Tag Archives: alternative
Sugar Seen Dropping Before Brazil’s Ethanol Demand Gains
By Chanyaporn Chanjaroen and Isis Almeida May 30, 2013 Sugar may drop to a low in three to four months before rebounding as millers in top producer Brazil direct more cane to ethanol at the sweetener’s expense, according to RCMA Commodities Asia Ltd. The millers will use 45 percent of their crop for making sugar, estimates Kingsman SA, a unit of McGraw-Hill Financial Inc. ( MHFI )’s Platts. That’s down from a previous forecast of 47.5 percent and from 49.5 percent a year earlier. Brazil said last month it will give producers tax breaks to raise ethanol output, making the biofuel more competitive against gasoline and lifting domestic consumption. Rising demand and lower beet planting in Europe may also support sugar’s recovery, RCMA says. “The question is when does the market bottom, when does it form an end to the cycle?” Jonathan Drake, chief operating officer at RCMA, said in an interview in Singapore last week, referring to sugar. “And probably that’s still in three or four months’ time. In 60 to 90 days’ time, we will see an increase in the hydrous ethanol consumption. The only question is that, is it enough?” Sugar prices fell 14 percent in New York this year and reached a 34-month low on May 23 as supplies are set to outpace demand by a record 10 million metric tons in the 2012-13 season that started in October in most countries, the International Sugar Organization in London estimates. Prices also retreated in the past two years and a third annual decline would mean the longest price slump since 1992. Ethanol sales in Brazil’s center south climbed 24 percent to 920.9 million liters (243 million gallons) in the first half of May, Sao Paulo-based industry group Unica said this week. Ethanol demand will continue to rise as the biofuel has now become more attractive to consumers compared with gasoline, Antonio de Padua Rodrigues, Unica’s technical director, said in a statement e-mailed on May 28. Flex-Fuel Cars The price of hydrous ethanol, the 100 percent biofuel used in Brazil’s flex-fuel cars, may need to fall to about 1,100 reais ($530) a cubic meter without taxes to ensure maximum consumption, Drake said. The biofuel is currently trading at about 1,250 reais a cubic meter (35 cubic feet), Drake said. Maximum consumption of hydrous ethanol will happen when the biofuel’s price is 60 percent of gasoline’s, he added. “If the price is right, Brazil can consume all the sugar surplus in eight months,” Drake said, referring to the price of hydrous ethanol. “If the price is not right, then we still have all this surplus. The big, big thing for the sugar market is to see after a couple of months whether motorists in Brazil have increased the consumption of hydrous ethanol significantly.” Ethanol Prices Hydrous ethanol prices in sugar equivalent are about 17.5 cents a pound, Patricia Luis-Manso, head of agriculture research at Kingsman, said in a separate interview in Singapore on May 27. That represents a premium of 4.5 percent over the raw sugar futures traded on ICE Futures U.S. in New York. “If the premium persists through October, which is the majority of the current season, that would be enough incentive to decrease the sugar mix in favor of hydrous ethanol production,” Luis-Manso said, adding that the company’s current forecast for the amount of cane directed to sugar production could still fall to 42 percent from 45 percent now. Sugar prices will also recover as demand increases by about 3.5 million to 4 million tons a year and production in some sugar-beet producing countries drops, Drake said. In Europe, cold weather delayed plantings, causing output to fall 600,000 tons from a previous forecast to 16.9 million tons, Kingsman estimated on May 24. Production in Russia will be five percent smaller at 4.35 million tons in 2013-14, the researcher said. European Plantings “In Europe, the plantings will be down, production will be a little bit down, partly because of the weather,” Drake said. “North America is the same issue. Even in places like Russia and the Ukraine, plantings will be lower. So beet sugar in general next year will have, it’s too early to know, but maybe several million tons less sugar.” Weather in cane-producing countries may not be as favorable for crop development, according to Drake. Production in India, the world’s second-biggest grower, will fall to 22.2 million tons in 2013-14 on dry weather, Kingsman estimated. That is down from 24.8 million tons now. To contact the reporter on this story: Isis Almeida in London at Ialmeida3@bloomberg.net To contact the editor responsible for this story: Claudia Carpenter at Ccarpenter2@bloomberg.net. Continue reading
Palm Oil Declines as Drop in Crude Reduces Appeal of Biofuels
By Ranjeetha Pakiam May 30, 2013 Palm oil declined from a seven-week high as crude oil traded near the lowest price in four weeks, cutting the appeal of vegetable oils as biofuel feedstock. The contract for August delivery fell 1.1 percent to close at 2,372 ringgit ($772) a metric ton on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives, the biggest decline for the most active futures since April 29. Futures ended at 2,399 ringgit yesterday, the highest level at close since April 8. West Texas Intermediate crude fell to $92.59 a barrel after an industry report showed U.S. stockpiles rose the most in a month. The contract closed at $93.13 yesterday, the lowest since May 1. A record 5.6 million tons of palm was used for fuel in 2012, according to Oil World, a Hamburg-based research company. “The drop in crude prices makes biodiesel less desirable and therefore there’ll be selling pressure on crude palm oil,” said Sim Han Qiang, an analyst at Phillip Futures Pte. Palm oil for physical delivery in June was at 2,350 ringgit today, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Futures are up 3.8 percent in May, heading for the first monthly gain in four. The decline in soybean oil prices may also damp demand for palm, Sim said. Soybean oil’s premium over palm oil was $297.56 a ton today, compared with an average of $322.89 this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The vegetable oils are substitutes in food and fuel. Soybean oil for July delivery lost 0.3 percent to 48.51 cents a pound on the Chicago Board of Trade, extending a 1.8 percent decline yesterday. Soybeans dropped 0.3 percent to $14.9775 a bushel. Refined palm oil for September delivery fell 0.9 percent to close at 6,144 yuan ($1,002) a ton on the Dalian Commodity Exchange, while soybean oil lost 0.7 percent to 7,484 yuan. To contact the reporter on this story: Ranjeetha Pakiam in Kuala Lumpur at rpakiam@bloomberg.net To contact the editor responsible for this story: Jake Lloyd-Smith at jlloydsmith@bloomberg.net Continue reading
Doosan Secures Major Boiler And Turbine Project For France’s Largest Biomass Power Plant
29 May 2013 Doosan Power Systems said it has been awarded a major biomass conversion and turbine upgrade project for E.ON’s coal-fired Provence power plant in Gardanne – Meyreuil, France. The project will help to create France’s largest biomass-fired power plant to date as part of the E.ON Group ’s “cleaner, higher performance energy” strategy, said Doosan. The new biomass unit, generating electricity from the combustion of wood – including forest chips, green residues and recovered wood – will be converted from the existing coal-fired Provence 4 unit, said the company. Doosan hopes it will provide 150MW of power with base production of more than 7500 hours per year until 2034, which corresponds to the annual electrical consumption (except for heating) of 440,000 households, reducing the CO2 balance by 600,000 tons per year. It will also extend the life of the Provence power plant for a further 20 years while helping structure and develop the region’s wood-energy industry. Work will begin this summer with the first firing in the autumn of 2014 and startup of operations in early 2015, said the company. Doosan Power Systems will be responsible for converting the existing Provence facility to biomass, in particular by converting the 20-year-old coal-fired CFB (circulating fluidised bed) boiler and renovating the steam turbine. The project will be led by the Germany-based CFB specialist, Doosan Lentjes who supplied the original CFB technology and key components for the plant in 1992. At the same time, the company’s turbine specialist, Doosan Škoda Power, will replace the inner steam path of the existing steam turbine to match the new output and enhance plant efficiency. Life-time extension works will be undertaken by Doosan Babcock on the remaining equipment so that the plant is well placed to deliver reliable performance for a further 20 years, said Doosan. The assembly of the new equipment will be subcontracted locally to ADF, a French group located in the Fos-Berre basin that specialises in the maintenance of power generation sites. The project will have a significant economic impact on the region, said the company, employing an average of 200 people over 18 months, and up to 350 in peak periods, a large number with local industrial players like ADF. Biomass plants produce electricity through the combustion of various organic materials (green wastes, chips, recovered wood). The new Provence 4 biomass unit will consume some 850,000 tonnes of biomass per year. Doosan said it plans that within ten years after the commissioning of the new unit, all the biomass will be sourced locally. Continue reading




