| US fuel ethanol production continues to grow in 2017US production of bioethanol has continued to grow in 2017, according to the US Energy Information Administration (EIA). 
 Through the first six months of 2017, US weekly ethanol production  averaged 1.02 million barrels per day (b/d), an increase of 5% over the  same period in 2016.
 
 On a weekly basis, US ethanol production set a record of 1.06 million  b/d in the week of January 27, 2017, and it has averaged near or above 1  million b/d in every week of 2017 except for a few weeks in April, when  ethanol plants typically undergo seasonal maintenance. If ethanol  production remains relatively high through the second half of the year,  as EIA’s Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO) expects, 2017 will set a new record for annual fuel ethanol production.
 
 King corn
 
 Corn is the primary feedstock of ethanol in the United States, and  large corn harvests have contributed to increased ethanol production in  recent years. The US Department of Agriculture estimates that the US  produced a record 15.1 billion bushels of corn in the 2016–17 harvest  year, 11% more than the 2015–16 harvest. Increased corn production and  relatively stable corn prices have helped make increased ethanol  production more profitable and less susceptible to corn price shocks  that had affected ethanol profitability and output in the past.
 
 US ethanol plant capacity increased for the fourth consecutive year  in 2017, reaching a nameplate capacity of approximately 15.5 billion  gallons per year in January. Total ethanol production is expected to  reach 1.02 million barrels per day in 2017, a rate equivalent to 15.8  billion gallons. Annual ethanol production is able to exceed capacity  for two reasons: new production capacity has likely been added since the  January 2017 capacity survey date, and many ethanol plants are able to  operate at levels beyond their nameplate production capacity.
 
 In the US, ethanol is primarily used as a blending component in the  production of motor gasoline and mainly blended in volumes up to 10%  ethanol, also known as E10. In recent years, ethanol production  increased as a result of higher Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) targets  and growth in domestic motor gasoline consumption, almost all of which  is now blended with 10% ethanol by volume. Demand for higher ethanol  blends such as E15 and E85 remains limited.
 
 US motor gasoline consumption has grown the past four years,  increasing from 8.7 million b/d in 2012 to 9.3 million b/d in 2016,  resulting in an increase of 7% in additional ethanol demand by way of  E10 blending that has helped to support consistent growth in ethanol  production over the same period.
 
 Exports of ethanol have also been increasing. Through the first four  months of 2017, US gross ethanol exports have averaged 96,000 barrels  per day—40% higher than exports during the same period in 2016—and the  highest level on record for that period of the year. In its latest Short-Term Energy Outlook,  EIA forecasts that US ethanol net exports will reach nearly 80,000 b/d  in 2017, likely surpassing the previous record of 70,000 b/d set in  2011.
 
 Through the first half of 2017, increasing ethanol production rates  have outpaced domestic E10 gasoline demand and export growth, leading to  elevated ethanol inventory levels at a time when they are typically  falling to meet peak driving demand. As of July 14, 2017, weekly ending  stocks of ethanol reached 22.1 million barrels, 5% higher than the same  time last year and 13% higher than the previous five-year average.  Ethanol inventories reached a record level of 23.7 million barrels for  the week ending 31 March, 2017.
 
 biofuels-news.com
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