Big year for ethanol

Source: AgriView • Posted: Friday, October 17, 2014

Ethanol production, consumption and stocks data are typically reviewed on a calendar-year basis because Renewable Fuel Standards (RFS) are established for calendar years.

But according to a University of Illinois agricultural economist, corn is the major feedstock for domestic ethanol production, ethanol data on a corn marketing year basis (September to August). Therefore are important for monitoring and anticipating marketing-year corn consumption.

Darrel Good reported that for the 2013-2014 corn marketing year, monthly estimates of domestic ethanol production and stocks are available from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) through July 2014.

Weekly estimates are available for August. Census Bureau estimates of ethanol imports and exports are available for the entire marketing year. Based on these estimates, domestic ethanol production for the year totaled a record 14.15 billion gallons, 1.3 billion gallons more than was produced during the 2012-2013 marketing year and 354 million gallons more than the previous record production during the 2011-2012 marketing year.

“Ethanol imports during the 2013-2014 marketing year are estimated at 275 million gallons, 509 million gallons less than were imported during the previous year when domestic ethanol production was limited by a short supply and the high price of corn,” Good said. “The vast majority of imports are from Brazil.

Exports of U.S. ethanol during the 2013-2014 marketing year are estimated at 788 million gallons, 227 million gallons more than were exported last year, but nearly 300 million gallons less than exports during the 2011-2012 marketing year.

Exports were exceptionally large in 2011-2012 resulting from a sharp decline in Brazilian ethanol production due to a small supply and high price of sugar. Ethanol is exported to a large number of countries, with Canada being the largest customer by a wide margin. The exception was the unusually large exports to Brazil in 2011-2012.”

Good continued that domestic stocks of ethanol during the 2013-2014 corn marketing year increased by an estimated 35 million gallons, following a decline of 94 million gallons during the previous marketing year.

“The estimates of production, imports, exports and stocks imply that domestic consumption of ethanol during the 2013-2014 marketing year totaled 13.6 billion gallons, 443 million gallons more than the previous record consumption in 2012-2013,” he said. “The 3 percent increase in consumption was supported by a modest increase in motor fuel consumption and a modest increase in consumption of higher ethanol blends, primarily E85.”

The U.S. Department of Agriculture has forecast that a record 5.125 billion bushels of corn were used to produce ethanol during the 2013-2014 corn marketing year that ended on Aug. 31. That forecast will be revised as EIA ethanol production and stocks estimates are finalized.

“Based on current estimates for August, corn consumption may have been slightly larger than the current forecast,” Good said.

On a side note, Good noted that a large quantity of corn used for ethanol production results in a large quantity of the co-product of distillers grains.

Those distillers grains are mostly fed to livestock, domestically or in importing countries, and substitute for other feed ingredients, mostly whole corn and soybean meal.

During the 2013-2014 marketing year, a larger portion of those distillers grains were exported than was the case in the previous 2 years. The Census Bureau estimates that 13.2 million tons of distillers grains were exported during the 2013-2014 marketing year, about 50 percent more than in each of the previous 2 years. China was the largest importer of distillers grains, followed by Mexico.

“Chinese restrictions on import of some genetically modified organisms (GMO) products have raised concerns about future U.S. exports of distiller’s grains to China,” Good said. “A slowdown in those exports, however, might have a minimal impact for the current year. Smaller Chinese imports could alter the mix of feed ingredients consumed, but it would not likely alter the global demand for total feed ingredients. That is, China would presumably replace U.S. distillers grains with some other feed ingredient that in turn would make room for more U.S. corn or distillers grains in other markets.

“With a record-large U.S. corn crop this year, the magnitude of ethanol production will be important in determining the extent of the buildup in domestic corn inventories by the end of the current marketing year,” Good said. “With only limited potential for growth in domestic ethanol consumption, expansion in production will be dependent on continued small or declining imports and growth in exports of ethanol. Export potential is enhanced by the current low price of ethanol relative to gasoline, but increases are not yet evident in monthly Census Bureau export estimates.”

Good said that the weekly estimates from EIA indicate that ethanol production in September 2014 was about 6.5 percent larger than in September 2013.

“The large increase, however, reflects the relatively low level of production in September 2013 so that rate of expansion will not likely be maintained,” he said. “Growth in ethanol production alone will not be sufficient to prevent a substantial build-up in corn inventories but may be helpful in limiting the magnitude of the buildup.”

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