that its SMT process frees more starch needed for enzyme conversion to sugar and then maximizes the additional energy created by targeting the particles that can benefit from it most. Plant data has identified several benefits as a result of the SMT process including: increased ethanol yields up to 3.0 percent, increased oil recovery yields up to 25 percent, and ultimately, increased revenues.

A model-scale SMT™ will be on display at ICM’s booth (#1023) at the Fuel Ethanol Workshop (FEW), June 20 – 23 taking place in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

corn, Ethanol

Trestle Energy & Larksen Partner on New Fuel Pathway

Joanna Schroeder

Trestle Energy and Larksen are partnering to commercialize a new Fuel Pathway Management Platform using biomass pellets. The platform would enable ethanol producers to reduce their fuel carbon intensity by powering their plant with biomass derived electricity. The biomass pellets would replace coal and provide emission reductions similar to wind energy according to Trestle.

Trestle Energy logoTrestle notes that while ethanol plants see carbon intensity benefits, the platform would also assist in building feedstock supplies for emerging cellulosic industries paving another pathway to the energy sector’s transition to a low carbon economy.

James Rhodes, Ph.D., of Trestle Energy notes, “This initiative is a clear example of how American energy can both grow the economy and advance important environmental priorities. It promises to deliver new jobs and economic development across America’s farm communities, enhance the value of American industries and American-made products, advance ambitious climate and renewable energy policies, and measurably improve environmental quality.”

Of particular importance to domestic markets and producers, says Trestle, this partnership charts a cost-effective path for the biofuels industry to comply with ambitious climate and energy programs, such as California’s Low Carbon Fuel Standards (LCFS), thereby enabling greater access to premium regulated markets.

Johan Neels of Larksen added, “with the recent signing of the Paris Agreement (COP21), and with the anticipation of CO2 rules to advance the goals of the Clean Power Plan (CPP), our partnership with Trestle Energy gives participating producers a clear economic advantage.”

biofuels, biomass, Electricity, Low Carbon Fuel Standard

BioEnergy Bytes

Joanna Schroeder

  • BioEnergyBytesDF1Greenbelt Resources Corporation has announced that it has entered into a non–exclusive contingent fee agreement with Boundary Stone Partners, to provide financial advisory and banking services to facilitate investment in the company or a company project. As noted by CEO Darren Eng, “Greenbelt Resources is ready to develop its own projects with the right strategic partners.”
  • Wind, solar, and other renewable energy sources set a series of records for domestic electrical generation during the first quarter of 2016 according to the latest EIA “Electric Power Monthly” report. Net U.S. electrical generation from non-hydro renewables (i.e., biomass, geothermal, solar, wind) increased by 22.9% compared to the first quarter of 2015. Output from conventional hydropower also rose by 6.5%. Combined, generation from all renewable sources increased by 14.60% in January-March 2016 compared to the same period in 2015.
  • Renewable Energy Group (REG) has announced the pricing of its offering of $132 million aggregate principal amount of 4.00% convertible senior notes due 2036 in a private placement to qualified institutional buyers pursuant to an exemption from the registration requirements of the Securities Act of 1933. In connection with the offering, REG has granted the initial purchasers an option to purchase up to an additional $20 million aggregate principal amount of Notes on the same terms and conditions. The sale of the Notes is scheduled to close on June 2, 2016, subject to satisfaction of customary closing conditions.
Bioenergy Bytes

Chief Ethanol Fuels Acquires Cornhusker Energy

Joanna Schroeder

Screen Shot 2016-05-31 at 10.29.26 AMNebraska ethanol plant Chief Ethanol Fuels has acquired Cornhusker Energy Lexington, also located in Nebraska. Chief Ethanol Fuels in Hastings is the first dry mill ethanol plant in Nebraska. It is currently operating at a rate of 70 million gallons per year. Chief Ethanol Fuels General Manager Duane Kristensen is the Vice President of the ACE Board of Directors.

In response, Executive Vice President of the American Coalition for Ethanol (ACE) Brian Jennings stated, “We congratulate Chief for the acquisition of the Lexington plant which will increase the company’s total production capacity to 120 million gallons per year,” said Jennings. “Chief Industries is a diversified company with a strong reputation. We’re confident that under the steady leadership of the Chief Ethanol Fuels management team, the plant in Lexington will provide high-skill, high-wage jobs and boost conditions for corn farmers and cattle ranchers/feeders in the area.”

ACE, Ethanol

RFA: #Ethanol Plays Vital Role in National Security

Joanna Schroeder

© Veronika Golovko | Dreamstime.com - Memorial day

© Veronika Golovko | Dreamstime.com – Memorial day

This Memorial Day holiday, the Renewable Fuel Association (RFA) has a message for American consumers: ethanol plays a vital role in national security. While the holiday marks the official start of summer with people piling in to cars on cross country vacations and trips to beaches and pools, the purpose of the holiday is to thank our armed forces for their sacrifices to keep America free.

A big part of keeping our country safe, says RFA, involves energy security. That’s where ethanol comes in to play.

As explained by RFA: In 2005, the year the original Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) was adopted, America’s net dependence on foreign petroleum peaked at just over 60 percent. The RFS has had a dramatic impact on our energy landscape, with net petroleum import dependence falling to just 25 percent in 2015; it would have been 32 percent without the addition of 14.8 billion gallons of domestically produced ethanol to the fuel supply. The surge in ethanol production has reduced gasoline imports from nearly 10 billion gallons in 2005 to almost zero today, displacing the amount of gasoline refined from 527 million barrels of crude oil. That’s equivalent to the volume of oil imported annually from Saudi Arabia and Kuwait combined.

“As the U.S. celebrates Memorial Day weekend, it is important we remember the whole point of the holiday,” said Renewable Fuels Association President and CEO Bob Dinneen. “We thank our armed forces for their sacrifices in keeping America safe.”

Dinneen continued, “When it comes to energy security, ethanol is a key player. It is the lowest cost, cleanest-burning, highest octane additive available to refiners and it provides consumers with significant benefits today. As we are seeing, the U.S. cannot frack its way to energy independence. Ethanol is indeed helping to chisel away our reliance on foreign sources of fuel. That’s why the RFS is such an important tool in the nation’s arsenal for energy security, and must be maintained.”

biofuels, Ethanol, RFA, RFS