|
Originally
printed in the September, 2006 issue of Ethanol
Producer Magazine
Tightening
Chains of Supply
Ethanol plant builders say
their waiting lists are growing—not
only because of their own limited abilities
to handle new jobs, but also because of the
size and capabilities of the suppliers who
serve them. It’s a critical period right
now for vendors whose ability to meet the
demands of the U.S. ethanol expansion has
a major bearing on the near-term success of
their own companies.
By Nicholas Zeman
Deadline pressure often brings results but,
as almost everyone knows, it can also cause
a lot of stress. Just ask any ethanol plant
builder who has to secure and manage materials,
services and equipment even after the plans
have been drawn, the site selected and the
crews mobilized. Not surprisingly, the shared
perspectives of ethanol industry suppliers
and service providers can provide valuable
insight into the logistics and challenges
of the present ethanol plant rush.
The first difficulty for any company engaged
in the business of building ethanol plants
has been a shortage of stainless steel. “My
understanding was there were massive amounts
of stainless steel being purchased by China
in preparation for the World’s Fair,”
says Rod Simms, project engineer for ICM.
“Anyway, that’s the story we heard—and
both the availability and the price of stainless
have gone up substantially over the past three
years.” This affects construction projects
and equipment manufacturing considerably,
Simms says, because many ethanol plant tanks
and vessels are made from stainless steel.
One factor is that the surcharge for stainless
steel has risen from 73 cents to $1.60 per
pound since March, according to Jim Bokor
Sr., president of Robert James Sales Inc.
(RJS), a steel distributor based in Buffalo,
N.Y. “Any piece of stainless steel has
a surcharge, he said. “You can’t
dodge that bullet.” The steel surcharge
is a fee added to the overall purchase to
cover the increased price of certain metals
needed in the manufacturing process. “The
demand for nickel in stainless steel is going
up,” Bokor says. In addition, the consumption
of stainless has spiked due to the current
popularity of the material in household appliances.
“It used to be that you didn’t
see a stainless steel refrigerator except
in restaurants, Bokor says. “Now everybody
has stainless in their kitchens.”
The other problem is that there are some shortages
of material at the mill end of the steel business.
“The flat-roll [businesses that] manufacture
the sheets are very busy, and a lot of the
pipe mills are on allocation. … They’re
not getting enough steel to produce what they
want to produce,” Bokor says. “This
causes deliveries to go way down.”
A Plant Per Week
In terms of industry expansion, ICM alone
has gone from three or four plants a year
to three or four plants a month, according
to Simms. “So we’re looking at
roughly a plant a week,” he says. This
has created a peak in demand over a relatively
short time for major equipment. “When
you look at a rise like that occurring over
the last three years, it’s a pretty
rapid escalation, ” he adds.
These
circumstances have put some pressure on unique
pieces of equipment produced by a finite number
of manufacturers. “The type of centrifuge
[for example] that’s used to dewater
distillers grains is only manufactured by
two or three companies in the world,”
explains Simms, adding that while there are
other manufacturers potentially available,
they’re not well known in the ethanol
industry. The selection and evaluation of
new vendors has become a major part of the
design/build process. “This requires
a substantial amount of what we call ‘bedding
time’ to really determine if manufacturers
(new to the ethanol industry) are capable
of doing what the industry needs, and if we
can get them up to speed on what the industry
is looking for in certain areas,” Simms
says.
The expansion has occurred so rapidly that
the identification and evaluation of new vendors
have been an important part of the construction
process. While there may not be an actual
shortage, Simms says circumstances have been
dictated by the fact that it has taken time
to identify and qualify new vendors. “Now
you might need up to eight vendors, when in
the past you’ve only needed two,”
he says. “It wasn’t that they
weren’t there, but no one necessarily
knew who they were and hadn’t checked
them out to the comfort level of spending
several million dollars.”
Noticing a New Market
Renewable fuels have seen a surge of new vendors
that have traditionally served petroleum and
chemical industries, but are now noticing
a new market. For instance, RJS noticed its
pipe fittings and flanges would work in renewable
refining. “Robert James Sales has an
inventory that you would have to go to Houston
to match,” Bokor says. “With $20
million in materials on hand, it [beats] everything
on the East Coast or in the Midwest. You can
build a lot of ethanol plants with $20 million,
and we’ve been gearing up for this business
for almost a year.”
Process engineers at the various design/build
firms are looking for new vendors, and there
are vendors looking for new customers. “Those
two have to get together, and there has to
be that traditional ‘how are we going
to work together?’ dance that goes on,
and when that is all done, maybe you have
a new vendor on your list and maybe you don’t,”
Simms says.
This process of evaluation that occurs between
a design/build firm and new vendors is familiar
to Bokor. “We’re doing great business
with [plant builders] now, but it took them
a long time to figure out that we were for
real,” he says. “We kept saying,
‘We have it. We have it!’…
Now they’re believers—Delta-T,
Lurgi—[and] we’re getting calls
from a lot of them. I think as time goes on
we’ll get more.”
Design/builders may require a period of testing
as well with certain pieces of equipment to
ensure performance expectations. “While
there are a number of pump vendors [for instance],
until someone has actually used a particular
pump in a plant somewhere and checked it out—made
sure it performs as promised—you are
reluctant to put them on the approved vendor
list,” Simms says.
Bokor agrees that there are shortages across
the spectrum from materials to manufacturers
in an industry with such specialized and unique
products. “Heat exchangers are taking
forever to get,” Bokor claims. “The
fabrication shops are busy. Everybody is busy.
It’s a great time to be in the ethanol
or biodiesel businesses.”
Forecasting
The task of placing orders and procuring services
to meet construction deadlines is an important
managerial function, which requires foresight,
advanced planning and other considerations
that may be overlooked. One of these major
planning ordeals, for example, is the construction
rail spurs.
“Many plants wait until the later stages
of construction before they contract out the
track work,” says Rick Volkmann of Volkmann
Rail. “They’re not realizing how
long it takes to build the track and get the
materials.” Many of the big railroads
are doing massive tie replacement programs,
and the short lines have had low interest
loans available to them, Volkmann explains,
which have allowed for various construction
projects. “The ties and the rail are
both in very tight supply,” Volkmann
says. Manpower has been an issue as well.
”It’s always hard to get good
employees, especially since our work is physically
demanding.”
These are the market circumstances that have
limited the operations of Volkmann Rail, which
said it has not had to turn down any customers
yet from operating at maximum capacity but
that it was certainly a possibility in the
future. “We were quoting [on a new plant]
this week,” Volkmann says. “They
need it completed in April. So that would
mean construction in Iowa through the winter
to get it done in time because we can’t
get the materials for at least two months
to start.”
The lead-time on equipment has increased substantially,
upwards of 50 percent in most cases. This
means instead of placing an order eight months
in advance, manufacturers now need 12 months
to deliver. “The lead times are going
up farther and farther, and what is happening
is people in the business are just placing
their orders earlier,” Simms says. “I
don’t know of any plants that have necessarily
been held up in the industry because of delivery
of equipment, but certainly the number of
vendors involved and the lead time on equipment
has changed significantly.”
Extended planning can also cause problems
due to the volatility of some of the commodities
that are involved in ethanol plant construction,
like the aforementioned stainless steel. “There
were good contracts in place with certain
distributors with long-term pricing, but now
you can’t deliver, not today, not with
what is going on,” Bokor says. “For
somebody to tell me that I have to take a
contract and guarantee the price for a year,
I’d have to seriously think about it,
and the price would be astronomical.”
A company operating on tight margins cannot
afford to have funds suspended for eight or
nine months, Bokor says. “We take firm
price contracts for 30, 60, 120 days, six
months,” he explains. “I’ll
even do it for a year on some of the commodities,
but I wouldn’t do it on pipe—it’s
just too volatile.”
In the current market, it is extremely difficult
to budget for a plant in advance because of
rapidly changing prices. Of course, this difficulty
runs parallel with the ability to order parts
and secure services. “To get your permits
for this or that takes time … and then
they get a budget to build the plant,”
Bokor says. “Then it’s three to
six months before they decide it’s time
to buy. Well, by that time, the budget prices
are no good. They’re absolutely thrown
out to the wind [because] prices have gone
up.” EP
Nicholas Zeman is an Ethanol
Producer Magazine staff writer, reach him
at nzeman@bbibiofuels.com
|