President of Sindaçúcar-AL
Op-AA-29
The development of the national sugarcane-based energy industry in the last three decades has varied for different reasons or factors. At the onset, this was due to government inducement aimed at equipping the country to better face the needed reduction of oil imports that were consuming an increasingly larger share of our foreign payments flow at the beginning of the 1970’s.
Subsequently, in the 1990’s and until the end of the last century, development was dictated by the need to increase the consumer market that lagged behind supply, generating production surpluses that caused price reductions and discouraged activities.
Looking away from the rear mirror and out the windscreen to the medium- and long-term future, for the first time one sees a promising scenario resulting from the existence of a market, in the next ten years, that will absorb a quantity of ethanol twice the current one.
This is to say that we can grow from now on driven by demand that already exists and signals actual growth along the sustainable supply and demand curve of flex-fuel vehicles, the increase in demand for green ethanol in the chemical industry and the opening up of the foreign market represented by the intensive debate in the U.S. Congress about the reduction of barriers for the import of ethanol. To grow supply thanks to the market, or even to produce given a sure destination, is the maxim of any business venture.
For the national sugarcane-based energy industry, to see that in 2020 it will be inserted in a market twice the size of the current one is a finished symphony whose musical score entrepreneurs and investors will love to draw up. However, if it is a fact that the market is visible before us, it is not true that the conditions for this vigorous and needed increase in supply are defined and given.
The extraordinary growth until 2007, shrunken starting in 2008 and stagnant in terms of new projects at this time, will require actions and reflections more synchronized with the current reality, both in terms of availability of funds, disbursed under feasible conditions for such growth, and the assessment of a business’ profitability vis-à-vis the required investments.
The abundant availability of foreign funds in the first five years of the 2000 decade allowed almost doubling our sugarcane production based on new projects and the expansion of existing mills. The dry-up of the flow of funds, brought about by the 2007/2008 financial crisis, allows us to conclude that new flows will intimately be associated with an analysis of feasible returns in the production and marketing of ethanol in Brazil.
Thus, the investment flow of funds needed to reach 2020 with a balanced supply, given the current market, will necessarily require reflections and the taking into account of some relevant aspects:
A financing program for the renewal of sugarcane plantations and the implementation of new ones will not take place at the same speed as in 2007, given the new remote areas to be exploited, low celerity in licensing, interpretational difficulties in monitoring labor relations, the adequate flow in freeing funds for loans and the feasible cost of such loans when compared with the prices to be attained;
Hence, one may conclude that at this time there is in fact a medium- and long-term scenario for ethanol and the national sugarcane-based energy industry. Perhaps never before so well contrasted with the scenarios that preceded past expansions. However, growth in supply will not be feasible at the pace of the five years prior to 2008.
On the other hand, one should mention Brazilian expertise in the implementation and operation of biofuel projects, which, when combined with overcoming the above mentioned aspects, will allow us to definitively consolidate Brazilian ethanol production so as to participate in all markets.