A Rebound for Cloverdale
After losing its new ethanol biorefinery at the start of a worldwide recession, this small Indiana town gets a second chance to participate in the biofuels revolution.By Darrell Boone
In the 1980's movie Hoosiers, the mythical 1950's small-town Hickory High School defeats big-city power South Bend Central to win the state boys basketball championship. Based on a true story, the film accurately captures the spirit of the "Hoosier Hysteria" of those days, when Indiana's one-class state basketball tournament gave the state's "Davids" the chance to occasionally knock off a Goliath.
One of those Davids was from the Indiana town of Cloverdale, which lies about 40 miles southwest of Indianapolis. Located in the rich, gently rolling farm country reminiscent of the movie, Cloverdale never won the actual state championship, but in 1966 did play its way into the state's Final Four . Folks around town still talk about how their beloved "Clovers" did them proud, competing very respectably in a field that included perennial mega-school powers from Michigan City, East Chicago and Indianapolis.
Fast forward about four decades. Cloverdale (population 2,200), like many other Midwestern communities, has found it challenging to hold its own in the current economic climate. Then in 2008, it got a great opportunity to take a big self-help step with the opening of a new 88-million gallon ethanol biorefinery a half-mile north of town. But quicker than a great-looking jump shot getting swatted into the tenth row, the facility closed -- a scant eight months after commencing production. And many of the community's hopes and dreams for a brighter future went with it.
"People here were really sad and disappointed that the biorefinery wasn't able to continue," says Bill Dory, Executive Director of the Greencastle-Putnam County Economic Development Center. "It appeared the facility was off to a good start. They [the facility ownership and management] were very gracious to the community, good neighbors and good community citizens. They were buying a lot of corn locally, which was really helping our farmers."
TOUGH TIMES FOR ETHANOL
Things started out on a promising note for Altra, Indiana, LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Los Angeles-based Altra, Inc. The ethanol industry was profitable and moving aggressively forward, the overall economy was on an upswing, and Altra, Inc. had ambitious plans.
The Cloverdale facility was announced by Altra, Inc. in October of 2006, and construction started immediately. Production commenced in April of 2008, and things appeared to be off to a good start.
"There were some minor glitches, but the management team was very pleased overall," recalls Dory.
But as the general economy began to crumble, the ethanol industry encountered its own unique set of troubles.
"In the spring of 2006 corn was $2 per bushel, ethanol was $3.50 per gallon, and total payback on an ethanol facility was about six months," recalls Dr. Chris Hurt, Purdue University Agricultural Economist. "By the end of 2008, corn had moved steadily up to $6 or $7 per bushel, ethanol was around $2 per gallon, the cost of building an ethanol plant had doubled, and there was a serious oversupply of ethanol on the market."
In December, Altra officials announced that the plant would be closing. An official company statement cited in Biofuels Digest listed the falling price of ethanol (due to the falling price of oil) and the credit crunch as the critical factors. Some of the biggest and best-known companies in the ethanol industry went into bankruptcy. Media headlines across the nation openly questioned whether biofuels were still an economically viable alternative, with one article bluntly calling ethanol "No Field of Dreams."
But while it was a difficult time for the entire industry, some companies were in a better position to weather the storm, including industry leader POET.
"We've been fortunate," says Larry Ward, POET Senior Vice President of Project Development. "Over our twenty-plus years, we've been through hard times on a number of occasions and have learned from that. But for a new company just getting started, it's really difficult."

MAKING THE SWITCH
The recent announcement that POET has agreed to acquire the plant and facilities at Cloverdale and retrofit them to be consistent with other POET biorefineries was made easier by some of Altra's earlier decisions.
"They did a nice job of picking this location," says Ward. "It has a great corn supply and doesn't have as many competing plants as other areas. There is also a good backbone of facilities and equipment in place to begin our modifications."
While the Cloverdale retrofit is different than anything the company has done recently, it is hardly without precedent.
"That's our roots. In our very early history, that's how we got started, purchasing an idled facility and figuring out how to make it work," explains Ward. "That's how what is now our Scotland, S.D. biorefinery was started, and it began even earlier on the Broin family's farm."
Since those days, however, all other POET plants have been new construction. In order to turn the Cloverdale facility into a POET biorefinery, POET begins construction in July on a retrofitting project that will cost about $30 million and take nine months to
complete.
With a nameplate capacity of
90 million gallons, it will be one of
POET's larger biorefineries. It will
consume 31 million bushels of corn
per year and produce 246,500 tons
of Dakota Gold Brand distillers
dried grains (DDGs). The 40 to
45 employees will take home $2
to $2.5 million annually in pay and
benefits.
Among the technologies installed
at Cloverdale will be POET's
proprietary process technology,
as well as improvements in the
original plant design. Some of
those upgrades will include
BPX™, POET's patent-pending
fermentation process which uses
enzymes instead of heat, reducing
energy use by 10 to 15 percent.
In addition, POET will also install
new pollution control equipment
and a new technology set known
as Total Water Recovery, in which
virtually no liquid is discharged
from the plant. All process water is
either re-used or recycled within the
facility. The only water consumed
in the entire facility will be what
evaporates from the co-product
(DDGS).
"The Cloverdale
plant has all the
ingredients we need
to put together a
top operation -- a
steady corn supply,
rail access, a great
workforce and
productive farmers."
-POET CEO Jeff Broin
"Total Water Recovery is a very
new technology that we're really
excited about," says Ward. "A
number of our newer plants have it,
and it's being deployed throughout
our other plants."
A number of other processes
could potentially be installed at
the facility in the future, including
cellulosic ethanol production from
corn cobs. POET's biorefinery in
Emmetsburg, Iowa is currently
preparing to undergo renovation to
become one of the first in the world
to commercially produce cellulosic
ethanol.
"The Cloverdale facility has all
the ingredients we need to put
together a top operation -- a steady
corn supply, rail access, a great
workforce and productive farmers,"
states POET CEO Jeff Broin.
"The ample corn supply in the
area includes significant quantities
of agricultural waste, making the
plant a likely location for cellulosic
ethanol production in the future."
ANOTHER OPPORTUNITY
For the Cloverdale community,
POET's acquisition represents
a second chance to benefit
significantly from today's green
industrial growth.
"When POET contacted us that
they were the successful bidder
for the facilities, we were quite
pleased," says Dory. "It will be great
to get those jobs back in place, and
the ag community will also be very
pleased. Some of our area farmers
are already familiar with POET.
They've already been hauling their
corn a few hours away to other
POET facilities in the state, then
back-hauling the distillers grains."
Dory himself had become familiar
with POET a few years back when
an ethanol plant first became
a possibility for the Cloverdale
community.
"As I researched biofuels, I
became aware of POET and their
national reputation as a top operator
in the ethanol industry," says Dory.
"They have a reputation for being
great neighbors, and they will fit in
with the community very well."
For POET, acquiring an existing
biorefinery in the area represents
not only an attractive opportunity,
but also a chance to "grow the
family" in a relatively new region for
the company.
"Indiana is also where three of
our newer biorefineries are located,
and this facility will complement
them very well and create some
nice synergistic effects," says
Ward. "We're also excited to be
able to welcome Cloverdale as the
newest member of our family of
27 biorefineries. The people in all
of our facilities build relationships,
and we all learn from each other."
Ward has also been impressed
with the business climate of the
area.
"In Cloverdale and Greencastle,
we've found a very progressive,
welcoming group of local leaders,"
says Ward. "They also really
understand the potential of the
ethanol industry and the 40-plus
jobs coming into town. We already
have a very good relationship for starting up a new business."
For Ward, the new facility also
represents the resurgence and
resilience of the ethanol industry
as it and the American economy
emerge from recession.
"Over a period of years most
industries run into difficulties from
time to time, and this industry is no
different," says Ward. "Ethanol has
shown itself to be a very good fuel
that lowers the cost of gasoline at the
pump, as well as the environmental
benefits. It also provides jobs, like
in the Cloverdale community, that
can't be outsourced, and has done
a tremendous job of revitalizing
communities across the Corn Belt.
Things like this keep us excited.
We're not surprised that there
continues to be opportunity. It's a
great story."
Does that mean that POET
will continue to seek similar
opportunities?
"We have been, and will continue
to look for opportunities across
the whole industry," says Ward.
"But we're not looking for just any
opportunities, we're looking for the
right opportunities."
Sounds kinda like a Cloverdale
high school hoopster looking for
another good jump shot, doesn't it?
Acquisition Strategy:
What does POET look for in an existing biorefinery?
How was POET's acquisition of the Cloverdale
facility different than their process from starting a
biorefinery from scratch? Not as much as you might
think, according to Larry Ward, POET Senior Vice
President for Project Development.
"Any existing biorefinery we consider has to meet the
same criteria as one of our greenfield developments,"
says Ward. "In the case of Cloverdale, there were a lot
of other similarities to our other developments, except
that this one already had a plant on it."
Some of those criteria that made Cloverdale look
like a potential winner include:
- A great corn supply.
- Compatible facility infrastructure. Needs to be capable of readily and cost-effectively being retrofitted to POET's proprietary production technologies.
- Transportation logistics. The Cloverdale biorefinery is on a mainline rail (CSX), and has a good utility structure already in place.
- Good community and business leadership, that understands the benefits of and has a vision for the future of the ethanol industry.
- Other POET biorefineries in the region. This allows for synergistic possibilities, which in this case includes capitalizing on some of the extensive market development that's already been done with the other POET biorefineries in the state.
- Immediately surrounding area not overpopulated with competing ethanol facilities.
- A good work force. As POET prepares to re-start the Cloverdale facility, the company will do a thorough search for top-notch talent, including all previous biorefinery employees who would like to be considered.
- Other site-specific considerations, such as how this site fits into overall company vision, future cellulosic potential, POET's desire to expand into a particular area, among others.
One thing was significantly different about the
Cloverdale acquisition.
"In this one, we were dealing with a court-appointed
receiver and Altra's senior lender, AgStar, to purchase
the assets of the company rather than dealing directly
with the company," says Ward. "It was a competitive
bidding process initially, where we didn't know who, or
how many others, were also bidding and it ultimately
was acquired through a foreclosure auction. In the
case of a new site, we simply purchase the land from
individuals."

