Patrick Gruber
Analyst · H.C. Wainwright. Your line is open
Yeah. So -- yes, we can -- expect to monetize it sooner rather than later. These are credits that exist, and they're already proven. Our CI scores are solid enough that unlike most companies, ours are really solid. I mean, we're metering carbon going down a hole. So, yeah, we expect to monetize it, and that'll surprise the heck out of people, right? And then as far as the EBITDA positive go, that should be overall for the year. We should be EBITDA positive is, what we'd expect, that's what we're shooting for. We're managing the cost side of things carefully. We see that we have these streams of money that can come into us, and we'll use those. But that's our goal is to do this because one of the questions that people always have, they always ask me, when are you going to raise more money, Pat? You're going to run out of cash. No. We aren't. Sorry, that's not the plan. The plan is, we already have enough operations to be self-sufficient, that's the idea. And we can execute projects. We have a well-developed intellectual property portfolio, engineering portfolio, project portfolio, mature projects. It's time to go execute those things. But the idea of big burn with no outcome, no. We'll have to still get money for projects to execute whether we expand ethanol or we do a but, when we -- or we do ATJ, but we expand ethanol. Well, that's what OIC said they're interested in. Great. We'll find out. So we are pretty -- we feel pretty confident in where we are. Now in terms of 45Z, I was in D.C. all last week talking to senators, representatives, and their staff. And I got to tell you, it's pretty strong support for 45Z. So I think they're going to get it done. If they get the big the big beautiful build done, I think we're going to be in good shape. The principles in play, I think are paid for performance. You got to do something in order to get into the money. It's a very -- it's more narrow rather than wide, meaning, you have to actually do something and the criteria remains stringent. We are in good shape. I think that, extending it through 2031 (ph) was at least a year better than I was expecting, so I was kind of excited to see that. And the rest of it, well, I like one of the really important ones, they're getting rid of the indirect land use, as a component of measuring CI. Outstanding, because that's bogus anyway. There's not any data that science-based that supports that. And so that is one of the problems that in games that people play is they say, well, gosh. I got to waste feedstock. It has a zero. Well, no. They don't have a zero. Not really, that's bogus. They have a they have a charge. Just people don't want to look at that. Well, guess what? Now they said, well, corn doesn't have it -- has a zero feedstock iLUX score as well. Cool. That'll make it and improve in the future the CI score even at our Gevo North Dakota plant and any of our other operations. And it also will help benefit the soybean people. And so this is one of the big -- there's been a lot of game playing and in the Yuko (ph) area. You use cooking oil and half a, where people are using counterfeit or the claims that people are using counterfeit, oils and stuff. So it'll -- it just goes along. It's a brilliant idea. They did a good job. It makes sense. It levels the playing field. I think they still should go pound on CORSIA and Europe, on because of their biases against U.S. agriculture. But, overall, I got to say, I was, like, pleasantly shocked, surprised. It's great. It's really good. I hope they get it done. Hope the whole bill works, and they make it all happen. But -- and even if they don't, we're in good shape. We're in the money from 45Z already.