A Kansas biodiesel and ethanol seller has been recognized for its efforts to sell the green fuels in a station that reflects that commitment to a better environment.
Zarco 66, which boast eight gas stations and convenience stores in Lawrence, Kansas, has picked up the Convenience Store Petroleum (CSP) Excellence in Green Design Award for its innovation to bring biofuels to the customer in some pretty green buildings:
“There are so many reasons for any business to incorporate environmentally-friendly practices, but there are even more reasons for fueling stations to start making the transition,” Scott Zaremba, president of family-owned Zarco 66, states. “With the volatility of the petroleum industry and foreign oil sources, we are on the front lines of two important battles—the environment and economic preservation.”
Putting action behind this philosophy, Zarco 66 launched the Green Energy Gateway station in February of 2008. The company employs the four “Rs”: recycling, reducing, renewing, and reusing, to transform an existing site into an eco-conscious location. From offering five grades of biofuel to reducing runoff with a living plant roof and using wind and solar energy to power the station, the Green Energy Gateway location is an example for other businesses on ways to go green.
“We chose Zarco 66 as the winner of this award because they are proof of how one business can make a difference,” Mitch Morrison, group editor of CSP, describes. “Scott Zaremba and his team do more than simply offer eco fuels; they educate consumers about the use of alternative energy in their vehicles, at home and at work. It is this type of comprehensive approach that will have the greatest impact on future generations.”
Zarco 66 is the first winner of the new award in the category of Excellence in Green Design.


Many fuel retailers have begun offering blends between 10 percent and 85 percent ethanol for flexible fuel vehicles. The
These labels are offered at a member rate and non-member rate. The coalition also offers the mandatory pump labeling for these blends. Besides blend pump labels, the NEVC offers a complete “pump imaging package” for E85 fueling stations. A listing of all items offered for pump labeling can be found by clicking
An Illinois-based technology services company recently unveiled a new set of “2nd Generation” technologies aimed at increasing the sustainability and profitability of corn-based ethanol plants.
In addition,
“Our view is that we can get to 12 to 13 percent by just simply understanding that it’s significantly not much different than 10 percent, it’s an insignificant difference, and under the rules and regulations EPA could do that,” Vilsack said Monday. “If you get to 15 percent or higher, there may be more review required, and we appreciate that. But the help is needed now.”
You may not have heard about Phibro Ethanol Performance Group but what they offer is what they believe is the top performing
As margins continue to be tight in the ethanol industry, I asked Slunecka to give the industry some advice when it comes to choosing products and services for their plants. “Just like how consumers purchase automobiles, the time is right to be selective in the products they choose and the services they ask for,” answered Slunecka. “It’s vital that all inputs be maximized in order to generate the greatest return on investment.”
Even amid a recession, this tax credit “is going to blow the top off the market,” said Ron Stimmel, a “small-wind” advocate with the American Wind Energy Association.
And according to
“We can move fairly quickly to move that rate up from 10 percent to maybe 12 or 13 percent in the interim and then take an even further jump to 15 percent or even 20 percent over the course of the next couple of years,” Vilsack said to the