Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Future Shock and the war over biofuels

 
Jim Lane | December 28, 2010 |
  



The old joke in cellulosic ethanol is that it is five years away from commercialization…forever.

So when a company in the know, like Novozymes, pushes back its cellulosic ethanol commercialization timelines to 2014 or 2015, it sounds like Deja Vu all over again.

The supporters of cellulosic ethanol say that unlucky timing is the root cause, and not their fault. For sure, the global financial crisis wasn’t modeled in any business plans we saw, biofuels or otherwise, and a capital-intensive investment in first-of-kind technology is at risk in years of tight credit. delays in the E15 decision timeframes, delays in loan guarantees, and uncertainty over the ethanol tax credit haven’t helped, according to Novozymes’ Poul Ruben Anderson.

The technologies are, in many cases, ready to scale. Coskata CEO Bill Roe declared a year ago now that “Coskata is open for business, ready to scale,” but the financiers we have heard about are asking for majority control of various cellulosic ethanol technologies, in return for financing plant number one. The original investors are, in these cases, waiting out the crisis, hoping for better terms.

News from the front 

But news from the research front this week raises two points. In one breakthrough, Virginia Tech researchers have discovered an enzyme mixture that works in the presence of the toxic infused liquid biomass (hydrolysate), meaning that the detoxification step is unnecessary, reducing the cost of producing biofuels as well as increasing biofuel yields by avoiding the production of by-products and synthesis of cell mass.

In another advance,  researchers funded by the Energy Biosciences Institute have developed a newly engineered yeast strain, that can simultaneously consume glucose, a six-carbon sugar that is relatively easy to ferment; and xylose, a five-carbon sugar that has been much more difficult to utilize in ethanol production.

“If you do the fermentation by using only cellobiose or xylose, it takes 48 hours,” said postdoctoral researcher and lead author Suk-Jin Ha. “But if you do the co-fermentation with the cellobiose and xylose, double the amount of sugar is consumed in the same amount of time and produces more than double the amount of ethanol. It’s a huge synergistic effect of co-fermentation.” According to the research team, “The new yeast strain is at least 20 percent more efficient at converting xylose to ethanol than other strains, making it the best xylose-fermenting strain reported in any study.”

Well, OK, there are advances in cellulosic ethanol — we’ve heard it all before, so what?

The material advances in research beg the question: how do you commercialize an industry that is innovating so rapidly, when selling a commodity product? In computers and consumer electronics, prices start high for new technologies and come down over time; in fuels, prices must be competitive with fossil fuels from day one.

In the Bioenergy Project of the Future series, we indicated that there are good reasons to think in terms of bolting on new technologies, producing small volumes of advanced products for specialty markets (such as lubricants, adhesives, or intermediate chemicals), while using older technologies to produce fuels for the mass market. As technologies mature, they would scale up for the fuels market.

Innovation and the bigger picture

The news from Virginia Tech and EBI is a reminder that, in advanced biofuels, innovation is all around us. It leads to a form of Future Shock that has invaded the critique of advanced biofuels. For sure, every industry needs a critique – to curb excesses, to advise and to warn. But it was Alvin Toffler who in 1970′s Future Shock warned that “too much change in too short a period of time” could induce a disorientation produced by information overload.

We feel it every day at the Digest, and our readers sometimes struggle with exhaustion, too. So much happening, so much to keep up with. Imagine how it goes with those keeping an eye on biofuels, as just a part of a larger set of concerns that might include the whole of alternative energy, the whole of agriculture, the whole of carbon mitigation, or the whole of world trade.

At the Digest, we have noted on all-too-many-occasions that there is a breakdown between those critiquing biofuels, and those developing them, based on assymmetries in available information, and different views on how the pace of innovation will play out over the 20-40 years through which the bioenergy revolution will take place.

For example, one’s world view changes dramatically if one accepts the Monsanto view that, by 2030, US corn yields will average 300 bushels per acre, up from 160 right now.

In a 160 bushel-per-acre world, many worry about where we are going to find all the land to produce the food and fuel we need. In a 300 bushel-per-acre world, we wonder where we are going to find markets to utilize added production, or what to do with all the spare land.

Another example. One’s world view changes dramatically if one accepts the Brazilian government’s view that there are up to 100 million acres ultimately available, in a sustainable production system for sugarcane, up from about 5 million now.

In a 5 million acre world, many worry about how rising prices for biofuels will trigger a tsunami of global deforestation. In a 100 million acre world (for none of this land is taken from anywhere near the Amazonian rainforest), we wonder again where we will find markets for all the products that could be produced from affordable, sustainable cane.

Cost and the bigger picture

In our current state of future shock, we appear to have become, for example, overly fixated on the current range of oil prices as a bell-weather for biofuels viability. $100 oil, $80 biofuels – biofuels win. $80 oil, $400 biofuels – fossil fuels win.

Instead, we might look for another more enduring metric – which is to say the amount of money an economy can sustainably afford to spend on liquid transportation fuels. There is ample evidence that costs above $30 per barrel of fuel – regardless of source – in constant dollars causes unsustainable shocks within a national economy. It is not entirely unfair to associate the worst US post-war economic crises – 1973, 1979-1982, 1990-1994, and 2008-10, as catastrophies triggered by high oil prices. And to see the two largest US economic booms, in the mid-1980s and the mid-1990s, as the consequences of cheap oil.

There are other systemic weaknesses in national economies. Chiefly, too much borrowing (by national governments and consumers) – and persistently high trade deficits and capital outflows caused by an overvalued US dollar. But these relate back to oil prices just as well. They are a consequence of US economic chiefs worrying more about doubling oil prices – and reducing US economic competitiveness – through a weaker dollar, than they worry about the long term problem of federal deficits and debt, which they believe will be de-toxified by growth and inflation over the long term.

Important to note that, because petroleum is dollarized, devaluing the dollar invariably raises the price of oil in the US (absent action from OPEC), whereas competing economies don’t necessarily face a price increase, because the rising oil price can be offset by a drop in the exchange rate.

$30 per barrel biofuels

We have seen the results of developing a biofuels platform that is – ahem, somewhat competitive with $75 oil. It’s a battle royale over subsidies, mandates, tax credits, incentives, tariffs, indirect land use change, and food vs fuel. Why?

There’s little consumer pressure for biofuels – and considerable push-back from tax groups and customers of cheap corn – when prices are so high that biofuels can only be afforded based on government incentive and the tepid support of a public regularly fed a diet of fear, doubt and uncertainty by the doomsayers at the American Petroleum Institute and the Grocers Manufacturers Association.

But what about $30 biofuels, or $40? Changes the equation – whether it is a drop-in biofuel or ethanol – buyers who love a bargain will be lining up in support. “Everyday low prices” has been a good strategy for Wal-Mart, and it works everywhere else.

The rise of information tribes

Without the compelling price advantage, biofuels producers and supporters are left talking not to the general public but to selected tribes within the body politic. Such as those who rate oil dependency as the greatest threat to national security. Or some of those who value clean air. Or those interested in rural economic development.

But there are other tribes. Those who focus on genetic modification, the corn monoculture, the Dead Zone in the Gulf of Mexico, world trade, the exploitation of Africa, the opportunities in libertarianism, the evil of high taxes and Big Government mandates, and so on and so on.

For those in other tribes, it is nearly impossible to keep up with the flow of innovation in bioenergy. For among the intractable problems of Future Shock are the problem of mindshare, and that of information overload.

Let’s look at some data that Jeff Alan and I first reported in our book Anchoring America: The Changing Face of Network News:

“In 1929, there were an estimated 45.25 billion private messages exchanged in the United States (phone calls, letters and telegrams), or an average of 368, per person per year. By 1999, that number rose to an estimated five trillion private messages(phone calls, emails, faxes, letters and text messages), or an average of 17, 857 per person per year. During that 70-year period, the rate of communication has grown approximately 2.5 times faster than the economy, and that indicates an enormous growth in the complexity of American personal and business life.”

With information growing apace – and who does not these days look at the email inbox from time to time with a sense of exhaustion? – an information and perspective gap has emerged that has converted the debate over biofuels from a healthy critique into the lobbing of grenades between fixed trenches. Stalemates that are caused by static conditions are self-correcting – snow is paralyzing New York this week, but it will melt.

But there are stalemates that are caused by fixed mindsets, and we are in one. On the one side, a belief in a Zero-Sum game where no one wins in biotechnology without someone losing; on the other, a belief that a rising tide of innovation will lift all boats. This type of stalemate is only generally resolved through market shock. Rampant fears over the uses to which computers would be put – which were frequent in movies of the 1950s and 1960s – disappeared with the market shock of cheap microprocessors and telephony. We worried about Big Brother, and instead got WikiLeaks.

For biofuels, the first $70 per barrel drop-in biofuel produced at commercial scale will be a signature event, but if the Western economies are to think in the long term about stability and growth, the target should be in the region of half that.

Advanced biofuels available for $1 per gallon is the kind of price point that will change a game that desperate needs changing.

Monday, December 27, 2010

Countering 'NIMBY' biomass project opposition

By Bryan Sims | December 27, 2010
The concept of using renewable energy sources, such as woody biomass, for heat and power generation garners support from the majority of communities in the Pacific Northwest. However, where there are supporters of biomass projects, many developers may also face opposition before permitting can be complete.

In a digital age where information is accessible instantaneously, proponents of the “not in my backyard” (NIMBY) stance are finding that the Internet is an effective vehicle for spreading false or negative information about proposed projects before developers have a chance to present their case as to why their project really is a win-win proposition for communities, said Erin Anderson, attorney for Stoel Rives LLP in Seattle.

“In the age of the Internet, anybody can become an expert in the ‘pseudo science’ of a theory opposing a [biomass] project with a few keystrokes of the computer,” Anderson said. “It takes no more than an hour to set up a website or Web page where a project opponent can add in hyperlinks to lead readers to other stories of other opposition groups in other parts of the country. It’s unfortunate, but it’s happening everywhere.”

At BBI International’s 2011 Pacific Northwest Biomass Conference & Trade Show, Jan. 10-12 in Seattle, Anderson intends to lay out a road map to success that project developers can use to create positive momentum for contested biomass projects, in a panel titled, An Eye on Milestones: Characteristics of Projects That Go the Distance. According to Anderson, a careful stakeholder strategy can often be utilized by the developer to create a positive permitting process from the beginning.

“You have this community populated with people who may not immediately be receptive to your story, so there needs to be strategic outreach into the community to make sure you don’t roll out this good news before you have developed a support web within that community, so they can echo that message back to their own citizens,” Anderson said.

Tools such as collaboration on passage of, or revisions to, local and state legislation addressing both public and developer needs; enhanced trade organization visibility; local economic development agency studies; community office presence; and coalition building among local civic, economic and environmental groups, are all viable methods to ensure a successful project from the beginning.

“It’s a marathon, not a sprint,” Anderson said. “You’re opportunity to get people to listen to you is in the early in the stage of development, before opposition hardens up.”

To attend the 2011 Pacific West Biomass Conference & Trade Show, Jan. 10-12 in Seattle, and to learn more about how your biomass project can successfully reach community members positively and achieve permitting, go to www.pacificwest.biomassconference.com.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Enviva to build wood pellet plant in N.C.

 
By Anna Austin | December 21, 2010

Enviva LP has announced intentions to construct a 330,000-ton wood pellet manufacturing facility in northeastern North Carolina.

The company expects the project to bring 53 new jobs to the area of Hertford County’s Ahoskie, a town of about 5,000 people. Salaries will vary by job function, but will be well above the average-paying job in the county. The average annual wage for the new jobs will be about $38,700 not including benefits, and the Hertford County average annual wage is currently about $27,500, according to Gov. Bev Purdue’s office.

 The plant will be built at the former site of Georgia Pacific Lumber, and will annually require more than 600,000 tons of woody biomass. Enviva chose the location due to the region’s abundant resources and close proximity to ports.

 State and local government support was a key factor in moving forward with plans, according to John Keppler, Enviva chairman and CEO. Specifically, the plant received a $270,000 grant from the state’s One North Carolina Fund, a program that invests in state projects to create jobs.

 Enviva is contemplating the development of two or more additional manufacturing plants in the area. The company is not new to the pellet market, as it has been supplying wood chips and wood pellets to customers in the U.S. and Europe since 2007.

 Recently, Enviva announced a long-term wood pellet supply contract with Electrabel, a subsidiary of GDF SUEZ Group, one of the largest utilities in the world.  The company also recently acquired two Mississippi-based wood pellet manufacturers, Piney Wood Pellets and CKS Energy Inc.

RWE npower considers biomass conversion

By Lisa Gibson | December 21, 2010


U.K.-based RWE npower is exploring the conversion of its 1,100-megawatt (MW) coal-fired Tilbury, England, Power Station to 100 percent biomass, sourcing the majority of its feedstock from the pellet plant its parent company is developing in the U.S.

The Tilbury station currently cofires 10 percent biomass as per U.K. Renewables Obligation regulations and has for a number of years, but a 100 percent biomass feedstock will decrease electricity generation at the station to 750 MW. The company has yet to make a final decision on the conversion and is awaiting consents and licenses from regulators, according to Dan Meredith, public relations manager for RWE npower.

“If we do go ahead with the fuel switch from coal to biomass, our recent trials indicate there will be significant environmental benefits due to reductions in emissions compared to coal,” Meredith said, citing a 70 percent to 80 percent reduction in sulfur dioxide, about half the nitrogen oxide emission concentration, and ash production of around a tenth the level associated with coal. The plant is opted out of the U.K.’s Large Combustion Plant Directive (LCPD) and therefore has run under a restricted operational regime of a maximum of 20,000 hours between 2008 and the station’s closure date in 2015.

“It is currently unknown whether a switch to biomass will alter the station’s LCPD status, but even with closure in 2015, RWE npower considers such a switch to have useful benefits: the impact on current air emissions including the avoidance of over two megatons of [carbon dioxide] from burning coal,” Meredith said. “In addition, the use of 100 percent biomass on this project will allow us to explore the sustainable sourcing of such fuel and support the establishment of supply chain infrastructure in the U.K.”

RWE npower is the U.K. unit of Germany-based RWE Group, which is constructing a 750,000-ton pellet plant in Waycross, Ga., slated for operation in 2011. The company chose the location because of the vast wood resources and availability of skilled workers in the forest industry, it said.

“If successful, the [Tilbury] plant will burn its last coal in the spring of next year and start to burn 100 percent biomass before the end of 2011,” Meredith said.

Friday, December 17, 2010

Grants available for wood energy projects

 
By USDA Forest Service Forest Products Laboratory | December 17, 2010

To address the goals of Public Law 110-234, Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008, Rural Revitalization Technologies (7 U.S.C. 6601), and the anticipated Department of the Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies Appropriation Act of 2011, $3.7 million is available for grants that address the nationwide challenge in dealing with low-valued material to create renewable energy.

Submission of an application is required for a grant up to $250,000 for wood energy projects that require engineering services. These projects will use woody biomass material removed from forest restoration activities, such as wildfire hazardous fuel treatments, insect and disease mitigation, forest management due to catastrophic weather events, and/or thinning overstocked stands.

The woody biomass shall be used in a bioenergy facility that uses commercially proven technologies to produce thermal, electrical or liquid/gaseous bioenergy. The funds from the Woody Biomass Utilization Grant program (WBU) must be used to further the planning of such facilities by funding the engineering services necessary for final design and cost analysis.

Examples of such projects include engineering design of a:

•    woody biomass boiler for steam at a sawmill

•    non-pressurized system to heat water for various applications at a hospital, and

•    biomass power facility, or similar facilities.

This program is aimed at helping applicants complete the necessary design work needed to secure public and/or private investment for construction.

Goals of the 2011 Hazardous Fuels Woody Biomass Utilization Grant Program are the following:

•    Reduce forest management costs by increasing the value of biomass and other forest products generated from hazardous fuels reduction and forest health activities on forested lands.

•    Create incentives and/or reduce business risk to increase use of woody biomass from our nation's forestlands for renewable energy projects.

•    Implement projects that target and help remove economic and market barriers to using woody biomass for renewable energy.

•    Produce renewable energy from woody biomass

Note: The federal government's obligation under this program is contingent upon the availability of 2011 appropriated funds. No legal liability on the part of the government for any payment may arise until funds are made available to the grant officer for this program.

Application Deadline: Postmarked by close of business March 1, 2011.

Thursday, December 16, 2010

PFI poised to release new pellet standards


By Lisa Gibson | December 16, 2010

The Pellet Fuels Institute is just months from implementation of its new pellet fuel standards, including for the first time third-party verification for compliance. Participation in the program comes complete with a new label for bags of pellet fuel, illustrating adherence.

John Crouch, director of public affairs for PFI, will give a presentation on PFI’s new fuel standards and how they’ll affect pellet manufacturers in the west at the Pacific West Biomass Conference & Trade Show Jan. 10-12 at the Sheraton Seattle Hotel in Seattle, Wash.

PFI fuel standards have always been voluntary and nonmembers are also welcome to participate, but third-party verification will offer another aspect of quality control, according to John Crouch, director of public affairs for PFI. “If you use the new label on your bag, it says, ‘There is a quality control program in place at my mill and someone physically comes and audits me on this periodically,’” he said. “This is the first standard that people would think of as a standard. It’s more accurate to say that there hasn’t really been a standard.”

PFI has been working on its standards for the past three years, keeping consumer interests in the forefront of decision making. “The standard is based around the consumer who is going to use it,” Crouch said, speaking dominantly about smaller, residential-sized heating systems. PFI has kept its standards consistent with that of the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), which is also working on pellet fuel criteria.

PFI rolled out standards last year, but pellet manufacturers thought they were too lax, Crouch said. “If they were going to participate, they wanted to know that others who participated had third-party verification,” he said.

Besides the periodic verification, PFI’s new standards tighten up the length and diameter parameters and specify a 1 percent ash content limit in order to be classified as premium fuel. “What consumers with small appliances care about is ash content because that’s how often they have to empty their ashes,” Crouch said. “As long as ash removal is manual in the appliances, consumers notice differences that are modest from a producer’s point of view.”

PFI will begin implementing the standards in the spring, once the third-party inspectors are in place, Crouch said, adding that he intends to use the same kind of companies that inspect lumber mills. “We believe that by next summer, when a costumer searches out bags of fuel, they will see some bags with the new standards label on them and obviously we hope that they will respond favorably to that.”

Crouch will be joined by three other speakers discussing biomass fuels on the panel Fuel Characteristics: Improving Stability, Flowability and Uniformity.

 For more information or to register for the conference, visit http://pacificwest.biomassconference.com/.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Biomass power major part of eco-park plan

By | December 15, 2010



Forsite Development has finalized crucial decisions in the process of developing its 20-megawatt waste-to-energy plant along the Catawba River in Charlotte, N.C., just one part of a major undertaking by the company, as it seeks to transform a 667-acre Superfund site into the region’s first eco-industrial area dubbed ReVenture Park.

Most recently, the company announced it has chosen ICM Inc.’s gasification technology, coupled with emissions abatement systems from Eisenmann Corp. “We have been in an exhausting technology validation process,” said Forsite President Tom McKittrick. Together, the systems will help the plant reach more stringent new regulations coming from multiple fronts, including the U.S. EPA’s boiler Maximum Achievable Control Technology rule, which currently is due out in January but could be pushed to April 2012, pending on a court decision on the EPA’s extension request.

During the enormous ReVenture Park project, the contaminated land will be recycled and dedicated solely to renewable energy, according to McKittrick. Plans include a solar field, a wastewater treatment facility, energy crop demonstration stands, an ethanol mixing operation, and office space for research and development, among other aspects.

The $300 million biomass power plant is the element of the project furthest along in development, with memorandums of understanding signed for municipal solid waste from Mecklenburg County’s residential garbage collection, and negotiations in late stages for the sale of electricity, McKittrick said. The waste feedstock will first be processed at another proposed facility off-site, to be operated by Charlotte-based recycling firm FCR Casella. That $30 million facility will be permitted to process about 575,000 tons of garbage per year, supplying between 180,000 and 200,000 tons to ReVenture’s biomass plant, McKittrick said. The power plant will also be capable of using yard debris, although that will be processed separately.

Since the city of Charlotte recently approved those amendments to the garbage routing, allowing for a biomass supply, Forsite is now working on the power plant’s air permit. “We are in the process now of engineering work required for the air permit,” he said, adding that the permit will drive the timeline for construction and operation. The plant should be operational by 2013 and has consumed 90 percent of the ReVenture project focus from Forsite thus far, McKittrick said. “The anchor project is this 20-megawatt waste-to-energy plant,” he said.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Federal export initiative targets wood pellets and chips

 
By | December 09, 2010

A recent government report has targeted wood pellets as one of the most promising export markets for U.S. companies, and has indicated that the USDA will expand its annual report on biofuels to include analysis on biomass in the form of wood pellets and chips in relevant countries, to provide the U.S. industry and policymakers with information on the sector’s growth, export opportunities in emerging markets and policy updates.

The report is a result of the Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Export Initiative, a coordinated effort to promote renewable energy and energy efficiency exports in the U.S. Seven federal agencies, including the U.S. DOE and Department of Commerce, are collaborating on the program, which is part of President Obama’s National Export Initiative.

The NEI is divided into two parts—assessing current competitiveness of U.S. renewable energy and energy efficiency goods and services, and developing an action plan of new commitments that facilitate private-sector efforts to significantly increase U.S. renewable energy and energy efficiency exports within five years.

According to the RE&EE report, biomass equipment and feedstock exports from 2007 to 2009 were about twice the amount of imports. The U.S. exported $176.4 million in biomass energy equipment and feedstock in 2009, with an annual average growth of 54 percent between 2007 and 2009. Imports during the same period were $349.2 million worth of biomass equipment, with an average annual import growth of 28 percent.

The report goes on to recognize that  several countries are expanding their use of biomass for power, either by building biomass-specific power plants or by co-firing biomass in existing coal-based power plants. “Many European countries already obtain a substantial portion of their electricity from biomass, most notably Sweden, which produced more energy from biomass than from oil in 2009,” it stated. “Several developing countries have recently developed biomass power capacity, including Brazil, Costa Rica, India and Mexico, but developing countries that consume biomass resources often use their own domestic resources rather than import feedstock from the U.S.”

The U.S. currently exports wood pellets and wood chips to Europe for co-firing in existing coal plants, and as more countries enact carbon reduction requirements, co-firing could become increasingly common, the report says.  Future exports in the biomass industry are likely to be in the form of consulting, engineering, procurement and financial services, all industries in which the U.S. is likely to remain competitive. In addition, U.S. companies should find relevant export opportunities in countries with little available feedstock or without a local biomass industry, particularly if strong government policy in those countries supports the use of biomass for power.

For more on the Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Export Initiative, visit http://export.gov/reee/.

Monday, November 15, 2010

Lithonia weighs plan for proposed green energy plant on Highway 124

http://www.ocgnews.com/index.php/archives/19-lithonia-weighs-plan-for-proposed-green-energy-plant-on-highway-124-
Written by Valerie J. Morgan

Lithonia could become a demonstration model for green energy with a proposal to build a $60 million plant that would convert wood chips into electricity.

A minority-owned company called Green Energy Partners, Inc. is working with AECOM, the largest design-build firm in the world, to explore building the plant on Highway 124 on a 26-acre tract. AECOM, a Fortune 500 company with clients in more than 100 countries, would oversee the design of the 50,000-square-foot enclosed plant.

The two companies want to use a gasification process to make electricity, which would be sold to Georgia Power and power about 7,000 homes. The DeKalb County Sanitation Department would supply the plant with about 100,000 tons of wood chips collected annually from residential yard waste to make the electricity. Georgia Power also would provide wood chips for the energy conversion.

Neville Anderson, the minority partner of the proposed project, likens the gasification process to heating up wood chips in a barbecue grill or fireplace then converting the heat into electricity.

“This is not medical waste. It’s not garbage. It’s not tires,” said Anderson, managing director for Green Energy Partners, Inc.. “We’re talking about strictly using woody biomass—good waste—to create energy.”

Anderson said the plant, which would be built with a federally-back loan, would be an educational model for engineers, students and others locally and from around the country. The plant would also serve as a catalyst to spur economic development in the city of Lithonia, attracting other companies and building a larger tax base for the city.

“What we’re talking about is putting Lithonia on the map for green energy. The city would be bringing in technology that the nation is embracing,” Anderson said.

The plant, he said, would create about 100 jobs during construction, which is expected to take about eight months—from April to November—if the city gives the go-ahead. About 25 of those jobs would be permanent positions–from security guards to technicians who earn between $45,000 and $60,000 a year. Anderson said the plant would create about 1,000 jobs in the region ranging from truck drivers to suppliers for various goods.

Even with the benefits that Anderson is touting, however, the proposed project has some concerned the plant would pose a health hazard. They fear the 24-hour operation would bring harmful emissions, noise and unwanted truck traffic to the community.

City Council member Deborah Jackson said she feels more information and research are needed before a decision can be made about the plant.

“I’m concerned that we just don’t know enough about it. Gasification has only been used since 2008,” Jackson said. “We don’t know what the impact will be 20 years from now.”

But Anderson said one need only look at the University of South Carolina, if there are concerns about health hazards associated with gasification. He said the university has been using the process on site for about four years to power facilities on its campus.

Six Lithonia citizens, including long-time resident Barbara Lester, a former City Council member, plan to present a report to residents on Nov. 17, 7 p.m., a the Lithonia Woman’s Club on Wiggins Street. The residents, along with Council members Doreen Carter, Al Franklin, Deborah Jackson and Lithonia Mayor Tonya Peterson joined Anderson and others on a bus tour of a gasification plant they visited Nov. 1 in Dalton. They observed how Shaw Industries uses carpet remnants to make energy and they plan to share their findings from the trip, Lester said.

Carter, who organized the trip, said she, too, is planning a community forum that will feature a panel of green energy experts and elected officials. That meeting will be held on
Nov 29, 7 p.m., at Union Missionary Baptist Church, 2474 Bruce St., Lithonia.
Pictured above:
1st Picture: Lithonia residents and other community stakeholders toured the Shaw Industries plant in Dalton, where carpet remnants are used to make renewable energy. Photo By Valerie J. Morgan/OCG News
2nd Picture: Neville Anderson, Managing Director for Green Energy Partners.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Obama administration makes massive biofuel push

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

U.S. Ag secretary visits biofuel plant

http://www.thepostsearchlight.com/2010/10/26/u-s-ag-secretary-visits-biofuel-plant/

Published 8:52pm Tuesday, October 26, 2010
 By Brennan Leathers


U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack visited Southwest Georgia Monday to highlight how his agency’s work is benefiting rural communities.

Vilsack and U.S. Rep. Sanford Bishop toured the First United Ethanol LLC (FUEL) biofuel plant located just outside Pelham, Ga., about 35 miles northeast of Bainbridge. FUEL has several connections to Decatur County and its officials said the plant has had a significant impact on Southwest Georgia since production of ethanol fuel began in 2008.

Creating a strong, vibrant rural economy is the central focus of a slate of U.S. Department of Agriculture initiatives announced by Vilsack on Oct. 21.

The USDA’s Renewable Fuel Standard sets a goal of American biorefineries producing 31 billion gallons of biofuels. Today, the United States produces about 12 billion gallons of ethanol biofuels and about 800 million gallons of biodiesel. Reaching that goal would reduce the United States’ spending on imported petroleum by an estimated $350 billion, according to Vilsack. A significant growth in production of biofuel would also benefit the environment. As biofuel burns cleaner its widespread use would result in less air pollution, he said.

Using domestically produced biofuels instead of petroleum produced overseas would also bolster national security, said Bishop, who serves on the defense and agriculture subcommittees of the U.S. House’s Appropriations Committee.

“A country that is energy-independent will maintain first place in the global marketplace,” Bishop said. “Everything is dependent on energy … [using biofuels,] we will not have to buy oil from other countries to fuel our military’s vehicles when we can possibly be self-sufficient.”

Vilsack, Bishop and members of their staff were taken on a tour of the large FUEL facility by CEO Murray Campbell, a Mitchell County farmer, and Chairman Tommy Dollar, owner of Dollar Farm Products in Bainbridge.

One of the USDA’s initiatives is the establishment of regional Biomass Research Centers for the development of non-food biomass feed stocks. As part of their duties, the centers will assist USDA Rural Development officials in the development and construction of new biorefineries. Tifton, Ga., will be one of the Southeastern center’s sites.

Biorefineries can boost rural economies

Campbell highlighted how a biorefinery can have an extensive positive impact on the local and regional economy.

FUEL, which now has 62 employees, built the first biofuel plant with a production capacity of 100 million gallons per year in the southeastern United States. The ethanol it produces is shipped by truck to fuel retailers. Blends of traditional unleaded gasoline found at many gas stations contain up to 10 percent ethanol to help the gas burn cleaner and meet federal environmental standards, Campbell said. E-85 gasoline can be used by vehicles with FlexFuel technology.

Bainbridge already has two E-85 pumps for commercial use and pumps for private consumers can be found in cities like Tifon and Tallahassee, Fla. Among the local companies using FUEL’s ethanol include Sharber Oil Company and Southwest Georgia Oil.

Vilsack said other USDA efforts include: research of other biofuel blends that can be used by vehicles and aircraft; research into the use of woody biomass and other agricultural products to make biofuels; encouraging use of biofuels by federal agencies like the USDA and U.S. Navy; supporting tax incentives and tax credits for businesses involved in the biofuel industry; and working with the auto and fuel retailing industries to make usage of E-85 more convenient for consumers.

FUEL ships an average of 235 ethanol trucks per week within a 100-mile radius of the plant. An average of 325 trucks per week visit the plant to pick up dried distillers grains and wetcake, two byproducts of ethanol production, for delivery to farmers who use it for animal feed.

FUEL captures some of the carbon dioxide that is emitted during ethanol production and sells it to AirGas, which has a facility next to the FUEL plant. AirGas has 14 full-time employees and ships an average of 17 to 23 trucks per day.

About 31 percent of the trucks that come to FUEL serve the Bainbridge market, Campbell said. While trains deliver most of the 36 million bushels of corn it needs to produce ethanol, FUEL gets about 24 percent of the required corn from Southwest Georgia growers. The company also pays millions in property taxes, sales tax, electricity, natural gas, chemicals and production ingredients—money that goes back into the local and Georgia economies, Campbell said.

Also on Monday, Vilsack and Bishop visited the Southwest Georgia Regional Information Technology Authority in Arlington, Ga., to learn more about the installation of broadband Internet in rural communities. He also had lunch with members of the American Peanut Shellers Association in Albany, Ga., to learn more about how the peanut business helps rural economies.

Friday, September 24, 2010

Alter NRG signs 22-month testing agreement extension with Coskata

  http://biofuelsdigest.com/bdigest/2010/09/24/alter-nrg-signs-22-month-testing-agreement-extension-with-coskata/

Thomas Saidak | September 24, 2010

In Canada, Alter NRG is pleased to announce it has signed a twenty-two month extension to its agreement with Coskata, to provide testing services to support Project Lighthouse for a minimum value to the Company of US$4.1 million and up to US$5.6 million if all contemplated tests are performed.

This includes monthly fixed payments totaling US$2.46 million over the term.  Lighthouse was completed in late 2009 and since that time, Alter NRG and Coskata have been converting woodchips into ethanol and optimizing the overall process. Alter NRG converts the woodchips into a clean tar free syngas and Coskata converts the syngas into ethanol using its patented biorefinery technology.

Mark Montemurro, CEO of Alter NRG, added “We are pleased to continue our relationship with Coskata, an acknowledged leader in second generation ethanol production. In the short-term the monthly fixed payments will cover our operating costs at the Westinghouse Plasma Centre. In the longer-term, the market for non-food based ethanol, which is mandated to grow by the US government, represents another market opportunity for Alter NRG.”

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Biomass Plant on Bruce Street

http://gep.us.com/PressRelease.aspx

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

On Thursday, September 9, 2010, Councilwoman Doreen Carter will host a community forum at 2474 Bruce Street Lithonia, Georgia 30058, where Rev. C. André Grier is the Sr. Pastor. The Community Forum will focus on a discussion of the Biomass Plant being built by Green Energy Partners-DeKalb, LLC. The company has received a 20 year contract from DeKalb County to obtain their yard waste that will be converted into electricity by using gasification technology. This is a non-emission process that is environmentally friendly thereby producing green energy. The agreement between Green Energy Partners and DeKalb County is expected to produce $200,000 in revenue for DeKalb County. If the plant is located inside of the city of Lithonia boundaries, it will produce an estimated 100 jobs and an increase of the tax digest of $50 million upon completion of the plant; thereby creating a much needed revenue injection for the City of Lithonia.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

DeKalb approves green energy plant

http://gep.us.com/PressRelease.aspx

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

DeKalb County’s yard waste is on its way to be turned into energy. The county commission voted 6-1 Tuesday to sell its wood chips, grass clippings and yard waste to Green Energy Partners LLC. Green Partners plans to build a $50 million biomass plant in Lithonia. The yard waste, along with cooking oil and greases, will be burned and turned into electricity. The company hopes to contract with Georgia Power, said Green Energy managing director Neville Anderson. Find this article here.

Thursday, July 8, 2010

DeKalb looks to turn yard waste into energy

http://www.ajc.com/news/dekalb-looks-to-turn-567090.html

By Megan Matteucci
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Metro Atlanta / State News6:33 p.m. Thursday, July 8, 2010

Discarded wood chips, grass clippings and cooking oil could bring money to DeKalb County and a new source of renewable energy to Georgia.
 
DeKalb gave the first approval Thursday for Green Energy Partners LLC to move forward with building a $50 million biomass plant in Lithonia.
 
The company said its proposal calls for turning yard waste, fats, oils and greases into clean energy that could be used to power 7,000 homes.

The 10 megawatt plant is expected to generate about $220,000 a year for DeKalb for the next 20 years.

“We are able to sell a commodity we were giving away or stockpiling before we put in the landfill,” Commissioner Jeff Rader told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “Most importantly, we are able to add to our generation of green energy.”

While turning trash into cash is a benefit for DeKalb, the county is facing some questions for not submitting a request for proposals for the contract.

Two companies – Green Energy Partners and Southeast Renewable Energy – approached the county about using their yard waste for a project under the federal stimulus program. Green Energy said it plans to apply for federal stimulus dollars.

Commissioners heard from both companies but did not solicit bids. On Thursday, the commission’s Planning, Economic Development and Public Works Committee voted 3-0 to issue a 20-year contract to Green Energy. The full commission will vote on the contract Tuesday.

Southeast Renewable Energy initially had a proposal to build a similar plant on Briarwood Road, but the county rejected the location. The company’s president and CEO Raine Cotton said Thursday he wished he had the opportunity to bid on the project.

William “Ted” Rhinehart, the county’s deputy chief operating officer for infrastructure, said that the county does not need to issue an RFP because the county is not purchasing a service.

The contract calls for Green Energy to pay the county $5 a ton for wood chips, tree branches, grass trimmings and other debris the county’s sanitation trucks pick up. The price could vary depending on electricity costs, Rhinehart said. Green Energy will also collect cooking grease from restaurants.

“We’ve tied this to the price of electricity so if this becomes more valuable in the future, we will benefit,” Rhinehart said.

The debris will then be burned into gas used to power turbines, which will produce electricity. Green Energy managing director Neville Anderson said he is negotiating with Georgia Power to buy the energy. Georgia Power spokeswoman Lynn Wallace said there are no talks with Green Energy, but the company would be willing to work with them.

DeKalb collects about 100,000 tons of yard waste annually and anticipates selling about 40,000 tons to Green Energy. The county already has at least a year’s supply of wood chips stored, Rhinehart said.
If it receives county approval, Green Energy must apply for an emissions permit from the state Environmental Protection Division, which could take up to six months, said Eric Cornwell, permitting manager for the EPD.

Anderson said the plant will have the “cleanest and lowest emissions” in the nation for a biomass plant.

Cornwell said the state has not received a permit application. He could not verify the company's emissions claim, but said the EPD would ensure there are no hazards.

“There are strict environmental regulations and no health risks for the area,” Rader said. “It’s super clean because of the permits.”

Construction on the Lithonia plant, which will be located near the Rock Chapel quarry, is scheduled for February 2011, Anderson said. The operation is expected to generate 100 construction jobs. Only a few workers will be needed to run the plant, Anderson said.

Anderson claims this will be the first such plant in Georgia. A competitive company runs a similar operation in Rabun Gap, near the North Carolina border. That 17 megawatt plant, which turns forestry debris into electricity, is the only permitted operational wood waste plant in Georgia, Cornwell said. Several others have applied for permits, but work has not started on any.

Georgia Power also purchases methane gas from household garbage in DeKalb’s Seminole Road landfill. Georgia Power is also in the process of converting a coal-powdered plant near Albany into wood biomass, Wallace said.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Georgia BioMass breaks ground on big GA wood pellet mill

http://www.woodbiomass.com/woodbiomass/news/North-America/Wood-Energy/Georgia-BioMass-breaks-ground-on-big-GA-wood-pellet-mill.html

LOST RIVER, WV, March 25, 2010 (RISI) - A groundbreaking ceremony was held this week at the site of Georgia BioMass' 825,000 tons/year wood pellet plant in Waycross, GA. The facility will add a market for 1.65 million green tons/year of wood.

Georgia BioMass is a limited liability corporation of Germany's RWE Innogy as an investor and Sweden's BMC (BioMass Capital Management) serving as developer. Startup of the $160 million plant set for third quarter 2011.

Initially, pellets from the plant will go to a biomass/coal cofiring energy facility using 3.3 million green tons/year of wood in Amer, Netherlands (operated by Essent). In the future, Georgia BioMass' production will fuel similar operations in the Netherlands, Germany, Italy and the UK. Shipments will go through the port of Savannah, GA.

New biomass projects for Georgia top any in the nation, now with six pellet mills in development having a projected wood demand of 5.1 million tons/year and 14 energy facilities needing 8.6 million tons/year.

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Gov. Perdue breaks ground in Waycross for huge wood pellet plant

http://jacksonville.com/news/georgia/2010-03-24/story/gov-perdue-breaks-ground-waycross-huge-wood-pellet-plant

The Waycross operation will use wood pellets as a coal substitute.

Posted: March 24, 2010 - 10:57pm

WAYCROSS - Gov. Sonny Perdue, local officials and executives from two European companies broke ground Wednesday for a new bio-energy wood pellet plant that, when finished, will be the largest in the world.

Georgia Biomass, a partnership between RWE Innogy of Germany and BMC of Sweden, will invest $150 million to build its wood pellet plant on Waycross' Industrial Park. Wood pellets are widely used in European power plants as a low-pollution substitute for coal. Once open, Georgia Biomass will create 75 direct jobs and boost timber sales regionwide.

During the ceremony's opening remarks Perdue and other speakers competed at times with the hum of heavy equipment in the background that had already broken a lot of ground. But there was no mistaking the message when Perdue and others tossed a dozen shovelfuls of sand into the air for cameras: Waycross industrial development had begun to write a new chapter.

Perdue said economic development is all about finding a way to match the state's strengths with a company's needs. In this case, the match between Georgia Biomass and Southeast Georgia "absolutely hits the sweet spot," he said.

It also fits Perdue's goal to develop Georgia as a center for innovation in alternative energy.

"There's not a lot of wind in Georgia. We don't have acres of sun we can harness. We have to focus on what we have," he said. "Biomass dollars, that's where we're real strong."

RWE Innogy is Europe's fourth largest producer of electricity and the world's largest user of biomass.

Building a biomass plant will help protect the company from too much market exposure, said Chief Financial Officer Hans Bunting.

RWE Innogy and BMC came to Waycross because it's the best place to manufacture wood fuel pellets, Bunting said. The Southeast has the best timber, and it's grown in a sustainable way. There are harbors and railroads to move the product, hard workers and a stable political environment.

"When you narrow all that down from a worldwide search, there is only one place to go: the United States' South," Bunting said. "And, Georgia pine is perfect for producing pellets. You have a constant supply of consistent quality."

It was a point he made earlier in addressing the crowd of hundreds that gathered under a tent.

"Where else would it make sense to build a pellet factory but in the heart of Georgia?'' he asked.

Could replace coal

BMC founder and managing partner Mats Lindstand said the pellets will have "coal-like'' characteristics and with additional advances the fuel could replace coal in many energy production facilities.

Erik Olsson, chairman of the board for BMC in the U.S., is credited for coming up with the idea of manufacturing fuel pellets at an industrial level. He said biomass has a bright future in the world of alternative energy.

"Out of all the renewable energy sources, biomass is the most sustainable," he said. "It's carbon-based, so it can be used for a lot of applications."

A green energy

Biomass can be considered a green energy because the carbon emitted by burning fuel pellets is offset by the carbon absorbed when trees are grown, he said.

"If you additionally capture carbon dioxide during the [fuel burning] cycle, the process then becomes a carbon dioxide vacuum cleaner," Olsson said.

Perdue, like Olsson, also sees biomass as a game-changer. He noted RWE Innogy is not just any company, but a linchpin in alternative energy development.

"They are in this for the long term. Right now 30 percent of their energy production is from fuel pellets and possibly in five years it will be 50 percent," Perdue said. "It's something that can literally change this part of the world as well as the rest of the geopolitical landscape."

As in the past, Regina Morgan, executive director of the Okefenokee Area Development Authority, won effusive praise for bringing all the parties together and making everything work on a strip of land near the edge of the Waycross-Ware County Industrial Park.

Times-Union Georgia Editor Terry Dickson contributed to this report.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Georgia Biomass will ship pellets to Europe

http://biomassmagazine.com/articles/3546/georgia-biomass-will-ship-pellets-to-europe

By Lisa Gibson
Posted February 25, 2010, at 9:50 a.m. CST

Once operational in early 2011, Georgia Biomass in Waycross, Ga., will have the capacity to produce 750,000 tons of wood pellets per year from local timber sources.

The pellets will be shipped from the port in Savannah, Ga., to Europe and used in biomass power plants owned by German utility RWE Innogy, as well as co-fired in coal plants, according to RWE. The Georgia plant will cost about �120 million ($163 million) and is one of a few being constructed in the U.S. for power in Europe, including two proposed in Arkansas. "Georgia is one of many natural places for building these types of plants in the southeast U.S.A. due to the wood resources and availability of skilled people in the wood forest industry," said Kent Sandquist, project director in Savannah, Ga., with BMC, a Sweden-based biomass manufacturing company collaborating on the Georgia project.

The pellets will initially be burned in existing power plants in Amer, Netherlands, where up to 30 percent of the hard coal has already been replaced by solid biomass, mainly wood pellets, according to RWE. The two Amer plants have the capacity to generate electricity for about 3 million homes. Use of the pellets will extend to other pure biomass power plants and also to conventional plants in the Netherlands, Germany, Italy and the U.K.

Georgia Biomass will use equipment from Washington-based TSI, including two sets of pollution reciprocating grate furnaces, two recycle dryer systems and two sets of pollution control equipment, according to TSI.

The plant will require about 1.5 million metric tons of fresh wood per year, which forests in Georgia can sustainably produce, according to RWE. Numerous pulp and paper mills have closed in the past decade, further reducing the local demand for wood and pushing wood growth ahead of consumption.

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Green-minded seeing red over biomass plant

http://www.ajc.com/business/green-minded-seeing-red-303007.html

Saturday, February 13, 2010

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution 

Ask people who live in the North DeKalb neighborhood along Briarwood Road if they consider themselves green friendly, and the answer likely is yes.

The surrounding area, one resident noted, has the highest participation in the county's voluntary recycling program. There's even a local REI store, known for its earth-embracing vibe.

The idea of promoting alternative energy development by building a biomass-fueled electricity generating plant nearby might seem like something they would support.

They do - as long as it's not in their backyard.

The plant, proposed for a Briarwood Road site by developer Raine Cotton of Southeast Renewable Energy, would take unwanted waste wood from tree trimming and clearing operations and convert it into electricity through a gasification process. It would power 6,000 homes.

Opponents contend it would pollute the air, increase truck traffic in the neighborhood near I-85, raise noise levels and use large amounts of water.

All indications are that community opposition will cause Cotton to take his $23 million biomass project elsewhere. The project, which needed rezoning from industrial to heavy industrial use, was rejected by the local community council and county planning commission. DeKalb County commissioners deferred a final decision on the site until later this month.

Last week, Cotton said he is considering two heavily industrialized sites in DeKalb and Gwinnett counties instead.

Biomass is a renewable energy source that can come from multiple sources, including trees. Advocates say the use of biomass fuels can help reduce greenhouse gas emissions that emerge from the burning of coal to make electricity.

The Briarwood Road experience could be a sign, observers said, that renewable energy projects, for all the benefits they bring in energy and jobs, won't have an easy time finding a home in densely populated areas. That could push them to more remote locations where they might meet less public opposition.