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Non-Tech : $2 or higher gas - Can ethanol make a comeback? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: elmatador who wrote (2592)10/3/2007 11:38:42 AM
From: richardred  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2801
 
Ethanol has no OPEC. Many big ethanol assets are now a public traded asset. IMO- It's only a matter of time before legislators cry foul. The cause, a refiner or those with refining assets wants these assets on the cheap.

UPDATE 1-OPEC raises oil output slightly in Sept - survey
Tue Oct 2, 2007 2:24pm BST

By Randy Fabi

LONDON, Oct 2 (Reuters) - OPEC boosted its oil production in
September as crude prices soared to record heights above $80 a
barrel, a Reuters survey showed on Tuesday.

Ten OPEC members bound by output targets, all except Iraq
and Angola, pumped 26.8 million barrels per day, up 60,000 bpd
from August, according to the survey of oil firms, traders, OPEC
officials and analysts.

The majority of the increase came from the world's biggest
exporter Saudi Arabia, which last month convinced fellow OPEC
members to open the taps amid surging oil prices.

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting countries,
source of more than a third of the world's oil, agreed to raise
production by 500,000 bpd from Nov. 1.

"With these high prices, there is no doubt in my mind that
OPEC is going to jump the gun and ship out more barrels before
Nov. 1, but I haven't seen any proof yet," said Paul Tossetti,
director of market analysis at Washington-based PFC Energy.

Oil has traded at around $80 a barrel for the past month,
surging to a record high of $83.90 on Sept. 20.

Total OPEC output rose to 30.62 million bpd from 30.37
million bpd in August as Iraq and Angola boosted their supplies,
according to the survey.

Iraq has issued three tenders in a month to sell Kirkuk oil
from its northern fields, indicating exports may be stabilising
after years of sabotage kept the pipeline mostly idle. About 7.5
million barrels have been sold via the first two tenders.

"That's an extra 200,000 to 300,000 barrels a day of crude
out of Iraq. That is a major change and one to watch," Tossetti
said.

Angola has also ramped up output with the start of its
Plutonio oilfields.

Angolan state oil company Sonangol said on Tuesday it
commenced first production in September, with initial output at
80,000 bpd.

OPEC is expected to give Angola, its newest member, an
output target from Jan. 1.

Following is crude output in millions of barrels a day.

Sept Aug Target

output output output Nov 1*
Algeria 1.38 1.38 1.357
Indonesia 0.83 0.83 0.865
Iran 3.86 3.86 3.817
Kuwait 2.41 2.41 2.531
Libya 1.7 1.7 1.712
Nigeria 2.16 2.16 2.163
Qatar 0.8 0.8 0.828
Saudi Arabia 8.7 8.65 8.943
UAE 2.56 2.56 2.567
Venezuela 2.4 2.39 2.470
OPEC-10 26.8 26.74 27.253
Iraq 2.1 1.95
Angola 1.72 1.68
TOTAL 30.62 30.37

(R)-Revised.

*Output targets for November 1 were published briefly on
OPEC's website, but were subsequently withdrawn without
explanation.

OPEC quotas exclude condensate and natural gas liquids and
apply to supply rather than wellhead output, defined to exclude
movements to, but not sales from, storage. Saudi and Kuwaiti
data includes Neutral Zone. Saudi data excludes oil produced for
Bahrain. Venezuelan data includes upgraded synthetic oil.

uk.reuters.com



To: elmatador who wrote (2592)10/4/2007 12:47:29 AM
From: richardred  Respond to of 2801
 
Brazil's Santelisa to invest $1.6 bln in mills
Wed Oct 3, 2007 4:05pm EDT

SAO PAULO, Oct 3 (Reuters) - Santelisa Vale, Brazil's No. 2 sugar and ethanol producer, said on Wednesday the group intends to invest around 3 billion reais ($1.64 billion) to build new mills and to expand its five existing ones.

The company, which resulted from a merger between Vale do Rosario and Santa Elisa groups, also plans to go public, possibly by the end of 2008.

"A large company is being created, with ambitious growth plans for the coming years," Santelisa's chief executive officer, Anselmo Lopes Rodrigues, said by telephone. Earlier he announced the conclusion of the merger process, which took eight months.

Santelisa's main shareholder is the Biagi family, with a 72 percent capital stake, followed by U.S. investment bank Goldman Sachs (GS.N: Quote, Profile, Research) with a 17 percent share.

Planned investments include 2.5 billion reais in mills being built by Companhia Nacional de Acucar e Alcool (CNAA), a company created by Santelisa and private equity firms Carlyle Group (CYL.UL: Quote, Profile, Research) and Riverstone Holdings LLC, among other investors.

Santelisa has a 28 percent share in CNAA, which is building three mills in Minas Gerais and another one in Goias.

Two of them will start operating next year and the other two in 2009. Each plant will process 2.5 million tonnes of cane per year and could be doubled in the future.

Santelisa also is investing in a new mill in Goias, together with Brazilian group Maeda, which should begin operations in April 2008. The initial cane crushing capacity of 2.5 million tonnes per year could be doubled by 2010.

Besides, it has plans to expand its Continental mill, in Sao Paulo, which came on stream this season, with a capacity to process 2.1 million tonnes per year.

Santelisa is the main shareholder in Crystalsev, which recently announced a joint venture with Dow Chemical Co. (DOW.N: Quote, Profile, Research), the largest U.S. chemical producer, to make plastic from sugar cane. Their facility is expected to begin production in 2011.

These actions should prepare Santelisa to go public, probably on the Sao Paulo Stock Exchange (.BVSP: Quote, Profile, Research), Rodrigues said.

"This is a very clear path for us, and we should move forward in this direction in the coming months -- in the next year for sure," Rodrigues said.

Before deciding on the merger with Santa Elisa, Vale do Rosario group rejected various takeover bids, from companies like Brazil's largest sugar and ethanol producer, Cosan (CSAN3.SA: Quote, Profile, Research), and agribusiness giant Bunge Ltd.(BG.N: Quote, Profile, Research).

Despite the decision of Vale do Rosario's minority shareholders at that time to fend off those bids and to buy the control of the company and merge with Santa Elisa, Rodrigues said the company is always "open to new partnerships", even with foreign companies.

"We are always receptive to good partners. We do not have any objection to new parterships as long they are interesting for both parts", he said.
reuters.com