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VeraSun Energy Files For Bankruptcy Protection
By Dirk Lammers, AP Energy Writer
Manufacturing.Net - November 03, 2008

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SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) -- VeraSun Energy Corp., the nation's second largest ethanol producer accounting for about 13 percent of U.S. capacity, said late Friday it is seeking Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection after skyrocketing corn costs and a deterioration in capital markets left the company short on cash.

VeraSun said it was working with lenders and expected to reach an agreement on additional financing to fund normal operations before a court hearing scheduled for Monday. The company said it plans to resume operations during the Chapter 11 proceedings, and it doesn't expect to reduce raw material purchases.

The company's operations include a plant in Linden, Ind., and it last year suspended construction of a plant in Reynolds, Ind., that was part of the state's BioTown USA project.

"Today's filing allows VeraSun to address its short-term liquidity constraints as we navigate historically challenging market conditions while we focus on restructuring to address the company's long-term future," Don Endres, VeraSun's chief executive, said in a statement.

VeraSun said it had significant losses in the third quarter due to a "dramatic spike" in the cost of corn it turns into fuel. The company also said the capital markets and a tightening of trade credit placed "severe constraints" on its liquidity.

VeraSun, founded in 2001, went public in June 2006 amid perfect market conditions. Corn was cheap, gas cost a bundle and refiners were clamoring for more ethanol to use as a cleaner-burning alternative to the additive MTBE.

But skyrocketing corn costs began cutting into ethanol producers' profits, and many tried to use hedging to control costs. Hedging sets future prices for corn sellers, while helping buyers avoid the risk of volatile price swings by letting them lock in at a set cost.

After VeraSun locked into prices for its feedstock for the third quarter, corn went into a sharp decline from almost $8 per bushel to a low of less than $5 per bushel in mid-August.

After a mid-September announcement of an expected third-quarter loss of $63 million to $103 million, the Sioux Falls-based company tried to raise $20 million in a public offering. VeraSun canceled the offering after several companies expressed a "strategic interest," it said.

The nation's 177 ethanol plants have the capacity to produce about 10.9 billion gallons annually, according to the Renewable Fuels Association. VeraSun's 16 biorefineries can produce 1.4 billion of the renewable fuel each year, second only to privately held Poet LLC.

AP Business Writer Tom Murphy in Indianapolis contributed to this report.


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Wrong Energy Policy.  11/7/2008 1:54:00 AM
The liquid energy infrastructure that we have should be kept. Methane hydrate should be refined into the liquid and gaseous fuel of the future. It is virtually unlimited. The world has over a thousand year supply, and it meets "green" standards.


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