April 19, 2024

Ethanol’s Days of Promise and Prosperity Are Fading

Backed by government subsidies and mandates, hundreds of ethanol plants rose among the golden fields of the Corn Belt, bringing jobs and business to small towns, providing farmers with a new market for their crops and generating billions of dollars in revenue for the producers of this corn-based fuel blend.

Those days of promise and prosperity are vanishing.

Nearly 10 percent of the nation’s ethanol plants have stopped production over the past year, in part because the drought that has ravaged much of the nation’s crops pushed commodity prices so high that ethanol has become too expensive to produce.

A dip in gasoline consumption has compounded the industry’s problem by reducing the demand for ethanol.

The situation has left the fate of dozens of ethanol plants hanging in the balance and has unsettled communities that once prospered from this biofuel.

“It’s a more somber mood,” said Todd Sneller, the administrator of the Nebraska Ethanol Board. “The growth opportunity that existed some years ago is still out there in theory, but the reality that it’s going to take an awful lot of time, money and political battles to realize that opportunity” is causing consternation.

Thousands of barrels of ethanol now sit in storage because there is not enough gasoline in the market to blend it with — and blends calling for a higher percentage of ethanol have yet to catch on widely in the marketplace. Advanced biofuels from waste like corn stalks and wood chips have also yet to reach commercial-level production as some had predicted they would by now.

Referring to the plants that have been idled, Eric Lee, a commodities expert at Citibank, said: “Is that going to be temporary or permanent? It’s hard to say.”

Not only do the plants employ residents of these small communities, but they also provide a market for farmers to sell their crops and buy grain to feed their livestock. They attract a steady flow of trucks whose drivers use truck stops and patronize other local businesses. Contractors visiting the plants stay in local hotels. And the plants hold large accounts with local banks.

“It’s been quite an ordeal, honestly,” Mayor Christopher Jackson of Walhalla, N.D., said of the closing of an Archer Daniels Midland ethanol plant there last April.

About a dozen families who had moved to Walhalla, a town of about 1,000, to work at the plant have left, he said. Many of the 61 people who worked there have since found new jobs, but the salary and benefits are not nearly as good, he said. Mr. Jackson manages his family’s bar in town, and he said Friday end-of-week gatherings did not happen as much because people had less to spend.

“It’s been hard on every business up and down Main Street,” he said. “I don’t know that people realized how big of an impact that plant closing had on the community. Now we’re a year into it; everybody’s feeling the pinch.”

Congress set out to create an ethanol industry that would produce enough to make up 10 percent of every gallon of gas pumped into a car, but the lawmakers assumed that demand for fuel would grow. Instead, it has shrunk to 8.7 million barrels a day from 9.7 million in 2007, said Larry Goldstein, an economist and a director of the Energy Policy Research Foundation. And with corporate average fuel economy rules now in place to double the number of miles that the average car gets per gallon by 2025, “you know we’re on a trend,” he added.

As the gasoline market got smaller, so did the amount of ethanol it could absorb, because most service stations are set up to sell fuel with an ethanol content of only up to 10 percent. Owners’ manuals of most cars call for fuel blends of no more than 10 percent ethanol. The industry calls this the “blend wall,” and it has won Environmental Protection Agency approval for some cars to run on blends of up to 15 percent, but thus far that fuel has not caught on with consumers.

Millions of cars are “flex-fuel vehicles” and can run on blends of up to 85 percent, known as e85, but that fuel is not popular and is not even widely offered outside a few corn-producing states.

But the ethanol producers were encouraged to build because the federal government had mandated that refiners use their product, and it established a tax credit of 45 cents per gallon of ethanol. The tax credit was allowed to expire on Dec. 31, 2011, but not before it had stimulated construction of ethanol plants.

The value of ethanol has also sagged. Its price is created in part by the price of the gasoline it displaces, and gasoline prices have been relatively modest for the past few months.

Mr. Sneller and others in the industry remain optimistic that technological innovations and sound public policy will keep the industry afloat.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/17/us/17ethanol.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

DealBook: Consumer Bureau Finds Support on Its First Day

Richard Cordray, President Obama's choice to lead the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.Michael Houghton for The New York TimesRichard Cordray, President Obama’s choice to lead the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau formally opened for business on Thursday, much to the consternation of Congressional Republicans.

But as conservative lawmakers step up their attacks on the new regulator, aiming to undermine its structure and authority, champions of the bureau are pushing back.

Consumer groups released a new opinion poll this week that showed broad public support for the bureau. And on Thursday, advocacy organizations issued a report detailing “ten reasons we need the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau now.”

The reasons boil down to a widespread lack of confidence in other regulatory agencies, which “manifestly failed to address” consumer protection problems in the run-up to the financial crisis, according to the report. The problems included “unchecked predatory” mortgages, the “lack of consumer legal rights” and “private student loan rip-offs.”

“Congress shouldn’t forget that a lack of consumer protection led to the Wall Street-led collapse of the economy and only a consumer cop on the beat can protect consumers from it happening again,” Ed Mierzwinski, the report’s author and the consumer program director of the U.S. Public Interest Research Groups, said in a statement. “This report is particularly timely because there are serious efforts to undermine the C.F.P.B. on Capitol Hill.”

The Republican criticism has centered on the consumer bureau’s power and its leadership. The Republican-controlled House has introduced measures to slash the bureau’s budget and subject it to greater Congressional oversight. Now that President Obama has nominated Richard Cordray to lead the bureau, Republicans attempts to derail his nomination are already in motion.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau was a chief component of the Dodd-Frank financial regulatory law, enacted a year ago Thursday. While the bureau opened last year, it did not officially inherit its broad new authority until the first anniversary of the law. The bureau can now write new rules for Wall Street, examine the books of some 110 banks and issue enforcement actions.

“This agency is ready to be a cop on the beat for American families — and I couldn’t be prouder,” said Elizabeth Warren, the Obama administration official charged with setting up the bureau.

On Thursday, the bureau sent “introductory letters” to bank chief executives, outlining its plans to supervise and examine their financial institutions. The bureau also revamped its Web site, where consumers can now file complaints about their credit cards.

“Today is an important day for consumers,” Lisa Donner, executive director of Americans for Financial Reform, said in a statement. “The C.F.P.B. will level the playing field for families, making the consumer credit market work for borrowers and lenders alike and making the whole economy safer.”

Recent poll results suggest that consumers agree. The poll, conducted by Lake Research Partners, a Democratic polling group, and backed by an array of progressive groups, found that nearly three-quarters of people surveyed support the bureau.

“Everyday Americans know what’s good for their pocketbooks, their families, and our economy — that’s why a large, bipartisan majority is calling for financial reforms to take effect,” Mike Calhoun, president of the Center for Responsible Lending, said in a statement about the poll. “Let’s hope policymakers hear them loud and clear.”


Consumer Bureau’s Letter to Bankers

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=bb226f58614e37676f939baba00a38b6

China’s Biggest Search Engine, Known for Illegal Downloads, Makes Music Deal

The agreement between Baidu and One-Stop China, a joint venture between the Universal Music Group, the Warner Music Group and Sony BMG, will shut down access to a vast amount of pirated music and promises to broadly reshape the way China’s 450 million Web users gain access to online music. The country has long been a haven for pirated content. Baidu has been one of the chief conduits to it, much to the consternation of record labels, publishers and artists both here and abroad.

Under the two-year deal between Baidu and One-Stop China, the three music labels will license over 500,000 songs, about 10 percent of them in Mandarin and Cantonese, which will be stored on Baidu’s servers and available for free streaming and download on the site’s ad-supported MP3 search page and social music platform, Ting.

Baidu will pay a fee to the labels for each time a song is downloaded or played in a stream. It will also share revenue from online ads if that revenue exceeds a certain amount, as well as provide promotional support for the labels. The companies declined to disclose financial details of the agreement.

With Baidu taking up the costs, this deal keeps music free — but legal. The International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, which represents global music companies, estimates that 99 percent of the music found online in China is illegal, much of it available through Baidu. Although China has more broadband connections than the United States and a rapidly growing middle class, the global recorded music industry’s revenue in the country for 2009 was worth just $75 million, compared with $4.6 billion in the United States, according to the federation. So making money from music downloads and streaming in China will have an outsize impact for the labels, since digital sales accounted for 76 percent of the country’s legitimate music revenue in 2010, compared with just 29 percent globally, where CD sales remain dominant.

As part of the deal, on Monday the labels and Baidu agreed to a settlement endorsed by the Beijing Higher People’s Court ending all outstanding litigation. For years, the American and Chinese music industries have singled out Baidu for criticism, saying the company has enabled users to steal vast quantities of copyrighted music, accusations that spurred a number of unsuccessful lawsuits.

In February, the United States trade representative named Baidu as one of the world’s 33 “notorious markets” for piracy and counterfeiting, centering on Baidu’s practice of “deep linking,” or providing search results that direct users to unlicensed songs on other Web sites. Although American search engines have long been forced to abandon such practices, Chinese courts had ruled that deep linking was legal because the music was not stored on Baidu’s servers.

Despite those favorable court decisions, Baidu has now agreed to remove all deep links to music belonging to the three labels, though a small amount of other independently loaded music may remain available. “We’ve never wanted to stand there and thumb our noses at the recording industry,” said Kaiser Kuo, Baidu’s director of international communications. “This is a watershed moment. It’s a great way for us to deliver the best possible user experience by providing free and high-quality music and brings obvious tangible benefits to all parties involved including the labels, artists and advertisers.”

Later this year, as part of the agreement, Baidu plans to introduce a premium fee-based service which will allow paying users to download music onto any computer, tablet or mobile device from a virtual storage locker.

Mr. Kuo added that music search was profitable but had never been a source of major traffic. He said it accounted for a high of 30 percent in 2004 and was now less than 10 percent.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/19/technology/baidu-chinas-search-giant-announces-music-licensing-deal.html?partner=rss&emc=rss