Some ethanol plants are making money again — on ethanol.
For more than a year, high corn prices squeezed the profit out of the biofuel. Producers that made money often did so only through sales of secondary products such as the animal feed called "distillers grains'' left over from corn fermentation.
But Minnesota-affiliated ethanol companies and the industry tracking service Biofuels Benchmarking say many plants' fortunes shifted in the second quarter, bringing positive margins back to the core business of making fuel.
"We are forecasting a good, solid year, as good as Blue Flint's ever had," said Greg Ridderbusch, president of the Maple Grove-based holding company for Blue Flint Ethanol in Underwood, N.D.
For the quarter ended in June or July, five of seven Minnesota-affiliated ethanol producers that release financial statements reported profits. Among those with improved results were Blue Flint and Heron Lake BioEnergy, based in Heron Lake, which reported net losses in the first quarter.
Most of the ethanol producers tracked by the Star Tribune reported getting higher prices per gallon for ethanol during the quarter — up to 13 percent more than the same period in 2012. Ethanol sales volumes also were up, due partly to the closing of some U.S. plants, producers said.
In a separate, private survey of 45 U.S. ethanol makers, Christianson & Associates of Willmar, Minn., reported that almost all plants broke even or made money in the last quarter. That's a big shift from recent quarters when only highly efficient plants made money.
"In the next two quarters, I think things will remain fairly consistent and even rise as far as earnings are concerned," said Paula Emberland, who manages Biofuels Benchmarking.