Four Minnesota ethanol plants are idled and many more have throttled back production as COVID-19 has sapped gasoline demand, crushing the biofuel industry.
U.S. ethanol production has hit an all-time low. Nearly 30% of the nation's 204 biofuel plants have been idled since March 1, while many others have slashed production.
"The fuel market is just telling us to shut down and not operate," said Randall Doyal, CEO of Al-Corn Clean Fuel in the southern Minnesota town of Claremont. "Economically, its abysmal."
Al-Corn has kept the doors open, running at 38% of capacity and doing some minor plant rejiggering to produce ethanol for hand-sanitizer makers. "We might have enough business on the hand-sanitizer side to at least defray some losses," Doyal said.
The ethanol industry's woes also spell trouble for farmers in Minnesota and across the Midwest. Ethanol makers consumed 36% of Minnesota's corn crop in 2019, according to the Minnesota Bio-Fuels Association.
With so much biofuel demand erased, U.S. corn prices are near a 10-year low.
Minnesota is the nation's fourth-largest ethanol-producing state with 18 plants. By federal law, most fuel sold as gasoline is required to have 10% ethanol. But gasoline demand has fallen off a cliff because of COVID-19 social restrictions.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) said that as of the week ending April 10, the four-week moving average of U.S. gasoline consumption hit a low not seen in the 29 years that such data has been collected.