Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Minnesota Biofuels Programs and the E20 initiative. Perry Aasness – Deputy Commissioner Minnesota Department of Agriculture.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Minnesota Biofuels Programs and the E20 initiative. Perry Aasness – Deputy Commissioner Minnesota Department of Agriculture."— Presentation transcript:

1 Minnesota Biofuels Programs and the E20 initiative. Perry Aasness – Deputy Commissioner Minnesota Department of Agriculture

2

3

4 Biofuels in Minnesota State Government and the Rise of Renewable fuels in Minnesota –Goals for program: 1.Boost the farm and rural economy 2.Reduce dependence on foreign fossil fuels 3.Improve urban air quality

5 Biofuels in Minnesota Minnesota responds: –1980 Minnesota Legislature creates “Blender’s Credit” Blenders get tax credit of 4 cents/gallon for gas blended with 10 percent ethanol Leads to over 40% market share for E10

6 Biofuels in Minnesota Problems arise: –Pump credit reduced from 4 to 2 cents –Gasoline marketers resist –By 1986, ethanol’s market share down to 7 percent –State production capacity stalled at 1 million gallons

7 Biofuels in Minnesota Farm crisis gives ethanol new life: –Minnesota loses 8,000 farms between 1984 and 1986 –Two-thirds of corn crop exported as low-priced raw commodity –Virtually no in-state corn processing –Policy-makers make ethanol a priority

8 Biofuels in Minnesota Air quality emerges as third driver: –Federal Clean Air Act requires Minneapolis-St. Paul Area to include oxygen in all gas sold in winter months staring November, 1992 –State requires year-round in use 1995 –State requires statewide use in 1997

9 Biofuels in Minnesota Increasing Ethanol Production: –Statutory Goal: boost from 1.5 million gallons to 220 million gallons (later increased to 450 million) –Key elements 20 cent per gallon producer incentive payments Financial, technical and organizational support 10% mandate gives market assurance to lenders

10 Biofuels in Minnesota State producer incentive payments: –20 cents per gallon –Limited to first 15 million gallons produced by a plant each year –10-year limit for payment eligibility –Eligibility requires local equity & financing partner –Payments follow documentation of quarterly production

11

12 Biofuels in Minnesota The results: –14 ethanol plants of which 12 were built as farmer- owned coops and LLCs - two more under construction –Production capacity surpasses 450 million gallons by June 2005 –20 percent of corn crop used for industrial processing –$200 million in value added to commodities –750 new jobs in the plants, 5,000 external jobs supported by plants

13 Biofuels in Minnesota Impacts of farmer-owned processing: –Corn-to-ethanol adds $2 to $2.50 in value per bushel –Each 15-million gallon plant adds up to $14 million in value to 5.5 million bushels of corn each year –Money pumped into local communities

14 Biofuels in Minnesota Goals achieved: –Boost farm and rural economy  Value added to 20 percent of corn crop 12 farmer-owned value-added coops & LLCs –Reduce reliance on foreign energy  Each gallon of ethanol cuts import needs by 7 gallons –Clean up environment  Twin Cities in attainment for carbon monoxide

15 Biofuels in Minnesota September 2004: Governor Pawlenty takes Minnesota to the next level –Rolls out plan to make Minnesota the “Saudi Arabia of renewable energy” Move to 20 percent ethanol content in state gasoline Boost E-85 fuel use in state fleet As chair of Governors’ Ethanol Coalition, advocate for other states to adopt E-10

16 Biofuels in Minnesota Minnesota legislature approves with bi-partisan support –E-20 bill signed into law in May 2005, passed by House (91-43 vote) and Senate (54-12 vote) –E-20 ethanol requirement will take effect in 2013 unless ethanol has already replaced 20 percent of the state’s motor vehicle fuel by 2010 -$500,000 allocated to assist stations in converting to E- 85—over 150 stations online. -$200,000 to study ethanol combustion (E20)

17 Biofuels in Minnesota Biodiesel Mandate reaches target Minnesota’s 2 percent biodiesel requirement will become effective September 29 th –FUMPA-Redwood Falls –3 million gallons –Soymor-Albert Lea—30 million gallons, operating –MSP- Brewster—30 million gallons, in production –Minnesota has 32,000 farmers growing soybeans –Minnesota is the third largest producer of soybeans

18 U.S. Oil Production vs. Imports


Download ppt "Minnesota Biofuels Programs and the E20 initiative. Perry Aasness – Deputy Commissioner Minnesota Department of Agriculture."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google