Pacific Ethanol just announced that it is once again producing ethanol at its Magic Valley facility in Idaho. The plant hasn’t been in production since February 2009, when unfavorable market conditions caused Pacific Ethanol to shut it down. The company received approvals from the court handling its bankruptcy petitions and from its lenders to restart production at the plant in December, and now it is up and running again.
Struggling ethanol producer Pacific Ethanol just announced that it plans to start making ethanol again. According to this press release, the company plans to bring its Magic Valley plant in Idaho back online for the new year. The plant, capable of producing 60 million gallons of ethanol annually, should be back up and running in January 2010, as long as the bankruptcy court approves.
Pacific Ethanol says that market conditions for ethanol production have … Read the rest
It was just days ago that the government announced its intention to revive the biofuels industry with the formation of the Biofuel Interagency. The help couldn’t come any faster for Pacific Ethanol (PEIX), the largest ethanol producer on the West Coast. While the company itself didn’t file bankruptcy, it did place four of its production plants in Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection which had defaulted on about a quarter of a billion in debt. Ethanol producers … Read the rest
“We must invest in a clean energy economy that will lead to new jobs, new businesses and reduce our dependence on foreign oil,” said President Obama. “The steps I am announcing today help bring us closer to that goal. If we are to … Read the rest
Earth2Tech.com has started a deathwatch for Pacific Ethanol (PEIX) and Nova Biosource Fuels. Pacific Ethanol could be out of cash be the end of the month, and the company may go bankrupt. This shouldn’t be a huge surprise to anyone, as the price of ethanol has plummeted and people have become aware of how inefficient it is to produce ethanol from corn.
Nova Biosource Fuels filed for Chapter 11 last week, and its shares are … Read the rest
Pacific Ethanol is temporarily halting production at its Stockton plant, laying off more than 20 workers. The company says that unfavorable market conditions prompted its decision, according to the Sacramento Bee. Pacific Ethanol VP Paul Koehler told the newspaper that the company is halting production at the Stockton plant and a plant in Burley, Idaho:
Each plant employs about 35 people, two-thirds of whom will be laid off, Koehler said.
Pacific Ethanol just announced that its lenders have agreed to give the company more time to renegotiate its default loan agreements. Pacific Ethanol reached two separate agreements with its lenders, both of which give the company until February 27th before the lenders begin to take action.
Currently, according to the Sacramento Business Journal, "the company is negotiating with Wachovia Capital Finance Corp. (Western) to alter terms of an operating line of credit for Pacific … Read the rest
Pacific Ethanol announced on Friday that it will be suspending ethanol production at its Madera plant starting tomorrow, January 12th. The plant can produce up to 40 million gallons of ethanol per year, but there is no word on when production will resume.
According to the Sacramento Business Journal, Pacific Ethanol "said in a news release that “extended unfavorable market conditions for producing ethanol” prompted the suspension.… Read the rest
Rumors of imminent consolidation in the ethanol industry gave some of the industry’s major players a stock market boost on Wednesday. Poet LLC, the biggest fish in the ethanol pond, announced this week that it was considering snapping up some its competitors. Poet isn’t naming any names, but bankrupt VeraSun announced it had received a takeover bid from another unnamed ethanol company.
Excluding a charge related to asset impairments, the company reported a loss of .51/share while analysts had expected a loss of .15/share. Sales did increase 56% in the quarter but the cost of corn has risen much faster than the price of ethanol sending margins into the red.