Author Topic: Failed ethanol plant sold, taxpayers lose $ millions.  (Read 519 times)

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Offline powderman

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Failed ethanol plant sold, taxpayers lose $ millions.
« on: January 06, 2012, 05:09:45 PM »
Business Failed Georgia-Based Ethanol Plant Sold — Taxpayers Lose Millions   
“The failed Range Fuels wood-to-ethanol factory in southeastern Georgia that sucked up $65 million in federal and state tax dollars was sold Tuesday for pennies on the dollar to another bio-fuel maker with equally grand plans to transform the alternative energy world,” writes Dan Chapman of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
The Courier Herald of Dublin reports the Range Fuels facility in Soperton, GA, was sold to the New Zealand-based LanzaTech for $5.1 million.
Wait a minute—that means the same billionaire was involved on both ends.
LanzaTech’s main financial backer is the California entrepreneur Vinod Khosla. Also the co-founder of Sun Microsystems, Khosla threw in his lot with alternative energies and decided to not only bankroll the now-defunct Range Fuels, but also secure its government loans.
Interesting.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports that Range Fuels cost U.S. taxpayers $64 million and Georgia taxpayers another $6.2 million. Authorities are trying to do damage control by claiming that the $5.1 million from this weeks’ sale will at least help offset losses suffered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. That’s not very consoling.
But wait! There’s more.
Although LanzaTech hasn’t been given the same type of loans Range Fuels received, the company is still getting $7 million from the U.S. departments of Energy and Transportation to “assist in the development of alternative fuels,” Chapman writes.
Sam Shelton, director of research programs at Georgia Tech’s Strategic Energy Institute, was unimpressed with Range Fuels’ plans and technology. And now it looks as if he was correct.
 
“It was too damn big a risk for an apparently unproven technology and the due diligence I personally performed on Range would not entice me to invest in it,” Shelton told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
“Government should not be in the venture capital business selecting technologies,” he added.
There were high hopes for Range Fuels when it first started. Dan Chapman reports:
 
Range was the alternative energy rage in 2007 when then-Gov. Sonny Perdue held a press conference to announce dot-com billionaire Khosla would help finance the $225 million wood-to-ethanol plant in economically depressed Treutlen County, 155 miles southeast of Atlanta.
Later that year, at a groundbreaking in Soperton’s industrial park, Perdue boasted that “Range Fuels represents a new future for our country.” And Georgia, with its 24 million forested acres, would become world renowned for cellulosic ethanol which, conceivably, turns pine trees and scrap into fuel.
The Bush administration’s Energy Department steered a $76 million federal grant to Range. The Department of Agriculture followed up with an $80 million loan guarantee. Georgia officials pledged $6.2 million. Treutlen County, one of the state’s poorest, offered 20 years worth of tax abatements and 97 acres in its industrial park.
Private investors allegedly supplied the effort with $158 million in startup cash, which means, when you add it all up, Range Fuels raised more than $320 million. Yet, somehow, despite all of its financial backing, the company was unable to accomplish its mission of converting wood into ethanol. Having been met with failure, the company therefore decided to close its doors.
And they didn’t even come close to creating 70 jobs.
Alison Tyrer, spokeswoman for the Georgia Department of Economic Development, said parts of the original deal with Range may remain in place with LanzaTech, according to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
Range Fuels had until 2015 to invest at least $150 million, and create at least 50 jobs, before the state would consider “clawing back” the investment. This means that — to no one’s surprise — the taxpayer-funded investments will most likely never be seen again.
“The accountability is still there,” Tyrer assured. “Technology is almost by definition innovative and with innovation there’s a certain amount of risk. But the state is as prudent as it can possibly be with taxpayer money.”
Georgians may beg to differ.
“We are disappointed that this company did not succeed,” said USDA spokesman Justin DeJong. “It’s important to remember that USDA has a long history of successful lending that supports rural homeowners, business owners, utilities and cooperatives, and over 90 percent of USDA’s loans are successfully repaid.”
“Successful” track record or not, it’s safe to say that those who spearheaded the Range Fuels investment made a severe miscalculation. Not to worry: they should be able to console themselves with the fact that it wasn’t their own money they gambled.
Mr. Charles Glenn “Charlie” Nelson, age 73, of Payneville, KY passed away Thursday, October 14, 2021 at his residence. RIP Charlie, we'll will all miss you. GB

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Offline bilmac

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Re: Failed ethanol plant sold, taxpayers lose $ millions.
« Reply #1 on: January 06, 2012, 05:40:58 PM »
The "Green Business" is making democrats and their money launderers rich.

Offline hunt-m-up

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Re: Failed ethanol plant sold, taxpayers lose $ millions.
« Reply #2 on: January 07, 2012, 03:44:01 AM »
Nothing new, ethanol and bio-diesel plants have been failing for a while. They waste more energy, valuable land and resources building these things than they're worth. Let's continue to subsidize them though...
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Offline Empty Quiver

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Re: Failed ethanol plant sold, taxpayers lose $ millions.
« Reply #3 on: January 07, 2012, 07:05:15 AM »
These things are designed to fail. Physics and Economics both agree you can't get something for nothing. The only ones who should profit are those who were "swinging" the hammers. To hell with the rest, they need to learn a lesson.
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Offline Sourdough

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Re: Failed ethanol plant sold, taxpayers lose $ millions.
« Reply #4 on: January 07, 2012, 09:23:14 AM »
They don't learn, they have been messing around with Ethonol for over 20 years.  It dies everyone forgets, then it gets started over again.  The government needs to keep it's nose out of it.  Let Economics work.
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Offline BUGEYE

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Re: Failed ethanol plant sold, taxpayers lose $ millions.
« Reply #5 on: January 07, 2012, 02:49:08 PM »
and it's not good for your engine.
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Offline Hooker

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Re: Failed ethanol plant sold, taxpayers lose $ millions.
« Reply #6 on: January 08, 2012, 07:27:56 AM »
This why our current government should be cut off from our money and left to die.
There is nothing in this current government that resembles the government described by our Constitution.
There is nothing worth salvaging in this current government we need to kill it off and start over with just the Constitution.
I'm no economic expert but if you give me 65 million dollars I'll give you hundreds of jobs, Give me 320 million and I'll give you thousands of jobs.  I will also create hundreds of new millionares  who's investments will continue to create even more jobs. Government intervention in job creation will always fail and the cost per job they create will always be more than that job will produce.

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Offline bilmac

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Re: Failed ethanol plant sold, taxpayers lose $ millions.
« Reply #7 on: January 08, 2012, 11:37:03 AM »
Most of the "stimulus" money went to pay off democrat doners or vote deliverers.

Offline mcwoodduck

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Re: Failed ethanol plant sold, taxpayers lose $ millions.
« Reply #8 on: January 08, 2012, 11:45:21 AM »
The Ethanol plants are one of the reasons for higher food costs.  The same corn is used as animal feed.  As free tax dollars are available to buy the corn it drives the price up. 
A friend of mine that is in that business tells me to make a gallon of ethanol you use almost a gallon of diesel fuel.  He said about 3/4 of a gallon.
If you were to run a car on a gallon of diesel or a gallon of ethanol the diesel will take you almost twice as far.

Offline Conan The Librarian

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Re: Failed ethanol plant sold, taxpayers lose $ millions.
« Reply #9 on: January 08, 2012, 03:15:49 PM »
Don't  blame the businessmen for this one. They were responding to the boondoggle politics that gave them an incentive to undertake a high risk enterprise. Blame the government for tampering with risk/reward system.

Funny note, there's a guy in Colorado that did the same thing on a smaller scale by buying a Tesla electric car. It cost him very little because of the state subsidies. He put a bumper sticker on it saying how much the tax payers paid to subsidize it. It's been vandalized several times  on that account.

Offline CannonKrazy

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Re: Failed ethanol plant sold, taxpayers lose $ millions.
« Reply #10 on: January 08, 2012, 03:31:02 PM »
That plant is about 20 miles from where I live. Most of the guys I know that put in applications were worried it would close soon after opening. Jobs were hard to find around here at the time (still are).

Offline mcwoodduck

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Re: Failed ethanol plant sold, taxpayers lose $ millions.
« Reply #11 on: January 08, 2012, 07:03:14 PM »
That plant is about 20 miles from where I live. Most of the guys I know that put in applications were worried it would close soon after opening. Jobs were hard to find around here at the time (still are).
In that case wouldn't a real (oil ) refinery be a better idea,
Lots of good paying jobs.  Job security for a couple hundred years. Not to mention the jobs associated with building and maintaining a refinery