Ethanol Plant for BioTown

Cindy Zimmerman

VeraSunSouth Dakota-based VeraSun Energy Corp. has officially announced plans to build an ethanol biorefinery in Reynolds, also known as BioTown USA.

“VeraSun is making a commitment to Reynolds and the BioTown(TM) project that continues our state’s focus on renewable energy sources,” said Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels in a press release from VeraSun.

BioTownBioTown USA was launched in 2005 and is the first community in the nation working to meet all of its energy needs through the use of biorenewable resources.

Intentions for the plant were first publicized in January, site preparation is expected to begin next month. Construction of the plant will take approximately 16 months. The plant is being engineered by ICM, Inc., of Colwich, Kansas, and the general contractor is Fagen, Inc., of Granite Falls, Minnesota.

Last week, VeraSun Energy Corporation was named South Dakota’s Business of the Year by the South Dakota Chamber of Commerce & Industry.

Ethanol, Facilities, News

NBB Blasts Conoco/Tyson Biodiesel Plans

John Davis

Conoco logoTyson
Oil company giant ConocoPhillips is teaming up with food giant Tyson to start selling biodiesel. According to this article on CNet News.com, the project would combine a plentiful resource Tyson has… animal fat… with a seemingly plentiful ConocoPhillips resource… money:

Tyson formed a renewable-energy division last year. The company generates about 2.3 billion pounds of animal fat a year in its operations. The companies estimate that the operation could result in 175 million gallons of biodiesel a year. ConocoPhillips said it will invest $100 million in this project.

While you might think this would be good news, the National Biodiesel Board is not happy. According to this article in the Houston Chronicle, ConocoPhillips would be able to take advantage of a recent IRS decision that allows big oil companies to cash in on the nearly $1-a-gallon tax credit originally created to help the fledgling biodiesel industry get off the ground (see my previous post on the subject here):

NBB logo“We’re not opposed to refiners converting a portion of their capacity into renewable capacity,” Joe Jobe, CEO of the National Biodiesel Board, said during a conference call with reporters Monday. “But we believe it’s bad public policy for taxpayers who are paying as much as $3 for a gallon of gasoline to have their taxes pay another dollar for this.”

ConocoPhillips officials say they need the money to keep the operation profitable.

Biodiesel

AFVi Awards

Cindy Zimmerman

AFVIThe Alternative Fuel Vehicle Institute (AFVi) recently recognized outstanding leadership in the alternative fuels and vehicles industry at the 13th Alternative Fuels & Vehicles National Conference & Expo 2007.

General Motors received the Green Award for the “Live Green Go Yellow” marketing and advertising campaign.

AFVIAmerican Honda was honored with the Green Fleet Award for “leadership and consistency in manufacturing vehicles that provide fleets and customers with the greenest choices around.” Pictured, Dan Bonawitz, Vice President of Corporate Planning and Logistics for American Honda, accepted this award from actor Larry Hagman and AFVi Executive Director Annalloyd Thomason.

The Industry Innovation Award was presented to James Harger of Clean Energy, Westport Innovations CEO Mike Gallagher, Mark Zucker and Andy Douglas of Inland Kenworth.

The Industry Pioneer of the year was Anne Smith with the Southern California Gas Company, and philanthropist T. Boone Pickens was honored with the Industry Vision Award.

More information and photos available here.

Car Makers, conferences, E85, Energy, Flex Fuel Vehicles, News

POET to Open 20th Plant

Cindy Zimmerman

Poet Energy™ is preparing for the grand opening of its 20th ethanol production facility next month in Iowa.

Poet According to a company release, the grand opening event for POET Biorefining in Corning, Iowa will be held on May 4.

The $105 million ethanol production facility in Corning will be the 20th POET production facility and their seventh in the state of Iowa. Once Corning is operational, the annual production capacity of POET will be over one billion gallons.

The event will begin with a flyover from the Vanguard Squadron – the world’s only 100 percent ethanol-powered aerobatic fleet – and guests will include U.S. Senator Chuck Grassley and Iowa Secretary of Agriculture Bill Northey.

Ethanol, Facilities, News

Leaders Agree on Biofuels Deal

Cindy Zimmerman

Chavez-LulaVenezuela’s Hugo Chavez and Brazil’s Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva apparently put their heads together and worked out a compromise on ethanol at this week’s first-ever South American Energy Summit.

Bloomberg reports that South America’s 11 nations have agreed to promote biofuels production to supplement oil output in the region.

According to the story, leaders at the Summit, “agreed to create a regional alliance, to be known as the South American Union, as well as an energy council to regulate and promote cooperation in the sector.”

The summit leaders debated for an entire day over what media reports called an “impasse over conflicting views on the issue by Venezuela and Brazil.” However, Chavez denied that, saying he believes “ethanol is a valid strategy as long as it doesn’t affect food production.”

Venezuela is the world’s eighth-largest exporter of crude while Brazil is the world’s largest exporter of ethanol.

Ethanol, International, News

Earth Day Specials on Ethanol

Cindy Zimmerman

EPICThe Ethanol Promotion and Information Council reports that the environmental benefits of ethanol will be featured in two upcoming Earth Day special television reports. Ethanol industry representatives, including Dan and Jamie Schwarzkopf of Renova Energy, participated in a feature with Sundance Channel during the Daytona open testing for the IndyCar® Series in Daytona, FL in January.

Sundance Channel
“Big Ideas for a Small Planet”
9 PM Eastern (8:00 PM Central Time)
Tuesday, April 17, 2007

ABC News 20/20
“Earth Day Special”
10 PM Eastern (9:00 PM Central Time)
Friday, April 20, 2007

IA ALAMeanwhile, the American Lung Association of Iowa is offering an Earth Day special for drivers in Des Moines with an E85 promotion on Thursday. Des Moines station Dahl’s will be offering E85 for just $1.85 from 10 am until 2 pm. Lt. Gov. Patty Judge will speak about Iowa’s leadership in cleaner-burning biofuels at a 12:30 p.m. ribbon-cutting ceremony at the station.

“This event is the unofficial kickoff of Earth Day weekend, which is capped by Saturday’s free Blues for Greens concert in Waterworks Park,” said Jessica Zopf, environmental health coordinator for the American Lung Association of Iowa. “The promotion at Dahl’s will also include some new flex fuel vehicles from Bob Brown Chevrolet, hot dogs, chips and drinks for a dollar, and plenty of information about E85 fuel and the vehicles that can use it.”

Ethanol, News

RFA Hires ADM Staffer

Cindy Zimmerman

RFAThe Renewable Fuels Associationhas hired Kristin Moore as its new Director of Technical Services.

Ms. Moore joins the RFA from Archer Daniels Midland where she served as Ethanol Technical Service Representative for the past four years. Her prior experience includes being the Quality Assurance Manager in both wet and dry milling operations at the ADM Decatur and Peoria locations. Ms. Moore holds a Chemistry degree from Illinois State University.

Ethanol, News

NBB Says IRS On Side of Big Oil

John Davis

IRS logoNBB logoAs we close in on income tax deadline day, biodiesel advocates are blasting the U.S. Internal Revenue Service for allowing petroleum producers to cash in on the same dollar-a-gallon tax credit orginally set up to help the fledgling biodiesel industry.

According to a National Biodiesel Board press release, special interests have successfully lobbied the U.S. Department of Treasury to to gain access to a renewable diesel tax credit for a specific process called thermal de-polymerization (TDP):

Joe Jobe“Certain powerful oil companies have managed to get the government to expand the definition of a separate provision that was added into the biodiesel tax credit law late in the legislative process,” said Joe Jobe, CEO of the National Biodiesel Board (NBB). “It’s our belief that this credit was developed to help a specific emerging technology, and not to further subsidize existing petroleum refineries.”

“This is bad energy policy, bad agricultural policy and bad fiscal policy,” Jobe said. “If Congress lets this stand, our government will be handing over U.S. taxpayer money to some of the richest companies in the world, and it will not provide many of the benefits that the biodiesel tax incentive has given back to America.”

NBB goes on to say that allowing large integrated refineries to claim a subsidy for dumping raw domestic or imported vegetable oil into the refining process won’t add refining capacity, it will hamper energy security efforts, and it will subsidize oil companies for what they are already doing. The board goes on to say it worries this would allow Big Oil to put a stranglehold on the biodiesel industry.

Since the original biodiesel tax incentive started in 2004, it has helped the biodiesel industry grow from just 22 plants producing about 157 million gallons a year to today’s 105 plants making 864 million gallons with 1.7 billion gallons of capacity under construction.

Biodiesel, Government

Arnold Pumps Biofuels

Cindy Zimmerman

California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger talked about making biofuels cool and sexy during two speeches last week on the East Coast.

Schwarzenegger spoke to the Council on Foreign Relations Board in New York on Thursday and at the Global Environmental Leadership Conference at Georgetown University on Wednesday, making nearly identical speeches comparing the environmental movement to bodybuilding and the need to make being green sexier.

Arnold “You have to make things cool, you have to make things sexy and cutting edge,” he said. “And so we don’t have to take away the cars from the people, the SUVs, the Hummers, and the muscle cars. No. That formula is a formula for failure. Instead, what we have to do is make those muscle cars and those SUVs and those Hummers more environmentally muscular. That is what we have to do. This is why now one of my Hummers runs on biofuel, and the other one of my Hummers runs on hydrogen fuel.”

At the Georgetown conference, which was sponsored by Newsweek, the governor appeared on stage next to a large poster of the current Newsweek cover, which portrays a smiling Schwarzenegger balancing Earth on one finger above the headline, “Save the Planet – Or Else.”

Full text and video of Schwarzenegger’s speeches available on the governor’s website.

Biodiesel, Ethanol, global warming, Government, Hydrogen, News

Prairie Grass Mixes for Ethanol

Cindy Zimmerman

Cellulosic ethanol might be better made from a blend of prairie grasses, rather than just one variety.

That is the finding of research being done at the University of Minnesota, according to researcher Dr. Jason Hill who testified at a Field Hearing of the U.S. Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry, held April 3 in Fargo, ND.

Jason HillAccording to the ND Farm and Ranch Guide, Hill testified that their study found that mixtures of 16 native prairie species produced 238 percent more energy on average than a single prairie species such as switchgrass and as an added bonus, the stands made up of the plant mixtures removed large amounts of carbon dioxide from the air and stored it in the soil, but that the single species stands did not.

“The environmental benefits of producing biofuels from diverse prairie biomass are striking,” Hill said in his testimony. “Most amazingly, producing and using ethanol from diverse prairie biomass can actually reduce the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. This is because a diverse prairie removes more carbon dioxide from the air and stores it in the soil than is released into the air when fossil fuels are burned to farm prairie biomass and convert it into ethanol. This, along with the nitrogen added to the soil by native legumes, actually restores fertility to degraded farmlands, and, a prairie also provides wildlife habitat and reduces soil erosion and pollution of waterways with pesticides, herbicides and fertilizers.”

More on the research can be found on the University of Minnesota website.

Cellulosic, Ethanol, News