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Published: February 12, 2010
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
recently cut the nation's biofuel output quota for 2010.
It wasn't a token cut, either. It was a -94% reduction in
cellulosic ethanol, to 6.5 million gallons, from 100 million
gallons.
(Cellulosic ethanol is a biofuel that can be made from any plant
material. Traditional ethanol is made from corn.)
The administration's cut is reason for investors to absolutely
rejoice.
Let me explain…
Those of you who read my
Government-Driven Investing newsletter know I shy away
from partisan politics. This is not because I don't have
passionate beliefs -- I assuredly do -- it's because partisan
politics doesn't make anyone any money. And while I love wading
into the political scrum, I do it purely as an avocation. My
main interest and top priority is helping my readers make wise
investment decisions.
Sometimes, however, politics is unavoidable. This is one of
those times.
I've long held the opinion that President Obama would not sign a
significant health-care bill and that environmental legislation
was more likely. Now the president appears ready to split his
"green" initiatives into two parts. One is the cap-and-trade
system to limit carbon dioxide emissions, the other is the
president's "green" jobs push. The cap-and-trade bill has
attracted more ire from the same groups that opposed the
president's health-care plan, and it is likely to suffer the
same fate: a quiet death in a Capitol filing cabinet.
With that background in mind, let's cut to brass tacks. This
administration needs a win. Some had thought that would be
financial reform, which Mr. Obama had also promised. But his
opposition, emboldened by the election of Scott Brown in
Massachusetts, which stripped the Democrats of their
super-majority, has changed that and the Republicans appear
ready to dig in their heels.
With health care, cap and trade and now financial regulation off
the table, the only other big issue left is green energy.
Green energy is mostly non-offensive to the president's
opposition. New, renewable energy technologies that reduce
dependence on foreign oil appeal to both sides of the aisle. So
does job creation. And policies that support green energy are
mostly
deficit neutral, as most of the investment comes from the
private sector. Even the stimulus money that the Energy
Department has given away has not been a giveaway, per se.
Energy has required recipients to pony up matching funds in many
cases to ensure that the technology being developed really was
commercially viable.
So what we're talking about here is an
issue that came to prominence as part of the president's agenda,
which has the capacity to win him industry support, create jobs
and reduce dependence on foreign oil.
The question, then, is this: How to ensure a win?
Sitting around a burnished hardwood table in the Old Executive
Office Building, what would be my advice to the President?
Simple. Cut the output target.
After all, no one's going to notice. Not really. It's inside
baseball. Letterman isn't going to joke about it. "The View" is
going to gab about something else at their gabfest. Morley Safer
and "60 Minutes" have far bigger fish to fry.
And later, when said output target has been exceeded, you've got
a win to crow about.
Here's the visual: The President in short sleeves and a hard
hat, goes down to a construction site in Florida to break ground
on a cellulosic ethanol plant. It could be one, say, that is
supported by a federal loan
guarantee. He can stand in the dirt with the dignitaries and
say "this plant will help the United States meet and indeed
surpass its ambitious goals for advanced biofuel output and
usher in a new era of clean energy while creating thousands of
green-collar jobs -- all at no cost to the taxpayer."
This isn't a stretch. I didn't crib this from an episode of "The
West Wing." That cellulosic ethanol plant in Florida? It's real.
It's a joint venture between giant BP Plc (NYSE: BP) and
tiny Verenium Corp. (Nasdaq: VRNM). It's just waiting to
be approved. Other projects around the country are getting
geared up. Projects involving all sorts of cutting-edge
cellulosic technologies, from the latest and greatest enzymes
from companies like Dyadic International, Inc. (OTC: DYAI.PK)
to interesting new concepts like private ethanol-producer POET's
corn-cob idea.
There are thousands of success stories in the cellulosic space.
They're about a year or so behind the federal timetable in the
2007 bill. So instead of missing the timetable, the
administration simply amended one year of it.
Verenium took a hit on the day the EPA lowered its quotas. It
should have shot up: The timetable didn't change because the
feds don't want to support cellulosic ethanol, the timetable was
changed because industry can't quite deliver the cellulosic
ethanol, and amending the quota saves face for both parties. And
my guess is that Verenium will shoot up, and dramatically, as
soon as the company's flagship cellulosic ethanol plant is
approved by Mr. Obama's Energy Department.
Risk-tolerant energy investors can best cover cellulosic with
Verenium and Dyadic. If you're unfamiliar with how critical
Dyadic is to the industry, be sure to
check out this recent article.
-- Andy Obermueller
Chief Investment Strategist
Government-Driven Investing |