Posts Tagged ‘Ron Kotrba’

RIN Credits, Ethanol Blending and the 800-pound Gorilla

RIN Credits, Ethanol Blending and the 800-pound Gorilla

By: Ron Kotrba
From the April 2009 Ethanol Producer Magazine


ethanol-producer

Renewable energy credit prices are on the rise as ethanol blend economics remain poor and the year-end reporting date looms. EPM talks with Clayton McMartin, president of Clean Fuels Clearinghouse, about renewable identification number credits, industry consolidation, and the oil industry’s 800-pound gorilla, Valero Energy Corp., which can no longer be ignored.

The 800-pound gorilla in the room finally announced itself in early February. For months, speculators have been trying to figure out which ethanol companies will buy out which ethanol plants during this period of crushing economic recession and potential ethanol industry consolidation. Aside from food companies, what other industry made record profits in 2008 and could logically purchase distressed ethanol production facilities? The oil refiners—they who are obligated to blend ethanol into their supplies as mandated under the federal renewable fuels standard (RFS). On Friday, Feb. 6, VeraSun Energy Corp. “took out the trash”—that’s public relations lingo for releasing bad news on a Friday, with the understanding that there will be little coverage of it until at least Monday. The same day, VeraSun issued a press release titled, “VeraSun Energy Obtains ‘Stalking Horse’ Bid From Valero for Five Facilities; Files Motion Seeking Authority to Sell Substantially All Assets by March.” Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

EPA rolls out RINs Moderated Tracking System

EPA Rolls Out RINs Moderated Tracking System

By: Ron Kotrba
From the March 2009 Web Exclusive Ethanol Producer Magazine

ethanol-producer

The U.S. EPA held a Webinar on Feb. 25 to explain its development of a Moderated Tracking System that will accurately and securely track renewable identification number (RIN) credits.

A RIN is a 38-character numeric code that’s generated by the producer or importer of renewable fuel; it represents gallons of renewable fuel produced/imported and is assigned to batches of renewable fuel that are transferred (change of ownership) to others. RINs are valid for the calendar-generated, or the following year.

RINs currently apply to the ethanol industry; however beginning in 2010 RINS will also apply to the biodiesel industry.

The EPA is developing MTS to track the generation, distribution and sale of RINs as a way to help accurately enforce the mandates under the renewable fuels standard enacted in the Energy Independence & Security Act of 2007. The market-based renewable fuels registry RINSTAR has been working with the EPA to help develop a federal register through which all RIN transactions would flow to ensure accurate and honest reporting. Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

RIN Registry, Trades, Prices Continue to Grow

RIN Registry, Trades, Prices Continue to Grow

By: Ron Kotrba
January 2009 Ethanol Producer Magazine Web exclusive post Feb. 2, 2009

ethanol-producer

Clayton McMartin, president of Clean Fuels Clearinghouse and the RINSTAR renewable fuel registry, was a guest on Bob Taylor’s live webcast show Jan. 27. Prior to the interview, more than 200 questions were submitted for McMartin to answer.

A year ago, McMartin said RINSTAR’s member companies totaled approximately 25, and since then, the registry has grown to include more than 140 members. In 12 months, RINSTAR has validated more than 500,000 trades, and renewable identification number (RIN) prices have gone from the 2 to 3 cent range to 15 cents on the market. “Most importantly, we’ve helped companies throughout the industry profit from this emerging market,” McMartin said.

Taylor placed the submitted questions in one of four categories: general program, compliance and penalties, the new renewable fuels standard (RFS2) and renewable fuels standard 1.5 (RFS1.5), and the economy and marketplace. Taylor then chose questions to ask McMartin during the one-hour show based on frequency. Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Transition Period

Transition Period

By: Ron Kotrba
From the November 2008 Biodiesel Magazine

biodiesel-magazine-logo

The federal renewable fuels standard calls for 500 million gallons of biomass-based diesel to be used in 2009. Many questions remain as to how this will play out.

2009 will be interesting with respect to implementation of the new renewable fuels standard, which many refer to as RFS2. New terms such as “advanced biofuel” and “biomass-based diesel” were never part of the 2005 RFS and just this year emerged as part of the new national energy-policy vernacular. Biomass-based diesel is a specified title under “advanced biofuel.” In 2009, RFS2 mandates that 11.1 billion gallons of renewable fuels must be blended into energy supplies; 10.5 billion of which is corn-based ethanol, and the other 600 million gallons must be “advanced biofuel,” 500 million gallons of which is to be biomass-based diesel. By 2012, 1 billion gallons of biomass-based diesel is required under the mandate.

Since the signing of the Energy Independence & Security Act of 2007—the Energy Bill that RFS2 was part of—speculation has run rampant as to how events will play out. There are a lot of unknowns left, especially since U.S. EPA delayed provisional rulemaking on implementation of RFS2 until January. Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,