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November 14, 2008 7:26 AM PST

Ethanol start-up Mascoma sheds staffers

by Martin LaMonica

Biofuel start-up Mascoma has laid off a handful of employees, including President Colin South and other executives.

The total number of eliminated positions was between 5 and 10, CEO Bruce Jamerson said Friday.

Mascoma is one of few well-funded companies that have developed technology to make cellulosic ethanol from nonfood feedstocks. General Motors and refiner Marathon Oil are investors.

Click on the image to see a photo gallery of Mascoma's lab, where scientists are engineering microbes to produce ethanol.

(Credit: Mascoma)

Jamerson said Mascoma continues to hit its technology and business milestones. But he and the board felt that it was prudent to cut costs, including personnel.

Because of the upheaval in the capital markets, Mascoma cannot go public to raise additional funds, and institutional investors are being more cautious now. So the company is positioning itself to hold on to cash as long as possible.

"I'm trying to get ahead of this," Jamerson said. "I don't want to find out that in six months, things are more challenging. Then when you make cost reductions, it's even harder."

The company raised $61 million in equity earlier this year. It has also gotten Department of Energy grants, and money from New York and Michigan, to build its first pilot facilities.

The state grants are not in jeopardy, Jamerson said. "I met with the governor of Michigan the other day. It's a priority for them. It will create a lot of jobs in northern Michigan," he said.

The clean-tech sector overall is feeling the effects of the financial-market turmoil. Public companies, such as solar providers, have seen their stock prices drop. Firms looking to raise late-stage financing or project financing to commercialize their technology are also facing difficulty, according to investors and entrepreneurs.

Ethanol producers that use corn as a feedstock are suffering from a significant drop in corn prices since earlier this year. VeraSun declared bankruptcy, and Pacific Ethanol reported a significant third-quarter loss earlier this week.

Martin LaMonica is a senior writer for CNET's Green Tech blog. He started at CNET News in 2002, covering IT and Web development. Before that, he was executive editor at IT publication InfoWorld. E-mail Martin.
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by slickuser November 14, 2008 10:01 AM PST
That's a great idea! ie. laying off executives who take fat pay checks! All companies should
follow this. Instead of having too many executives, just have few and keep the engineers!!!
Reply to this comment
by AppleSuxLeo November 14, 2008 11:53 AM PST
Watch much Mad Money ? ADM is the big player , and the one to invest in. The little guys are all dead or dying. Jim Cramer explained all this.
Reply to this comment
by Manhattan2 November 17, 2008 8:21 AM PST
Those seeking viable solutions in Greeen Energy should look into a Solar Transfer.
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