Kinder Morgan Inks NJ Biodiesel Terminal Deal

John Davis

Kinder Morgan, one of the nation’s pioneers in biofuels by pipeline development, has signed a 30-year deal with Carteret, New Jersey to turn 14 acres of brownfields into a biodiesel storage and processing facility.

This article from NJToday.net says the project will have connections to some regional pipelines:

Adjacent to Kinder Morgan’s existing facilities, the project will make use of property formerly used for truck maintenance, calling for additional blending and storage units, and allowing for 1,035,000 million gallons of biodiesel storage and processing. Ultimately the project will provide new connections to SUN, Colonial, and Buckeye regional pipelines.

Kinder Morgan’s proposal was first presented to the borough in 2008, and received initial Planning Board approval on Jan. 27.

The agreement will offer many benefits to both the town and Kinder Morgan, according to [Carteret Mayor Dan] Reiman…

“The numbers are certainly impressive but the foremost benefit will be to our homeowners and workforce,” Reiman stated. “We’ve put a strong emphasis on unionized labor in this agreement as with all of our capital improvement projects, and are pleased to announce that 100% of the non-specialized construction labor involved with this project will come from New Jersey unions. This is in addition to the 250 private-sector jobs that will be created upon the facility’s completion.”

Got to love that. Clean up a brownfield, provide green energy AND jobs to an economy that really needs a boost right now. That’s what you call a REAL stimulus package.

Biodiesel

NBB: Biodiesel Supports World Water Day

John Davis

Today is World Water Day, and the National Biodiesel Board is tapping into the environmental day of recognition to illustrate just how water-thrifty the renewable fuel really is.

In an NBB piece, the group’s sustainability folks point out that fresh water is helped along by biodiesel’s green nature:

By switching to renewable fuels, like biodiesel, we help ensure future access to energy and future access to clean, fresh water. For every unit of energy put into producing biodiesel, 4.5 units of renewable solar energy are stored in the usable form of liquid fuel. Biodiesel is the best way to store energy from the sun in a dense, liquid fuel for transportation uses, but it can also be used as a renewable fuel for stationary uses such as the Thames Water Desalination Plant in London. This plant will use biodiesel from recycled fat and oil from London restaurants and households to provide water for one million people.

We must also protect our water resources by minimizing pollution. Biodiesel production reduces wastewater by 78 percent and reduces hazardous waste production by 96 percent compared to producing petroleum diesel. These numbers are based on the entire lifecycle of the fuel. The conversion of fats and oil to biodiesel uses very little water, and can be done consuming no water at all, if necessary. The year 2008 was a record year for biodiesel production in the US. Even during that record production, the entire US industry used less water than a handful of golf courses use to water their lawn. In the context of our societal uses of water and the benefit it brings, biodiesel production represents a very meager use of water.

And since it is nontoxic and biodegradable, biodiesel isn’t the threat to the environment that petroleum is. Seriously, when was the last time you saw a picture of a duck or an otter struggling through a biodiesel slick in some previously pristine bay?

Biodiesel, NBB

Acres for Biodiesel, Ethanol Feedstocks to be Big

John Davis

If the biodiesel makers ever get the $1-a-gallon federal tax credit back, the industry could have plenty of feedstock for the green fuel come fall.

This Bloomberg article posted in the Wichita (KS) Eagle
says U.S. farmers are expected to plant their largest soybean crop this year:

Soybean plantings will rise 2.1 percent to 79.111 million acres from a record 77.451 million last year, Allendale said today in its 21st annual survey of farmers. Production will total 3.338 billion bushels, down from 3.359 billion last year, the biggest crop ever, based on a projected national yield of 42.7 bushels an acre.

With a little luck, those biodiesel brewers will be able to take advantage of the big crop (despite it being a bit lower than last year) with lower commodity prices.

Another biofuel that could end up benefiting from farmers’ efforts would be ethanol. Bloomberg is expecting that green fuel’s main feedstock, corn, to have the second-biggest area planted since World War II and a projected record yield of 13.243 billion bushels.

Biodiesel, Ethanol, Ethanol News, News, Soybeans

Wind Power Faces New, Tough Opponent in US Military

John Davis

Wind energy has faced some opposition, mostly against people who are afraid their oceanfront views will be obscured by windmills seven miles offshore, but now it has a pretty tough opponent in the U.S. military.

This article from BiofuelsWatch.com says the military is raising concerns about wind farms disrupting military radar arrays:

The primary military concern about wind farm development stems from the fact that in order to maintain adequate efficiency wind farms must operate at least 80 to 100 feed in the air, with the higher the placement the more efficient the turbines can operate due to the “cleaner” wind streams. RADAR detection, however, generally begins at roughly 50 feet, thus any wind turbines present would potentially block any RADAR signals by bouncing back signal waves with their blades and create an effective “dead zone” on the opposite side of the turbine from the RADAR emitter.

Experts say the issue could, at best, delay some projects or, at worst, cancel individual wind turbines … and even bring about a whole new set of regulations.

Wind

Green Energy Benefits from Recession

John Davis

While parts of the renewable energy sector have had some tough times lately … biodiesel with the loss of the federal tax credit, ethanol with the food vs. fuel fight, the economic downturn and the tightening of the credit markets … it seems green energy has actually benefitted from the recession. Well, at least in the area of new ideas.

The Financial Times has details:

Not only did the funding model for much of the US renewable energy industry put the sector within a whisker of being dragged down in Wall Street’s wake, but the general economic climate also threatened to put numerous projects on hold.

But clean tech patents – admittedly only a rough indicator of industry sentiment – suggests a more confident picture. US patent filings for clean energy rose to their highest-ever level in the last three months of 2009, according to a report from consultancy Cleantech Group and intellectual property lawyers Heslin Rothenberg Farley & Mesiti:

U.S. patents for clean-energy technologies in 2009 were at an all time high with 200 more patents than 2008 at 1125.

… patents in fuel cells and hybrid/electric vehicles were each up over twenty percent over 2008 with solar patents up sixty percent and biomass/biofuel energy patents up two hundred sixty percent. Fuel Cells, wind, and biomass/biofuel energy patents were also at all time highs in 2009. In contrast, hydroelectric and tidal patents decreased in 2009 while geothermal patents were up only one patent over the year prior.

The article goes on to point out that while Silicon Valley is usually known for its venture capitalists going green, the real growth in renewable energy is being fueled by what’s happening in Detroit, with fuel cells dominating the conversation … four times the number of patents as closest competition wind and solar … and Honda, GM and Toyota are speaking the loudest.

Car Makers, Solar, Wind

Biggest Biodiesel Plant in Canada to Start Construction

John Davis

When it’s finished, it will produce nearly twice as much biodiesel as the entire country of Canada produces now and will supply our friends to the north with one-fourth of their increasing national demand by 2012.

The Edmonton Journal reports that the Bio-Street plant in Vegreville will begin construction later this year … just in time for Canada’s 2 percent biodiesel mandate to kick in in two years:

“With these federal standards, that means there will be a demand for one billion litres. And some provinces are going further, with B.C. requiring five per cent biodiesel by 2012,” vice-president Angela Reid told the Resource Industry Suppliers Association on Thursday.

“Our plant will produce 225 million litres, and will also produce canola meal, glycerine and potassium fertilizer.”

Currently, Canada produces less than 150 million litres of biodiesel each year, with the rest coming from U.S. suppliers, which largely use soybeans rather than canola.

BioStreet has 34 hectares of land, and after 18 months of waiting expects provincial and federal regulatory approvals within weeks.

Groundbreaking for the plant will begin sometime after this summer.

Biodiesel

New Ethanol Blender Pump Introduced

Cindy Zimmerman

Now that Underwriters Laboratory has approved the use of certain pump dispenser models for mid-level ethanol, the door is open for manufacturers to begin marketing them more aggressively.

This week, Gilbarco Veeder-Root announced the release of a new dispenser in the Encore® S fuel dispenser product line that offers four fuel products at the same fueling position – regular unleaded, premium unleaded, a mid-level ethanol blend and E85.

Underwriters Laboratories (UL) and the National Conference on Weights and Measures have approved 19 other Gilbarco Encore S and Encore 300 flexible fuel dispenser models for use with Ethanol blends up to E25, giving retailers maximum choice and flexibility.

“Retailers are requesting products that provide flexibility in the fuel choices they can offer their customers. Increasing consumer demand for ethanol based fuels, combined with incentive programs to encourage the development of an infrastructure to deliver these fuels, are helping to create demand for a range of products,“ said Chad Johnson, product manager at Gilbarco Veeder-Root and a board member for Growth Energy. “The Encore series flexible fuel dispensers help retailers meet demand for higher Ethanol fuel blends and offer the opportunity to capture blender tax incentives as well.”

Find out more here.

blends, Ethanol, Growth Energy

DF Cast: Ethanol & Biodiesel Talk of Commodity Classic

John Davis

Since it was the biggest gathering of the year for corn and soybean growers, it’s only natural that Commodity Classic was also a good place to talk about the state of the ethanol and biodiesel industries, especially when you consider the two grains are still the biggest feedstocks for the biofuels.

In this edition, we listen in on the conversation about ethanol and biodiesel at Commodity Classic with Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack; Brian Jennings, the Executive Director of the American Coalition for Ethanol; Robert White with the Renewable Fuels Association; National Corn Growers Association president Darrin Ihnen; and American Soybean Association president Rob Joslin.

They talk about the E15 blend wall, the state of biofuels infrastructure, and the prospect of getting the federal $1-a-gallon biodiesel tax incentive passed through Congress.

It’s an interesting conversation, and you can hear it below.

You can also subscribe to the DomesticFuel Cast here.

Audio, Biodiesel, corn, Domestic Fuel Cast, Ethanol, Ethanol News, NCGA, News, Soybeans

Newest Cash Crop – Clean Energy

Joanna Schroeder

Farmers and small business have found a crop to make them more money – clean energy. This according to a recent report from the Environmental Lay & Policy Center (ELPC) which just released “Farm Energy Success Stories” that demonstrate how a farm or small rural business adopted clean energy technologies and cut energy costs. Examples cited in the report include a Montana brewery that runs on solar power and an Illinois dairy that generates electricity from manure. Much of the monies that made these projects possible came from the Farm Bill’s Rural Energy for America Program (REAP).

“With the help of farmers, ranchers and rural small businesses, America can make great strides toward solving its energy problems.” said Andy Olsen, Policy Advocate for ELPC. “REAP is creating economic development, energy independence and a cleaner environment one farm at a time.”

Since 2003, REAP has funded over 3,000 clean energy projects, in 50 states that cover the clean energy spectrum – wind, solar, geothermal, biomass and energy efficiency. The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), which oversees the program receives applications for more than three times the amount of funds available, and in February, President Obama raised the funding levels to the highest amount ever to $109 million.

ELPC has been a public supporter of the program since its inception and notes that the program,”leverages billions in private investment, reduces pollution, builds interest and awareness about the benefits of clean energy.” Many legislators support the program as well and Represenative Colin Peterson (D-MN) commented, “This is the kind of common sense program that will help transform rural America into an energy resource for the entire nation.”

You can download Farm Energy Success Stories here.

biomass, Electricity, Energy, Geothermal, Solar, Wind

ConocoPhillips and Penn State Join Forces in Energy Contest

ConocoPhillips and Penn State have joined forces to award up to $300,000 to further the development of innovative ideas and solutions in energy. This award is to recognize new ideas and original, actionable solutions that can help improve the way the nation develops and uses energy.

Three areas will be judged:
1. Developing new energy sources, including new ways to develop alternative energy.
2. Improving energy efficiency, such as new methods to significantly reduce the amount of energy consumed in the United States.
3. Combating climate change, including solutions that reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Entries for the award will be accepted through May 21. Finalists will be annouced in August and will be given $25,000 to further their ideas on the project. The winner will be announced in October and will be awarded $100,000, first runner up will receive an additional $50,000 and the second runner up will receive $25,000. The contest is for U.S. citizens who are 18 years of age and older. For more information or to submit an entrie for the contest, click here.

Energy, News