Thursday, January 31, 2013

Ethanol industry credits new technology for cellulosic breakthrough, less reliance on corn

http://www.startribune.com/nation/189153701.html?page=all&prepage=2&c=y#continue

Article by: DAVID PITT , Associated Press
Updated: January 31, 2013 - 2:17 AM

DES MOINES, Iowa - After decades of talk, the ethanol industry is building multimillion dollar refineries in several states that will use corn plant residue, wood scraps and even garbage to produce the fuel additive.

The breakthrough comes at a key time for the industry, after the drought heightened criticism about the vast amount of corn used to brew up ethanol rather than be transformed into animal feed or other foods. The corn crop already was smaller than expected because of drought last year, and livestock groups were especially critical of how 40 percent of the crop being diverted toward ethanol caused corn prices to soar.

The new cellulosic ethanol technology could quiet that criticism while also making use of material largely seen as worthless.

Experts said it hasn't been easy.

"You're fighting against millions, perhaps hundreds of millions of years of evolution and that's sort of the secular equivalent of going against the word of God," said C. Ford Runge, a University of Minnesota professor of applied economics and law.

Making ethanol from corn is relatively simple, as kernels are cracked and fermented. But to produce ethanol from the woody and fibrous parts of plants, scientists had to figure out a way to break lignin — the tough fibers that plants have developed through evolution to make stems, trees and corn stalks stiff — from the cellulose. They must then extract the plant's sugars and convert them into ethanol.

Efforts to make that leap have made for a punch line in the industry since the 1980s. Cellulosic ethanol, everyone would say, is just a few years away.

But high oil prices eventually drove companies to spend more on research and development. The government jumped in too. The 2008 farm bill provided $1 billion in financial incentives to encourage cellulosic development.

"You cannot underestimate the impact on the world of $80- or $90- or even $100-a-barrel oil," said Monte Shaw, executive director of trade group Iowa Renewable Fuels Association.

Oil futures first reached $100 a barrel in January 2008, marking a quadrupling of price in five years since 2003. Oil trades now at around $95 a barrel.

The push for more ethanol production comes amid federal requirements that the petroleum industry mix 36 billion gallons of the additive into the nation's fuel supply by 2022.

The Environmental Protection Agency has required that 16 billion gallons of that ethanol be cellulosic, providing another incentive for companies to pursue cellulosic research. Only about 25,000 gallons of cellulosic ethanol were produced last year, but 10 million gallons are expected in 2013.

"Suddenly technological development started to occur," said Adam Monroe, president of Novozymes North America, which makes enzymes used in cellulosic production.

Scientists found enzymes that more efficiently break down the plant material and better yeast strains to convert sugars to alcohol, clearing the way for cellulosic production.

About 70 cellulosic projects are under way, reflecting billions of dollars of private investment.

In Iowa, the nation's leading corn producer, two cellulosic plants are under construction that will use corn plant leaves, stalks and cobs known as corn stover.

Near Nevada, a small Iowa farming community about 40 miles north of Des Moines, DuPont is building a $200 million factory that when completed in 2014 will be the nation's largest cellulosic ethanol plant, capable of making 30 million gallons a year.

Scientists said it's a major step forward.

"We had lab experiments. That's all we had five years ago," said Jan Koninckx, a chemical engineer and DuPont's global business director for biofuels.

The DuPont plant will work with 500 local farmers to collect more than 375,000 tons of corn stover annually.

In northwest Iowa, two companies are teaming up to build another corn stover plant producing 25 million gallons of ethanol annually. Sioux Falls, S.D.-based ethanol-maker POET and Royal DSM, a biotechnology company based in the Netherlands, are building the $250 million plant in Emmetsburg.

Other cellulosic plants are under construction in Kansas, Michigan and Mississippi. Plants in Georgia and Nevada will convert garbage into ethanol in commercial-size plants. One in Florida will convert yard waste and other plant material from a nearby landfill to the fuel additive.

Other projects are testing the feasibility of making ethanol from fast-growing trees and various grasses.

If cellulosic production can ease the demand for corn, the change will be welcomed by livestock producers who have been infuriated by rising feed costs.

"The bottom line is it's all about the competition for corn," said J.D. Alexander, a cattle feeder and corn producer from Pilger, Neb., who is president of the National Cattlemen's Beef Association.

The ethanol industry said millions of gallons of cellulosic ethanol should begin flowing this year and rapidly increase over the next few years.
Wade Robey, a board member at POET-DSM Advanced Biofuels, said the companies are confident the new plants will be profitable.

"We feel very strongly this is a good business to be in and a good investment for our companies," he said.

Some companies, including DuPont and Abengoa, acknowledged they are already looking at sites for more cellulosic plants.

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Biomass power plant to open at Georgia paper mill

 http://www.biomassmagazine.com/articles/8577/business-briefs

By Staff | January 30, 2013

Green Power Solutions will open a biomass-fueled power plant in Laurens County, Ga. The project is the culmination  of more than 18 months of collaboration between Beasley Forestry Products and Land Care Services. The facility has received approval from the Georgia Public Service Commission and will be located at an existing paper mill that was recently purchased by SP Fiber Technologies LLC. The planned capital expenditures will allow Green Power Solutions to provide steam required for the paper mill’s daily operation, and also generate 56 MW of electricity to feed the grid. The company will provide base load power, which will be sold to Georgia Power Co. under a 20-year power purchase agreement.

Monday, January 28, 2013

LSU AgCenter Commissions Advanced Biofuels Pilot Plant

http://www.biofuelsjournal.com/info/bf_articles.html?ID=129936

 Date Posted: January 28, 2013

St. Gabriel, LA—The fledgling biofuels and bioprocessing industry in the South took a step forward Friday, Jan. 25, with the formal commissioning of a pilot plant at the LSU AgCenter Audubon Sugar Institute.

This indicates success in several areas, said LSU AgCenter Vice Chancellor John Russin.

The infusion of federal funding will benefit the state and the sugar industry as well as the biofuels and bioprocessing industry and the rural economy, Russin said.

“This is an amalgam of a true team effort.”

The pilot plant is part of a larger project funded by a five-year, $17.2 million grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture through its agriculture and food research initiative, said William Goldner, national program leader for sustainable bioenergy in the USDA Institute of Bioenergy, Climate and Environment.

The grant came as a result of a competitive peer review of proposals to create regional systems for sustainable production of biofuels and biobased products, Goldner said.

“We want to enhance existing agriculture and improve opportunities for rural communities.”

Dedicated to producing biofuels and biochemicals from agricultural crops and byproducts, the pilot plant is the centerpiece of the AgCenter’s Sustainable Bioproducts Initiative, said AgCenter project director Vadim Kochergin.

It will focus on processing sweet sorghum, energy cane and other grassy feedstocks into convertible sugars, fiber and bioproducts for further refining into butanol, gasoline, isoprene and biochemicals, he said.

The pilot plant is a scaled-down version of a typical sugar mill, said Juan Miguel Bueno, president and CEO of Manufacturera 3M, S.A. de C.V. in Cordoba, Mexico.

Bueno’s company fabricates sugar mills used in Louisiana, so his challenge was to design and produce the pilot plant.

“It’s exactly the same as a big mill but on a smaller scale,” Bueno said of the project that took about five months to engineer and manufacture.

“By developing new things, we can produce new energy and new resources,” he said.

The pilot plant is seen as a milestone for the project that Kochergin described as a “work in progress.”

“The facility can be scaled up to any capacity,” Kochergin said. “The focus is on primary processing of sweet sorghum, energy cane and other grassy feedstocks.

"We can facilitate projects targeting evaluation and validation of technologies as well as training of research and operating personnel.”

“This is a tremendous opportunity to identify potential feedstocks, not only for Louisiana but all of the South,” said Carrie Castille, associate commissioner for government affairs and science advisor in the Louisiana Department of Agriculture and Forestry.

“This project will provide long-term, lifecycle assessment for continued crop production with respect to weather,” Castille said.

Louisiana is in a unique position for feedstock production, and lifecycle assessment will provide information on how various crops perform during different weather patterns, such as drought.

“The benefits this facility will give to Louisiana landowners is forward thinking,” said Klein Kirby, chairman of A. Wilbert’s Sons, LLC, a leading Louisiana land development company.

“This is a huge tool for the Louisiana sugar industry, for the processors and for the landowners,” Kirby said.

For more information, call 225-578-5839.

Friday, January 25, 2013

DC Circuit Court Issues Narrow, Mixed Decision on Cellulosic Biofuel Standard

http://www.biofuelsjournal.com/info/bf_articles.html?ID=129885

Date Posted: January 25, 2013

Washington, DC—The D.C. Circuit issued Jan. 25 a narrow, but mixed decision, vacating the 2012 cellulosic biofuel standard and affirming the 2012 advanced biofuel standard.

Reacting to that decision, leading organizations representing biofuel producers--who had intervened in the litigation to defend the rulemaking--noted that although the court vacated the cellulosic standard, it also rejected API’s argument that EPA was required to follow the US Energy Information Administration’s projections in setting its own.

Similarly, the court rejected API’s argument that EPA was not entitled to consider information from cellulosic biofuel producers in setting its projection, finding that cellulosic producers were, of course, an “almost inevitable source of information” for EPA.

According to the biofuel organizations, these were important decisions that give EPA flexibility in setting cellulosic biofuel volumes in the future.

Nonetheless, the court vacated the cellulosic biofuel standard because it believed that EPA had impermissibly set the volume with the objective of promoting growth in the industry, rather than simply making an accurate prediction.

The biofuels organizations strongly disagree with the court’s characterization of what EPA did -- EPA did not determine a reasonably achievable volume and then inflate it, rather it set the volume based on the best information available to it at the time.

Regardless, under the D.C. Circuit’s decision, EPA is free to reinstate the volumes that it had established, as long as the information available at the time would support the agency’s conclusion that those volumes were reasonably achievable.

The court’s decision does not now require, or permit, EPA to set volumes based on hindsight.

The D.C. Circuit also affirmed the EPA’s decision not to reduce the advanced biofuel volume, categorically rejecting API’s arguments that EPA must support its decision not to reduce the applicable volume of advanced biofuels with specific numerical projections.

In a joint statement, the biofuel organization stated that “although we disagree with the court’s decision vacating the 2012 cellulosic volumes, today’s decision once again rejects broad-brushed attempts to effectively roll back the federal Renewable Fuel Standard.”

The intervenor biofuel organizations are reviewing the court’s decision and assessing next steps in the matter.

For more information, call 202-545-4000.

Court blocks 2012 cellulosic biofuel target

http://newsandinsight.thomsonreuters.com/Legal/News/2013/01_-_January/Court_blocks_2012_cellulosic_biofuel_target/

1/25/2013 
By Ayesha Rascoe

WASHINGTON, Jan 25 (Reuters) - A U.S. federal court on Friday struck down a 2012 target for refiner use of cellulosic biofuels, but upheld the government's goal for use of other advanced fuels.

The divided ruling by the D.C. Circuit Court allowed oil refiners to claim a partial victory after fighting against U.S. renewable fuel targets. But it also gave hope to biofuel producers, who have been defending the mandates.

The American Petroleum Institute filed a lawsuit against the Environmental Protection Agency's 2012 target, requiring refiners to mix 8.65 million gallons of cellulosic biofuels into the U.S. gasoline and diesel.

Cellulosic biofuels are made from sources such as grasses, wood chips and agricultural waste.

When Congress passed the Renewable Fuel Standard in 2005 with the goal of reducing U.S. reliance on oil, it expected such fuels would make up a significant portion of its mandated use of 36 billion gallons of biofuel by 2022.

But development of the innovative fuel source has lagged and refiners argue they should not be punished for failing to use a fuel that is not commercially available.

Every year refiners have to prove they have used a certain amount of advanced biofuels or have bought credits representing use of the fuel by others in an open market. If they do neither they are subject to fines.

The court upheld API's case regarding the cellulosic goal, finding the EPA did not make a "neutral" assessment of the amount of cellulosic biofuels that would be produced last year.

"We are glad the court has put a stop to EPA's pattern of setting impossible mandates for a biofuel that does not even exist," said API Group Downstream Director Bob Greco.

API said refiners and importers would have had to pay over $8 million for credits to fulfill the 2012 mandate.

While an agency may set standards to promote future technology, in this case the court said there was no clear link between the regulations and the innovation.

"Apart from their role as captive consumers, the refiners are in no position to ensure, or even contribute to, growth in the cellulosic biofuel industry," the court said.

Still, the court rejected API's challenge to the government's decision not to lower its goal for use of advanced biofuels in general.

The court agreed with EPA's finding that other advanced biofuels, including imported sugarcane ethanol and biomass-based diesel, could make up for the shortfall in Congress' goal of 500 million gallons of cellulosic ethanol use in 2012.

EPA is reviewing the court's decision and "will determine its next steps," the agency said in a statement.

A coalition of biofuel groups said the court's ruling allows EPA to reinstate the target it had set, as long as the agency could provide information backing the agency's assessment at the time that the volumes were "reasonable achievable."

The court did not accept API's arguments that EPA had to use projections from the Energy Information Administration to set its goals and that the agency should not consider information from cellulosic biofuel producers.

"Although we disagree with the court's decision vacating the 2012 cellulosic volumes, today's decision once again rejects broad-brushed attempts to effectively roll back the federal Renewable Fuel Standard," said the coalition, which included Growth Energy and the Renewable Fuels Association.

(Additional reporting by Timothy Gardner)

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Sundrop Fuels to buy Cowboy Town for $2.5 million

http://www.thetowntalk.com/article/20130103/NEWS01/301030310/Sundrop-Fuels-buy-Cowboy-Town-2-5-million?nclick_check=1

3:15 PM, Jan 3, 2013   |  
 
Sundrop Fuels Inc. is reportedly buying the former Cowboy Town property in Boyce. Sundrop plans to build a biofuel plant on land adjacent to the former entertainment venue.
Sundrop Fuels Inc. is reportedly buying the former Cowboy Town property in Boyce. Sundrop plans to build a biofuel plant on land adjacent to the former entertainment venue. / Tia Owens-Powers/towens@thetowntalk.com
Written by Jeff Matthews
After years of uncertainty, Cowboy Town finally may have a long-term owner.

The former entertainment venue off Interstate 49 is being purchased by Sundrop Fuels, which plans to invest nearly half a billion dollars to develop a pilot plant for biofuel on adjacent land in the Rapides Station area.

The Cowboy Town property in Boyce includes nearly 28 acres and a building of approximately 200,000 square feet. The Rapides Parish Clerk of Court Office did not have a record of the transaction, but local real estate professional Rod Noles reported a sale price of $2.5 million on his radio show Wednesday.

Cowboy Town's most recent owner was Yahweh LLC, a venture by local businessmen James Greer and Richard Kyle. They purchased the property in March for $1.5 million, though there were significant additional costs involved, including liens.

Greer confirmed the sale but referred comment to Steven Silvers, director of corporate communications for Sundrop Fuels, who could not be reached Wednesday.

Before Yahweh bought the property, it was the subject of almost constant speculation, most of which turned out to be only that.

Cowboy Town opened in 2001 as a 4,000-seat venue for events such as rodeos and concerts. Its original announced value was $5 million. It lasted only a few months, though, before closing for financial reasons.

After talk of turning it into a training center for USA Boxing failed to materialize, it was purchased by businessman Ken Moran at a bankruptcy auction for $2.9 million in September 2004.

Under Moran's ownership, there was more talk about what Cowboy Town would or could be, but little action. Among the speculation was that a local institution of higher education would purchase the property, or that the parish would buy it was a replacement for the Rapides Coliseum.

The former Donahue Family Church in Pineville agreed to purchase the property for $4.85 million in 2007 and made an $800,000 down payment. That deal fell through, though, after a split in the church.

In 2011, a real estate agent representing Moran confirmed that an agreement to sell the venue was in place, but that, too, fell through.

Sundrop Fuels, a Colorado-based startup, announced plans in 2011 to build the first production facility of its vehicle-ready "green gasoline" in the Alexandria area. The fuel is produced from woody biomass and natural gas.
 
The $450 million plant will sit on more than 1,200 acres that surround the former Cowboy Town property.