Tucson to Open Area’s First Large-Scale Biodiesel Plant

John Davis

Tucson, Arizona will soon get the area’s first large-scale biodiesel plant.

Inside Tucson Business reports EDG Fuels, a division of Environmental Development Group, will open the refinery next month using used cooking oil as the feedstock:

EDG Fuels anticipates production to be about 3 million gallons of biodiesel the first year, with a potential of doubling to 6 million gallons per year.

EDG Fuels is collecting used cooking oil from Tucson-area restaurants through a program called Enjoy Dining Green. The company also is collecting used cooking oil from elsewhere in the country through contracts it has with chain restaurants.

The company then has contracts to sell the refined biodiesel to companies for their commercial fleet vehicles.

EDG Fuels is also looking at developing biodiesel retail locations in the same area.

Biodiesel

Car Parts Makers Want Biodiesel Tested for Metals

John Davis

The makers of automobile parts, also known as the original equipment manufacturing (OEM) community, as well as emission controls firms want to know how much metal is in biodiesel.

This article from Biodiesel Magazine says the National Renewable Energy Laboratory has been able to improve detection of sodium and potassium … two elements that can compromise catalysts and diesel particulate filters (DPF) by causing ash buildup … to into the parts per billion range, even recognizing sodium leached from glass storage devices:

Another NREL study, “Impact of biodiesel ash loading on DPF performance,” collected 100 samples of ASTM biodiesel. The study, led by NREL engineer Aaron Williams, concluded that with the metal content found in biodiesel, it is highly unlikely that ash build-up would result. “No biodiesel produced right now has these levels of metals.” Williams said at the 2010 National Biodiesel Conference & Expo in Grapevine, Texas, last week. Nevertheless, NREL asks, does the ASTM spec for alkali metals need to be lowered to satisfy catalyst and diesel particulate filter manufacturers?

The original equipment manufacturing (OEM) community and emission controls firms are especially interested in knowing metal limits. “We wanted to see how low we could go,” Alleman said. “If we reported that there was less than 1 ppm in biodiesel, [stakeholders] wanted to know: ‘Well does that mean .9 or .09? Can you qualify that any better?’”

The best news is that biodiesel, even when spiked at 26 times the ASTM limit, still ran amazingly clean.

Biodiesel

Ethanol Report From National Ethanol Conference

Cindy Zimmerman

Ethanol Report PodcastIn this edition of “The Ethanol Report,” we hear from both the chairman and the president and CEO of the Renewable Fuels Association at the 15th Annual National Ethanol Conference held in Orlando, Florida this week.

Chairman Chris Standlee of Abengoa Bioenergy talks about the mood at the event, RFA’s new membership award, and developments toward second generation ethanol. President and CEO Bob Dinneen discusses how the industry fared in 2009, the new RFS2 rule from EPA, and the importance of keeping ethanol incentives in place to continue growth.

You can subscribe to this twice monthly podcast by following this link.

Listen to or download the podcast here:

Audio, Ethanol, Ethanol News, Ethanol Report, RFA

EPA Official Explains RFS2 at Ethanol Conference

Cindy Zimmerman

2010 National Ethanol Conference Photo Album

The new rule for the expanded Renewable Fuel Standard, fresh out of the box just two weeks ago, was the main topic of discussion at the Renewable Fuels Association’s 15th National Ethanol Conference in Orlando. Sarah Dunham, Transportation and Regional Programs Division Director with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, boiled down the guts of the new RFS2 in a 45 minute presentation that highlighted changes made in lifecycle analysis determinations from the rule as originally proposed.

“I can safely say that this is the area we got more comment than any other area in the rule,” Dunham said, calling it very constructive and helpful to get real data and science to apply to the rule. This led to “significant” decreases in estimates of international indirect land use change related to biofuels production, “more than 50-60-70 percent in some cases,” she added. Using corn ethanol as an example, she noted that the final rule factored in both increasing yields and the value of co-products, which had not been in the original model

Dunham also talked about how EPA addressed “uncertainty” in their analysis. “There is inherent uncertainty in these assessments,” she said. “And we thought it was important to try to formally recognize that uncertainty” and incorporate it into the analysis. The assessments will be updated over the next two years as more information becomes known.

The regulations for RFS2 are scheduled to go into effect on July 1 and between now and then EPA will be working with the Renewable Fuels Association and the biofuels industry in general to conduct workshops to help inform producers about the new rule and what it means to them.

If you are in the industry, it is worth listening to Sarah’s presentation, including answers to questions at the end asked by moderator Charles Knauss with Bingham McCutchen LLP. Listen to the audio in the player below and you can see screen shots of some of the slides she references in the NEC conference photo album.

Audio, Ethanol, Ethanol News, Government, National Ethanol Conference, RFA

US-China Group Announces $1.5 Bil Texas Wind Project

John Davis

Two American companies have teamed with a Chinese company for a $1.5 billion West Texas wind farm project.

The Austin (TX) Business Journal says Texas-based Cielo Wind Power and U.S. Renewable Energy Group out of Washington, DC have teamed with Shenyang, China-based A-Power Energy Generation Systems Ltd. subsidiary Shenyang Power Group for a 36,000 acre wind farm:

A-Power will begin shipping wind turbines in March and deliver all units by the same month of 2011. Its subsidiary, Shenyang Power, is contributing $36.6 million to the project, which is expected to produce about 600 megawatts of energy.

Shenyang and U.S. Renewable Energy formed a separate Delaware LLC to own, design, develop, construct, manage and operate the wind turbines, according to the release. A Cielo affiliate will also assist in development.

This is one of the world’s first Chinese-American utility-scale wind power projects, able to produce enough electricity to power 180,000 homes while creating hundreds of U.S. jobs.

Wind

Report: Global Biodiesel Market Worth $12.6 Bil by 2014

John Davis

A new market research report says that the biodiesel market will be worth $12.6 billion by the year 2014.

This press release says the MarketsandMakets report, entitled ‘Global Biodiesel Market (2009 – 2014)’, says the markets in Europe and the Americas will make up nearly 85 percent of that total, with 55.6 percent and 28.6 percent respectively:

Increasing environmental concerns and the need for energy independence have led to the biodiesel market. Despite the economic recession, global biodiesel production totaled 5.1 billion gallons in 2009, representing a 17.9% increase over 2008 levels. The biodiesel market is expected to grow from $8.6 billion in 2009 to $12.6 billion in 2014. Market growth is primarily dependent on the availability, quality, and yield of feedstock, as it accounts for 65% to 70% of the cost of biodiesel production.

Biodiesel derived from rapeseed oil forms the largest segment of the overall market. Germany is the single largest producer of biodiesel with 2.8 million tons produced in 2008. The biodiesel market also offers immense opportunities countries such as U.K., India, and China, as these regions have high diesel fuel prices and a large number of diesel fueled vehicles.

While growth may be affected by feedstock availability issues and the food v/s fuel debate, the market is expected to witness a paradigm shift with the increasing conversion efficiency of existing feedstock, and the development of newer feedstock sources such as algae.

You can read more of the report here.

Biodiesel, International

US Military: Just Months Until Affordable Algae-Biodiesel

John Davis

One of the biggest knocks on algae-based biodiesel is the high cost for the truly green fuel. But the U.S. military says it is just months away from making biodiesel from algae for the same cost as its petroleum-based counterpart.

The UK’s Guardian reports that the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency … better known as DARPA …. which helped develop the internet and satellite navigation systems, has surprised the industry with the announcement:

Darpa’s research projects have already extracted oil from algal ponds at a cost of $2 per gallon. It is now on track to begin large-scale refining of that oil into jet fuel, at a cost of less than $3 a gallon, according to Barbara McQuiston, special assistant for energy at Darpa. That could turn a promising technology into a ­market-ready one. Researchers have cracked the problem of turning pond scum and seaweed into fuel, but finding a cost-effective method of mass production could be a game-changer. “Everyone is well aware that a lot of things were started in the military,” McQuiston said.

The work is part of a broader Pentagon effort to reduce the military’s thirst for oil, which runs at between 60 and 75 million barrels of oil a year. Much of that is used to keep the US Air Force in flight. Commercial airlines – such as Continental and Virgin Atlantic – have also been looking at the viability of an algae-based jet fuel, as has the Chinese government.

“Darpa has achieved the base goal to date,” she said. “Oil from algae is projected at $2 per gallon, headed towards $1 per gallon.”

DARPA officials expect to have a 50 million-gallon-a-year algae-biodiesel refinery up and running sometime next year, making it possible that cost for the fuel will drop even further.

The effort is part of the Pentagon’s plans to get half of its fuel from renewable sources by 2016.

algae, Biodiesel

Cellulosic Breakthrough Announced at Ethanol Conference

Cindy Zimmerman

2010 National Ethanol Conference Photo Album

A major breakthrough in the development of cellulosic ethanol was announced at the National Ethanol Conference in Orlando Tuesday.

Novozymes launched the first commercially viable enzymes for production of biofuel from agricultural waste – Cellic® CTec2.

“We have been working on this for the past 10 years and promised our customers and the market to be ready by 2010,” says Novozymes’ CEO, Steen Riisgaard, who first started work on the project 30 years ago as a young researcher.

He says they are really focusing on using this new development on making ethanol from agricultural waste, such as wheat straw or corn cobs, to avoid the current controversy of indirect land use change. “Personally, I think energy crop are wonderful and should be part of our future, but I don’t want to see this beautiful development be blocked by people speculating about things,” he said.

Riisgaard gives lots of credit to the United States for moving toward renewable energy sources. “Other than Brazil, the US is certainly in the lead,” he said. “Corn based ethanol has paved the way in terms of establishing the infrastructure and it appears to us on the other side of the Atlantic to be a carefully orchestrated and well-executed plan.” But he stresses the importance of continued investment by both the public and private sectors to make cellulosic ethanol commercially viable.

Novozymes is in the process of contracting a plant in Blair, Nebraska to produce the enzymes. “It will be ready for production by the end of 2011 and will produce enzymes for both corn based and cellulosic ethanol,” he said.

Listen to or download my interview with Steen Riisgaard here:

Audio, Cellulosic, Ethanol, Ethanol News, National Ethanol Conference, RFA

Ethanol’s Economic Impact

Cindy Zimmerman

2010 National Ethanol Conference Photo Album

Despite the bad economy and continued attacks by detractors, ethanol provided a significant economic impact for the nation in 2009.

According to “The Economic Contribution of the Ethanol Industry to the Economy of the United States” by economist John Urbanchuk, the economic activities of the ethanol industry put an additional $16 billion into the pockets of American consumers in 2009, added $53.3 billion to the nation’s Gross Domestic Product and displaced crude oil imports amounting to a value of $21.3 billion.

“While 2009 was a really rough year for the overall economy, the ethanol industry grew and expanded,” Urbanchuk said during the 15th annual National Ethanol Conference in Orlando on Tuesday, where he presented his findings. “I think it’s one of the shining stars in the manufacturing sector.”

Listen to or download an interview with John Urbanchuk from the 2010 NEC in the player below:

Audio, Ethanol, Ethanol News, National Ethanol Conference, RFA

General Motors Executive Calls for More Ethanol Pumps

Cindy Zimmerman

2010 National Ethanol Conference Photo Album

The vice chairman of Global Product Operations for General Motors told attendees of the 15th Annual National Ethanol Conference that his company will keep putting more flexible fuel vehicles on the road, but more ethanol pumps are needed to fuel them.

Tom Stephens said GM is committed to making more than half of their vehicle production flex fuel capable by 2012. “GM is spending about $100 million a year adding flex fuel capability to our vehicles,” he said. “We can’t afford to leave this capital stranded.”

He noted that the majority of flex fuel vehicles are in highly populous areas, especially the east and west coasts, while the majority of E-85 fueling stations are located in the Midwest. He advocates the use of blender pumps to allow retailers to put both mid and high level blends in the pumps so consumers can choose the right fuel for their vehicles.

However, when it comes to increasing the blend level to 15 percent ethanol, he added a note of caution. “We believe it’s critical to complete the planned testing of mid level blends to understand the impact on light duty fleet, off-road vehicles, boats and other equipment,” he said. “Until the results of these comprehensive durability tests are fully understood, we remain concerned about customers using fuels containing more than 10 percent ethanol. If ethanol gets a bad name, it will be bad for everyone.”

You can listen to or download Stephen’s speech in the player below and watch part of his talk here:

Audio, Car Makers, Ethanol, Ethanol News, Flex Fuel Vehicles, National Ethanol Conference, RFA, Uncategorized, Video