Midwest floods hammer U.S. ethanol industry, push some
gasoline prices toward five-year high
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[April 08, 2019]
By Jarrett Renshaw and Stephanie Kelly
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The March floods that
punished the U.S. Midwest have roiled the ethanol industry, hammering
prices and trapping barrels in the country's interior while the U.S.
coasts suffer from shortages of the biofuel.
The historic March floods have dealt a series of blows to large swaths
of an ethanol industry that was already struggling with high inventories
and sluggish domestic demand growth. And the ethanol shortages are one
factor pushing gasoline prices in Los Angeles and Southern California to
the highest in the nation and they could top $4 a gallon for the first
time since 2014, according to tracking firm GasBuddy.
Benchmark price for ethanol used in most supply contracts initially
jumped on news of the floods but has been hobbled by rising waters
around the Chicago hub that have halted barges and sales. That stands in
contrast to prices on the coasts, which rose dramatically - drawing in
heavy imports from Brazil, the main U.S. ethanol competitor.
The floods inflicted billions of dollars in damage to crops and homes in
the U.S. Midwest, and knocked out roughly 13 percent of ethanol
capacity.
U.S. ethanol is made from corn and required by the government to be
blended into the nation's fuel supply to reduce emissions.
While some ethanol plants were flooded, the primary effect of the rising
waters was to shut rail lines that serve as the main arteries for corn
and ethanol deliveries.
Ethanol prices on the coasts spiked due to shortages, but Midwest
producers have been unable to take advantage because of washed-out rail
lines, market sources told Reuters.
"Unfortunately for anyone who was impacted by logistics issues it was a
double whammy. You couldn't capture the rally," said one trader.
At Chicago's Argo terminal, the nation's main ethanol pricing hub, the
cash price for ethanol fell for an eighth straight session last week to
$1.29 a gallon, the longest downward skid since April of last year,
according to Oil Price Information Service, which does daily
assessments.
Initially, fears of widespread plant outages boosted that benchmark, but
plants proved more resilient than expected, continuing to produce
despite logistical challenges.
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The contents of grain silos which burst from flood damage are shown
in Fremont County Iowa, U.S., March 29, 2019. REUTERS/Tom Polansek/File
Photo
U.S. ethanol inventories were at 24 million barrels for the week ended March 29,
just off a record hit a week earlier, according to U.S. Energy Information
Administration data.
Chicago's price acts as the benchmark for millions of barrels bought and sold
via longer-term supply contracts each day. While that price faltered, ethanol
prices at the coast have surged, helping plants owned by Pacific Ethanol Inc and
White Energy in California and Texas to take advantage of higher prices.
Ethanol delivered into Los Angeles typically trades at 20 cents a gallon higher
than Chicago, but that premium rose to as high as 50 cents a gallon, traders
said. The price in New York Harbor was at roughly double normal levels, traders
said.
The tight ethanol supplies, along with refinery outages, boosted retail gasoline
prices and led to some gas station shutdowns in the West as blenders there
lacked the ethanol needed to blend with gasoline to make fuel that meets
government regulations.
Gas prices in Arizona averaged $2.88 per gallon on Sunday, 17 percent higher
than last month, according to the American Automobile Association. Prices were
even steeper in California at $3.78 a gallon, well above the national average of
$2.74 a gallon.
"Ultimately, Los Angeles could get close to seeing that average at $4 a gallon,"
Patrick DeHaan, head of petroleum analysis at tracking firm GasBuddy, said,
adding that much of that increase will come because of refinery outages in the
state.
At least one county in California has already surpassed $4 a gallon. The highest
recorded average price for the state was $4.67 a gallon, in October 2012,
according to AAA.
The high coastal prices attracted barrels from the biggest U.S. competitor:
Brazil. Overall ethanol imports to the United States totaled 558,279 barrels in
March, the most seasonally since 2013, according to Refinitiv Eikon ship
tracking data. Most of the imports during the month came from Brazil, according
to the tracking data.
(Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw and Stephanie Kelly; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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