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Great Western Malting Co.. Has been in Vancouver since 1933Other plants in Idaho, Canada, UK
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1. Project Synergy & Biofuels
2. Great Western Malting Co. Has been in Vancouver since 1933
Other plants in Idaho, Canada, UK & Australia
Produces malt for the worlds leading brewing, distilling and food producers since the 1880s
Large grain and feed merchandiser
3. Great Western Malting, Our Customers Produces malt from NW barley & wheat
A vital part of the NW community providing family wage jobs
Our products are the heart & sole of these any many more beers in your local market
Customer base has changed
4. What Vancouver Has To Offer Junction 3 major rail lines
Near 2 major freeways
In major port
Zoned: Heavy Industrial
Large water right
Large wastewater processing
Large NPDES Permit for discharge of cooling water
High pressure gas line
Malting process is a great heat sink
Port can handle shuttle trains
Large amount of grain storage
5. Ethanol Production Needs Needs water
Needs grain storage & handling
Has waste heat needs cooling
Needs access to transportation: Road, rail & barge
Needs source of alpha amylases, NW grown barley and could e used
NW short of ethanol production
Favorable rail rate for corn bound to this ethanol plant site
Needs outlet for distillers grains
Ethanol does have a positive ROIC
Ethanol is environmentally positive
6. Ethanol Process Corn & NW Barley
Brewing/Distilling
Milling
Cooking
Fermenting
Distillation
DDGS production
Produces
Ethanol
Distillers Dried Grain With Solubles
CO2
7. Ethanol: Why? Renewable domestic fuel that keeps our dollars in the USA
Demand rising
10% blend that produces cleaner air without the issues of MTBE
E85 is taking off faster that predicted
Cars able to burn 85% ethanol currently being sold.
No ethanol plant yet built in the PNW
NW Freight advantage
Part of the Governor's Energy Program
8. West Coast Ethanol Demand Gasoline Consumption: 19.746 BGY
Washington: 2.701 BGY
Oregon: 1.533 BGY
California: 15.512 BGY
Ethanol Demand
Current: 1.1 BGY
Potential 1.975 BGY
9. The Future: Energy Security Act of 2005 Signed into law August 2005
Double ethanol production by 2010
Goal: Cut 29,200,000 barrels of foreign oil a year
To transform our energy future, we must combine the same kind of fast-paced innovation that ushered in the information age, with an investment on the scale of the Manhattan project.Biodiesel and ethanol are becoming increasingly cost-competitive. With vision and focus, we can capitalize on American ingenuity, put Washington farmers in the fuel business, and break our dependence on foreign oil.
10. Sen. Cantwell's Clean EDGE Act DIVERSIFYING AMERICAN ENERGY SOURCES, INVESTING IN THE FUTURE
Renewable Electricity
Investing in American Jobs and Industry
TRANSFORMING AMERICAS VEHICLES & INFRASTRUCTURE
Flex-Fuel Vehicles:
Accelerating Infrastructure Conversion
PROTECTING AMERICAN CONSUMERS & BUSINESSES
Preventing Gas Price Gouging and Increasing Transparency in the Oil and Gas Industry.
Energy Emergency Loans for Farmers and Small Businesses
LEVELING THE PLAYING FIELD FOR CLEAN ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES
Ending Giveaways to Big Oil
Providing Certainty to Emerging Technologies
REAL GOVERNMENT LEADERSHIP FOR CLEAN AND SECURE ENERGY
A Serious Federal Commitment
Innovative New Tools for States
11. Benefits for the State: 55 MGY Plant Increases employment: Family Wage Union Jobs:
42 Jobs
Shuttle trains of corn:
52 Shuttles/Year
Barge, ship, truck & rail ethanol shipments:
25 to 39 barges and tariffs
Barge, ship, truck & rail other DDDG shipments:
Potential increase in tariffs & additional employment
Leased land
Annual payments
Politically high level visibility
Governor Gregoire: Renewable fuel bills and develop 1st WA plant.
Senators Cantwell & Murray: Renewable Fuel And Energy Security Acts
Great match:
GWM and other Port Tenets
Large beneficial economic impact on the community & Port:
Goods & services a year
Total capitalization
Construction investment & jobs
12. Great Western & Ethanol
13. Feed Stocks Feed stocks in use
Corn
Sugar
Barley
Wheat
Cellulosic
The Challenge: ItsCommodity drivenBusiness
14. Snapshot Of Feedstock Prices
15. Snapshot Of Feedstock Prices
16. Corn & Ethanol
17. Challenges For The NW Large competitive corn pipeline, but its the end of the pipe.
NW grown feed stock benefits NW growers, MW or offshore feedstock doesnt benefit NW growers, but can it compete with corn?
Increased ethanol production will create new NW feedstock: DDGS
Effects on other feed grains in the NW?
How to use DDGS to bolster the NW cattle industry or create other uses for DDGS
DDGS export market has yet to be developed
18. Summary The politics of renewable bio-fuels
Its a tough double commodity driven industry
Opportunities for the NW
Bio-fuel feedstock
Diverse renewable fuels
New animal feed sources
Great research centers