A previously embattled downtown New York-based biofuels company has become the subject of a number of new class-action lawsuits on behalf of shareholders.
Xethanol Corporation (AMEX: XNL), which claims to be pursuing the conversion of biomass currently being abandoned or land-filled into ethanol, says the lawsuits are without merit.
Three separate law firms are variously accusing Xethanol of:
The company received unwanted attention, and a tumble in its stock price, for similar issues in August raised by a financial newsletter, whose owner later admitted to having shorted the shares of Xethanol in advance of the publication of its negative article. Xethanol president and interim CEO Louis Bernstein said the newsletter's accusations were either "without foundation or irrelevant."
In a letter to shareholders regarding the new class action suits, Bernstein said these lawsuits, "as well as any future copycat lawsuits, are meritless" and thanks shareholders for their messages and telephone calls of support.
In a printed statement, the company claims to be continuing to produce ethanol at its plant in Blairstown, Iowa and pursuing a collaborative research programs in cellulosic ethanol "with leading academic and government scientists in the field." It plans to move forward expansion plans in Iowa and other potential locations and is searching for a permanent CEO, it says.
Xethanol says it is developing proprietary biotechnologies to extract and ferment sugars trapped in biomass waste concentrations. It claims its key business would be in producing ethanol and co-products cost effectively with ethanol plants located closer to biomass sources.
Xethanol, through its PR firm, chose not to be interviewed for this article.