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Home International Customs

US ethanol exports to China poised to collapse with 30% tariff

byCT Report
30/01/2017
in International Customs
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WASHINGTON: US ethanol exports to China, which were at an all-time high in 2016, are likely to dry up in the coming year thanks to a 30% import tariff, according to industry sources. “You’re not going to get the trade flow to happen,” an analyst at a biofuels trading company said. “You’re not going to be able to export there.” China was one of the top buyers of US ethanol in 2016. The US exported a total of 678.1 million liters of ethanol to China through November, according to US Census Bureau data. Nearly 100% of that volume was fuel-grade ethanol at 677.7 million liters. But with the higher tariff, exports to China are unlikely. Another source struck a more optimistic tone. “If US prices stay low, it may work out even with 30% import duty,” he said. He added the arbitrage might work better “in summers, after maintenance is over and Brazil is back in production.” China announced December 23 that it would adjust tariffs on several imports, including ethanol. Ethanol imports received a tentative 5% tariff in 2016, but the 2017 tariff has been restored to 30% as of January 1, according to China’s ministry of finance.

News of the tariff immediately stifled exports to China. Some cargoes for late in the first quarter were canceled and sources said nothing is currently booked to go to China. “What they’re doing on ethanol and DDGS (dried distillers grains with solubles) is more about propping up their domestic corn industry than anything else,” a source familiar with US exports said earlier this week. “They do have a domestic ethanol industry that has had fits and starts,” the source said. “They have announced that they intend to ramp those facilities back up.” The corn industry in China is eager to increase its production, and China sees increasing import tariffs as a means of boosting the industry. “The 2017 tariff adjustment will … encourage much-needed domestic energy raw materials to reduce imports,” the Chinese ministry of finance said in its December statement. “In order to give full play to the protection of tariffs on domestic industries, in 2017 the modified ethanol import tariff rates will be adjusted accordingly.” Asia developed as a key demand center for US ethanol in 2016, coinciding with increased production from US plants.

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US production capacity in 2016 climbed to nearly 56.5 billion liters/year, up 2.1 billion liters from 54.4 billion liters/year in 2015. With so much product available in the market and less demand than 2016, the ethanol market could find itself overwhelmed with product. “We could be drowning in it,” the analyst said. “US ethanol might have a tough time this year.” US biofuels groups criticized the tariff. “The implication of these recent moves is clearly that we are less than welcome in their market, and this will challenge the extent of our engagement with China,” Tom Sleight, president of the US Grains Council, said in a statement earlier this month. The announcement about ethanol’s tariff was followed by China finalizing on January 11 antimdumping duties on US DDGS, to 42.2%-53.7%. The tariffs have stifled US DDGS imports to China — the top foreign market for US DDGS — falling 71% in volume for the first 11 months of 2016 compared with 2015, according to US Census Bureau data.

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