http://www.biodieselmagazine.com/articles/9006/kior-ships-first-cellulosic-diesel-volumes-from-miss-biorefinery
KiOR
Inc. announced initial shipments of cellulosic diesel from its first
commercial-scale facility in Columbus, Miss., where the company uses
pine wood chips that previously fed a now-defunct paper mill to produce
cellulosic gasoline and diesel fuels. The $213 million facility is
scaled to process 500 bone dry tons of sustainably harvested woody
biomass per day. It can produce more than 13 million gallons of
gasoline, diesel and fuel oil blendstocks annually.
KiOR's renewable gasoline is also the first renewable cellulosic gasoline registered by U.S. EPA for sale in the U.S.
Condoleezza Rice, former U.S. Secretary of State and a current member
of KiOR's board of directors, said, “KiOR is changing the American
energy equation by innovating and commercializing an entirely new
generation of hydrocarbon-based diesel and gasoline fuel. By making the
promise of cellulosic fuels a reality, KiOR demonstrates that these
fuels are an attractive option for lessening America's dependence on
foreign sources of energy.”
Haley Barbour, former Governor of Mississippi, who was instrumental
in attracting KiOR to Mississippi, said, “The shipment of this first
fuel from KiOR's Columbus, Miss., facility is the culmination of a
vision to establish Mississippi as the birthplace of the wood-to-fuels
production technology. This progress highlights our highly skilled labor
force, abundant natural resources and supportive government climate for
innovative companies like KiOR seeking a home to expand their
businesses. Mississippi has partnered with KiOR throughout this
history-making project, contributing economic development support
ranging from research and testing projects within our world class
universities, to technical training within our superb community college
system.”
“This is a major step forward for KiOR, the biofuels industry and the
entire renewable fuels sector,” said Fred Cannon, KiOR's president and
CEO. “With first production at Columbus, KiOR has technology with the
potential to resurrect each and every shut down paper mill in the
country and to replace imported oil on a cost-effective basis while
creating American jobs. This facility demonstrates the efficacy of
KiOR's proprietary catalytic biomass-to-fuel process with the potential
to deliver cellulosic gasoline and diesel to the U.S. We are proud to be
making history in Mississippi. The technology is simply scalable and we
believe sufficient excess feedstock exists in the Southeast alone to
build almost 50 KiOR commercial-scale facilities.”
The company plans to build a similar but larger facility in Natchez,
Miss., scaled to process three times the woody biomass as the Columbus
biorefinery.
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