Wednesday, May 13, 2009

US DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE: BNDES FUNNELING MONEY INTO BRAZILIAN SUGAR AND ETHANOL INDUSTRY, MAY BE STOKING OVERCAPACITY

While most plants in Brazil can produce both sugar and ethanol, about 150 of the country’s 420 plants are ethanol-only operations (previous post). Most were set up during the ethanol fever that took hold of the industry post-2006, when oil prices were skyrocketing and the U.S. government embarked on an all-out to promote the use of ethanol.

Highlights on the expansion of Brazil’s sugar and ethanol industry, taken from the USDA’s recently-released report on the 2009-2010 outlook for the Brazilian sugar and ethanol industry:
Dropping sugar and ethanol prices during 2007 and 2008 and the global financial crisis in September 2008 became a major obstacle to new investments in 2009 and 2010, although investments in the sugar-ethanol sector had been growing steadily during the last few years. (Financing from the National Bank for Economic and Social Development - BNDES, the major federal bank funding new projects, increased from R$ 3.56 billion in 2007 to R$ 6.5 billion in 2008.) Credit has become scarce, to fund both sugar export operations and investments in new mills. The industry estimates that total credit to finance investments should drop from R$ 12 billion in 2008 to R$ 7 billion or less in 2009. Approximately 40 percent of the mills that were supposed to start running in 2009 (35 mills) have already postponed operations until 2010.

No comments:

ETHANOL FUEL ADVANTAGES DEMONSTRATED IN THE INDY 500

I worked with Tom MacDonald from April to August 2007. He has a long track record at the California Energy Commission with fuel ethanol, wit...