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U.S. Lacks Ethanol Infrastructure

CHICAGO - Jan 28/08 - SNS -- The United States does not have the infrastructure to handle the volume of ethanol which can be produced this year, argues Purdue University agricultural economist Wally Tyner.

By the end of the year, the United States will be able to produce 13 billion gallons of ethanol, but the maximum ethanol the market can handle may be considerably less than 12 billion gallons.

As a result, Tyner and colleagues forecast a few possible changes in 2008:

* The price of ethanol will be lower.

* Some ethanol plants will have to reduce production or shut production down.

* Some ethanol may have to be exported.


Some Combination Most Likely

However, Tyner said a combination of these factors is most likely.

"There will be a lot of pressure on ethanol prices in 2008 and with high corn prices that means there will be a lot of pressure on profitability of ethanol during the next year," he said.

The challenge is that once all this ethanol is produced, it has to be made available to consumers at gas stations, and shipment of ethanol is an issue.

Tyner said that in order to build the ethanol market to its maximum potential - 14 billion gallons, or 10 percent of gasoline consumption - the capacity has to exist to transport it by rail to the East Coast, West Coast and the South. Because of its corrosive nature, ethanol can't be moved by pipeline.

"Once at its destination, there needs to be terminal blending capacity so the ethanol can be blended," Tyner said. "That means building new tanks and, in some cases, building new rail lines into the terminals.

"All this can happen, but it takes time. It is already being done in Florida, but not everywhere, and it most certainly will not be done by the end of 2008. This puts a real infrastructure constraint on even getting to the physical potential."

Tyner said that expanding the E85 market in the longer term means producing more flex-fuel cars and installing more E85 pumps in gas stations.

"That's a long, slow process," he said. "Automotive manufacturers will be moving that way, but changing the percentage of the fleet that's flex-fuel will take years. But the faster we move in that direction, the faster it will happen."

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