The 2010 National Biodiesel Conference and Expo is just around the corner, going on February 7-10 just outside of Dallas at the Grapevine Gaylord Texan Resort and Convention Center, and you’ll be able to bring a friend for free.
CEO of the National Biodiesel Board Joe Jobe says, with federal legislation and rules pending, this is an event anyone in the biodiesel business should not miss. In fact, the EPA is anticipated to release the much-awaited new Renewable Fuels Standard, or RFS-2, just a few days before the start of the conference. And Jobe says that makes the conference the perfect venue to talk about the new rule.
“The (conference) content is really going to emphasize the upcoming the ruling from the EPA. Six EPA senior policy analysts and officials will be at the conference to explain it to the industry. We’re cautiously optimistic the rule will be favorable (to the biodiesel business) and could have volume-gallon requirements that could create as much as a billion-gallon market.”
Recognizing that the biodiesel industry has had a tough past year, Jobe says they’re offering a “buy-one, get-one free” registration … a first in the seventh year of the big event. He says the free guest for the conerence just needs to register for his or her own hotel room at the Gaylord Texan Resort and Convention Center. More information is available at the conference Web site.
You can hear more of my conversation with Joe in this edition of the Domestic Fuel Cast: [audio:http://www.zimmcomm.biz/domesticfuel/DFCast-1-15-10.mp3]


The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Secretary Chu announced today nearly $80 million awarded for advanced biofuels research and fueling infrastructure.
A team of scientists has cracked the code on the soybean genome, and that information could lead to better biodiesel yields from the oilseed.
It looks like there will be plenty of soybeans for food and fuel use, especially since the non-renewal of the biodiesel tax incentive seems to have put a lot of refineries’ operations on hold.
The St. Louis-area Donald Danforth Plant Science Center will receive $44 million in stimulus bucks to conduct advanced biofuels research.

A proposed ethanol pipeline could create nearly 80,000 jobs across the country, according to a new feasibility report.
Ethanol producer 
“Pursuing this strategy runs counter to the stated goals of Governor Schwarzenegger and the State Assembly to reduce carbon emissions from motor vehicles,” said 