Development site in ‘Biotown USA’ acquired-WEB ONLY

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Valero Energy will buy seven ethanol plants and a key development site
in the Indiana city of Reynolds from VeraSun Energy for $477 million,
the largest biofuel buyout ever in terms of production capacity.
 
VeraSun, the country’s second largest ethanol producer, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection last October.

VeraSun suspended construction of a 110-million-gallon-a-year plant in
Reynolds, north of Lafayette, in 2007, citing deteriorating market
conditions. Reynolds is the centerpiece of “Biotown USA,” a state-led
initiative to make Indiana a dynamo in the production of ethanol and
biodiesel.

Valero won an auction for the assets in court, Verasun announced late
yesterday. It will seek approval at a Delaware bankruptcy hearing
planned for today. The sale is expected to close in April.

Also involved in the bidding was agribusiness giant Archer Daniels Midland Co.

Valero would become the first traditional refiner to cross over into ethanol production if the deal is approved.

The sale could give other major energy companies a benchmark price for
the assets of ethanol producers now under tremendous financial strain.
Ethanol industry leader Poet LLC is also shopping around.

Valero Energy Corp., the nation’s largest independent oil refiner, will
acquire plants in Aurora, S.D.; Charles City, Fort Dodge, and Hartley,
Iowa; Welcome, Minn.; Albion, Neb.; and the development site in
Reynolds.

With tighter national renewable fuel standards on the way, industry
analysts believed it was just a matter of time before traditional
refiners like Valero stepped into ethanol production.

The nation’s renewable fuel standard ensures demand for ethanol by
calling for 11.1 billion gallons of renewable fuel to be blended into
gasoline this year, with that number climbing to 36 billion gallons by
2022.

The current financial state of the ethanol industry allowed Valero to pick up Verasun’s assets on the cheap.

Overproduction, tight credit markets and the recession have pummeled
the biofuel industry and helped put Sioux Falls, S.D.-based VeraSun
under bankruptcy protection.
Other ethanol companies are also feeling the pinch.

Cambridge, Mass.-based Verenium Corp., which is teaming up with oil
giant BP PLC to build a $300 million cellulosic ethanol plant in
Highlands County, Fla., said in a filing this week it may have to
“curtail or cease operations” if it cannot raise additional capital.
The Florida biorefinery would produce 36 million gallons a year from sugarcane and other plant waste.

And ethanol producer Aventine Renewable Energy Holdings Inc. said late
Monday it may need to seek Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection if it
cannot raise sufficient cash in the very near-term.

Aventine, a Pekin, Ill.-based company, said it does not expect to have
enough cash to satisfy a $15 million interest payment due April 1 or to
pay $24.4 million due to its engineering and construction contractor.

VeraSun Energy Corp. owns 16 biorefineries with the total capacity to
produce 1.4 billion gallons of ethanol annually, or about 13 percent of
the country’s total capacity.

Secured lenders submitted successful credit bids for the remaining VeraSun facilities.
A group of lenders led by AgStar Financial Services submitted a credit
bid of $324 million for Verasun plants that were part of its buyout of
US BioEnergy Corp. They include biorefineries in Central City, Neb.;
Ord, Neb.; Dyersville, Iowa; Hankinson, N.D.; Janesville, Minn.; and
Woodbury, Mich.

Dougherty Funding LLC submitted a credit bid of $93 million for a plant
in Marion, S.D., and a group of lenders led by West LB AG successfully
bid $99 million for plants in Bloomingburg, Ohio and Linden, Ind.,
obtained in its purchase of Dallas-based ASAlliances Biofuels.

Valero has said previously that it would group the plants under a
subsidiary, Valero Renewable Fuels, and use the Verasun staff already
in place.

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