Process Optimization Seminar Success

Cindy Zimmerman

Nearly 60 ethanol plant managers attended the second Process Optimization Seminar held in Indianapolis this week. The interactive seminar is a team effort of Fremont Industries, Fermentis, Novozymes and Phibro Ethanol Performance Group.

“All four of us companies got together and realized a need to provide training for plants,” said Steve Rust with Fremont. “So we decided to provide this for them where each of us share our expertise on how we can help plants optimize their process.”

Their first seminar was held last year in Minneapolis and Rust says they will be having another one later this year in Kansas City. “We try to move them around the country,” Rust says. Because the seminars are very interactive, the number of participants is limited to about 60. The seminar is targeted at all levels of ethanol plant management, including operations, technical, lab and general managers.

The Kansas City seminar will be held September 1-2 and registration will be open on July 1.

Listen to my interview with Steve here:

Audio, Ethanol, Ethanol News

Lack of Biodiesel Tax Cut Cuts REG Iowa Workforce, REG Launches Facebook Page

John Davis

Iowa-based Renewable Energy Group has had to lay off 45 percent of its workforce in the company’s home state, due to the failure of Congress to renew the $1-a-gallon federal biodiesel tax credit.

REG is expected to meet with two key members of Congress, Senator Dick Durbin (D-Illinois) and Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), at REG facilities in each of the congressmen’s home states.

In addition, REG Chairman and CEO, Jeff Stroburg, sent U.S. House Ways & Mean Committee chairman Sander Levin a letter pleading his case for reinstatement of the incentive:

The reinstatement and retroactivity of the biodiesel tax credit is critical to putting these employees back to work.

The biodiesel tax credit is currently within the Extenders Package (H.R. 4213) which is part of the second jobs bill, the American Workers, State, and Business Relief Act. This bill was sent passed by the Senate March 10th and is currently awaiting action by the U.S. House of Representatives Ways & Means committee.

We know the countless issues you face each day each deserve your attention and I know you work tirelessly to address each one; however, ours is becoming increasingly critical for our survival.

The earliest Congress can take up the issue would be the week of April 12th, when it returns from spring break. Meanwhile, those REG biodiesel workers … and approximately 23,000 others across the country … are on a break from drawing a paycheck.

Meanwhile, REG has started a Facebook fan page to urge Congress to reinstate the biodiesel tax credit:

Can we get 500 emails into the House Ways & Means Committee to aid the biodiesel industry? Tell our legislators to reinstate and make retroactive the biodiesel tax credit TODAY!

http://waysandmeans.house.gov/singlepages.aspx?NewsID=10470

Copy and paste the message below or write your own:

“Reinstatement of the federal blenders biodiesel tax credit is a national energy security and green collar jobs issues. It is urgent for the biodiesel industry that the biodiesel tax credit, within HR 4213, be passed and sent to the President’s desk for signature as soon as possible.”

Biodiesel, Government, Legislation

New Fuel Economy Standards May Benefit Ethanol

Joanna Schroeder

Today the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Department of Energy (DOE) signed a joint final rule that establishes greenhouse gas emission standards and corporate fuel economy standards for light duty vehicles for model years 2012-2016. This National Fuel Efficiency Policy requires passenger cars and light trucks to get an overall average of 35.5 miles per gallon (mpg) by 2016 while cars are expected to average 39 mpg and trucks will be required to get 30 mpg. According to the current administration, this measure is expected to save 1.8 billion barrels of oil over the life of the program.

However, we could actually reduce oil imports and emissions even more under this program by using ethanol.

Ricardo’s EBDI engine technology

Let me explain. The easiest way to gain the improved fuel economy is through “engine downsizing,” in other words, using smaller engines. But the new smaller engine technologies will not mean less power, like in the past. According to Ethanol Boosting Systems, their technology enables gasoline engines to “reach their full potential” by utilizing performance enhancing properties of ethanol in conjunction with advances in direct injection (DI) and turbocharging.

Here is how their system works: The EBS approach uses controlled direct ethanol injection to add a very significant vaporization-enhanced On-Demand Octane BoostTM that essentially removes the knock limit on engine performance. The elimination of the knock constraint has been proven by systematic engine dynamometer tests. This allows a small gasoline engine to provide the same or higher torque as compared to a conventional engine of much larger size.Read More

Car Makers, E85, Ethanol, Ethanol News, technology

New Fuel Economy Regulations Set

The the U.S. Department of Transportation’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and unveiled new fuel economy rules today that will begin phasing in in 2012. According to EPA, the rules could potentially save the average buyer of a 2016 model year car $3,000 over the life of the vehicle and, nationally, will conserve about 1.8 billion barrels of oil and reduce nearly a billion tons of greenhouse gas emissions over the lives of the vehicles covered.

“This is a significant step towards cleaner air and energy efficiency, and an important example of how our economic and environmental priorities go hand-in-hand,” said EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson. “By working together with industry and capitalizing on our capacity for innovation, we’ve developed a clean cars program that is a win for automakers and drivers, a win for innovators and entrepreneurs, and a win for our planet.”

Automobile manufacturers are expected to meet these standards by more widespread adoption of conventional technologies that are already in commercial use, such as more efficient engines, transmissions, tires, aerodynamics, and materials, as well as improvements in air conditioning systems. EPA and NHTSA also expect that some manufacturers may choose to pursue more advanced fuel-saving technologies like hybrid vehicles, clean diesel engines, plug-in hybrid electric vehicles, and electric vehicles. The new regulation allows automakers to get credits for building flexiblie fuel vehicles until 2015, but after that, it must show the alternative fuel is being used to get credits.

“America needs a roadmap to reduced dependence on foreign oil and greenhouse gases, and only the federal government can play this role,” The Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers President and CEO Dave McCurdy said, “The national program announced today makes sense for consumers, for government policymakers and for automakers.”

NHTSA predicts that passenger cars will have to average 33.3 mpg in 2012, a figure that rises to 37.8 mpg in 2016, light trucks, including SUVS, pickups and vans, will be required to average 25.4 mpg in 2012 and 28.8 mpg by 2016.

E85, Ethanol, Ethanol News, Flex Fuel Vehicles, Government, News

High School Students Win Eco-Marathon With Ethanol

Joanna Schroeder

Photo Credit: DiscoverySeveral high school students from Durand High School in Wisconsin, took first place in the national Shell Eco-Marathon, with their ethanol entry. The challenge was to build a car with the best fuel economy and the Wisconsin team was the only team to enter a vehicle fueled by ethanol. After a snafu with another vehicle that ran into their car, they were able to achieve 345 miles per gallon using ethanol. Their original goal was to go more than 700 mpg which was squashed after their brakes and alignment on their car was thrown off due to the crash.

“There’s a track we have to do 10 laps on and that’s a total of 6 miles. They measured the fuel before the event and after,” student Ted Wayne said in an interview with WEAU-TV.

The students competed against other high school teams as well as college teams and many of these groups has a larger budget. however, it didn’t stop these dedicated students from winning. The three students who traveled to the event in Texas all plan to attend UW-Stout next year and are already planning on starting a club that will compete in future challenges. Ultimately, the team said their goal is to beat Purdue.

Ethanol, Ethanol News

Sugarcane Harvest Begins in Brazil

Joanna Schroeder

Brazil’s 2010/2011 harvest officially begins today, and it is predicted that there will be a 10 percent increase in sugarcane production this year, as compared to last year. This according to the Brazilian Sugarcane Industry Association (UNICA) who is estimating that the sugarcane harvest should reach 595.89 million tons, compared to 541.50 million tons last season. Final 2009/10 production numbers are expected in the next few weeks as the harvest season officially came to a close yesterday.

According to UNICA’s Technical Director, Antonio de Padua Rodrigues, the increased harvest forecast has to be carefully evaluated. “The cane available for ethanol and sugar production in the 2010/11 harvest is virtually the same as in the 2009/10 harvest, which was severely hampered by unfavorable weather conditions. In other words, in terms of crushing, the new harvest should be what the industry was simply unable to complete in the previous harvest.”

According to UNICA, the data collected via satellite images shows no discernible expansion of the area dedicated to growing sugarcane. The expected increase is actually due to a large volume of “bisada” cane, sugarcane that was not processed in the last harvest and has now been growing for two years. Another factor for the larger production is attributed to the gradual increase in production at new mills, especially in the states of Mato Grosso do Sul Goias and Minas Gerais.

Of the total cane volume expected for the 2010/11 harvest, UNICA projects that 43.29 percent will be destined for the production of sugar, and 56.71 percent will be used for ethanol production. Of the ethanol production, estimated to be 27.39 billion liters, 20.14 billion are expected to be produced as hydrous ethanol.

Last season’s reduced harvest caused the amount of ethanol mandated by the country to be lowered. If this season’s harvest goes as predicted, it is anticipated that the ethanol blend levels will be increased to former levels.

Ethanol, News

UK Report on Food Crisis Vindicates Ethanol

Cindy Zimmerman

A new report commissioned by the UK’s Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) has concluded that drought and high oil prices, not biofuels, were behind the so-called food crisis of 2007/2008.

defra“Available evidence suggests that biofuels had a relatively small contribution to the 2008 spike in agricultural commodity prices,” the report noted. “Studies which have found a large biofuel impact across agricultural commodities have often considered too few variables, relied on statistical associations or made unrealistic or inconsistent assumptions.”

The Global Renewable Fuels Alliance (GRFA) welcomed the report’s findings. “This food crisis event in 2008 allowed critics of ethanol to make an easy scapegoat of the industry during a period of unprecedented expansion in ethanol production,” said GRFA spokesperson Bliss Baker. “This is a lesson for us all about the dangerous impact of rising oil prices and the willingness to look to an easy answer, not necessarily the right answer.”

The report found that speculators responding to rapidly declining global wheat stocks caused by ongoing drought originally triggered the crisis, which was exacerbated by countries imposing export restrictions on grains that drove prices even higher. The simultaneous spike in crude oil prices to record levels put upward price pressure on all commodities making the food crisis a truly global event. “The primary impact of high oil prices on agricultural commodities seems still to be through the supply-side, via increased costs of production, rather than the emerging demand-side channel of biofuels,” the report noted. “Fuel and fertiliser account for over half of operating costs of crop farms but many commentators have ignored oil’s ongoing importance as an input into agricultural production.”

Going forward, the report is very optimistic about the world’s ability to respond to both demand for biofuels and the need for additional cropland citing vast amounts of under utilized agricultural reserves around the world.

Read the full report here.

biofuels, Ethanol, Ethanol News, food and fuel, Food prices, International

Siemens to Provide Cape Wind Turbines

John Davis

Siemens will be the supplier of 130, 3.6-Megawatt (MW) turbines for Cape Wind, America’s first planned offshore wind farm off the coast of Massachusetts … if the project is ever built.

This Cape Wind press release says Siemens will also open a U.S. Offshore Wind office in Boston:

“We are pleased to be working with Siemens which is a market leader in offshore wind and we are thrilled Siemens is bringing clean energy jobs to Massachusetts by opening up its U.S. Offshore Wind office in Boston. This agreement between Cape Wind and Siemens represents a major step forward to jumpstarting the American offshore wind industry and increasing energy independence, creating a healthier environment while producing hundreds of green energy jobs,” said Jim Gordon, Cape Wind President.

The Siemens 3.6-MW offshore wind turbines are an industry ‘workhorse’ with 1,000 units sold and 150 units installed and successfully operating.

“While the onshore wind industry is well developed in the U.S., the United States offshore wind resources still offer a vast, untapped source of renewable energy potential. The final approval of the Cape Wind offshore wind farm will be key to the success of the offshore wind industry in the U.S.,” Randy Zwirn, President and CEO of Siemens Energy, Inc. stated.

As anyone who has been following this story knows that it’s not a done deal. About a week ago, the the federal Advisory Council on Historic Preservation held a hearing that could be the end of a nearly 10-year-old fight over the plan to build the wind turbines in Nantucket Sound. If the Department of Interior approves of the project, it could open up green energy and green jobs for the area … unless, of course, the Kennedys and other millionaires find a way to shut it down. Stay tuned.

Wind

Biodiesel Focus of GM, DOE Study

John Davis

General Motors has announced a five-year partnership with the U.S. Department of Energy to study using jatropha plants for biodiesel.

UPI reports that the test sites in India will look at whether jatropha can produce enough oil for the green fuel:

Farms with more than 200 acres of the drought-resistant, non-edible plant will host life-cycle studies near GM plants in India.

“In the long term, if jatropha is commercially viable, it will reduce dependence on petroleum as well as reduce greenhouse gas emissions and promote economic growth,” said Mike Robinson, GM vice president of environment, energy and safety policy.

GM officials say the non-edible plant will also help defuse the food-versus-fuel argument.

Biodiesel, Car Makers, International

METRO Biofuels To Promote Bioheat

Joanna Schroeder

Heating oil is common on the East Coast and so many companies are looking for ways to replace heating oil with alternative sources. Today, METRO Biofuels, based in Brooklyn New York, announced that it is supporting a neighborhood coalition to promote cleaner air quality by using “bioheat” to heat buildings. METRO is the largest independent marketer of bioheat for the New York Metropolitan area, and later this year, plans to open a 110-million-gallon capacity processing facility in Greenpoint, Brooklyn which will create more than 60 green collar jobs and ensure a steady in-city supply of biodiesel for buildings and truck fleets.

The coalition, led by Council Member Jessica Lappin, who represents parts of the Upper East Side, was formed in response to a recent New York City Department of Health air quality survey that listed the neighborhood as having among the City’s worst air quality.

“We got a real wake up call from the Health Department’s report last December,” said Council Member Lappin. “It’s scary. This is what we breathe every day and we need to take some drastic steps soon to improve our air quality. Switching to biodiesel fuel is one way we can start to make a difference right away. We also need to be looking at things like solar power, green roofs, and energy efficient upgrades to further clean our air.”

According to the company, bioheat is a blend of traditional heating oil and biodiesel that is made from a wide variety of vegetable or plant oils including used restaurant grease. Read More

Biodiesel, bioenergy, News