Corn shortage idles 20 ethanol plants

  Comments (...)
Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

Cooper said most of the idled plants expect to restart production — just not anytime soon. Corn is expected to remain scarce and expensive at least until the 2013 crop is harvested, starting in late August and into September. Cooper believes ethanol production won’t resume at most plants until then.

For now, many of the plants remain open with workers doing maintenance or helping to modernize the facilities while they wait for production to resume, Cooper said.

Only one of the closed production facilities, an ADM plant in Wallhalla, N.D., may be closed for good, Cooper said.

“Generally the industry is optimistic,” Cooper said. “We’re just going through a rough patch here.”

Not everyone associated with the industry is that optimistic.

Brian Baalman farms near Menlo, Kan., typically growing 8,000 acres of corn each year. Last year’s crop was about one-third of that. This year, he may plant only the one-third of his acreage where irrigation is available this summer.

Like many growers, Baalman has a direct interest in ethanol. He is on the board of Western Plans Energy in Oakley, Kan., and has stock in seven ethanol plants. He said near-record prices for corn, driven up by the drought-fueled shortage, are making ethanol production costs too high.

“We are burning up all our excess cash just to stay running at a reduced rate to keep people working and keep the people there, keep the lights on, so to speak,” Baalman said. “It’s very tough right now.”

“A lot of these ethanol plants aren’t going to make it,” Baalman said.

|||3|Next Page

Comments

Total Comments
0

View/Add Comments

There have been no comments made about this story.


Newton Daily Deals Email:

National video

Reader Poll

What Summer activities are you most looking forward to:

Vacation Travel
Sports & Activities
Capitol 2/Valle Drive In
ThunderNites
Iowa Speedway