Modest
results from ethanol projects
Member units
under state giant Vietnam National Oil and Gas Group are swallowing a bitter
pill on their ethanol investments.
The PetroVietnam group is currently taking the lead of
the state’s ethanol industry development with three factories planned to
produce 300,000 tonnes per year in Phu Tho, Binh Phuoc and Quang Ngai
provinces.
Five years have gone by since the establishment of a
steering committee for implementing bio-fuel projects which is headed by the
chairman of PetroVietnam and the projects currently in the development
pipeline have seen slow progress.
At the Phu Tho biofuel plant, construction is only 78
per cent complete. This is largely blamed on PetroVietnam’s Construction
Joint Stock Corporation having little experience with the
engineering-procurement-construction (EPC) contract model and its own
financial struggles.
In this context the project’s founding shareholders’
were split on how to address the problem and PV Oil – a PetroVietnam member –
has reduced its stake to 39 per cent and therefore cannot make major
decisions.
For the project, PV Oil has two options – sourcing
outside shareholders who have an interest in its continued involvement or
selling its stake and exiting the project, said a PetroVietnam source.
In regard to the Binh Phuoc biofuel project, although
it was opened in 2013 it had to suspend production due to poor sales.
PV Oil has a 29 per cent stake in this project and the
other two shareholders –
PetroVietnam estimates that Binh Phuoc’s suspended
operations will amount to a loss of around VND270 billion ($12.8 million) a
year from interest, machinery amortisation and operating costs.
The Dung Quat biofuel plant in central Quang Ngai
province produced 27,000 cubic metres of ethanol last year, but only 10 per
cent was sold domestically and the rest was exported with limited returns.
A feasibility study done for the project put the input
material (cassava) cost at around VND1,800 per kilogram with end-use ethanol
fetching VND10,000 per litre on average. But during 2012-2013 the price of
cassava rose by VND5,000 per kilo while ethanol only went up to VND13,000 per
litre. Higher production cost has yielded limited returns.
Since ethanol production is new to
By Thanh Huong, VIR
|
Thứ Ba, 4 tháng 3, 2014
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