Wednesday, February 14, 2007

NZ: Biofuels targets may kickstart raft of new businesses

Source:

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/3/story.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=10423916

Biofuels targets may kickstart raft of new businesses
1:00PM Wednesday February 14, 2007
By Kent Atkinson
Peter Neilson


New Government requirements for fuel to contain a component of biofuel
may kickstart a new energy sector, a lobbyist for sustainable business says.

The Government yesterday set a target of 3.4 per cent for the biofuel
component of petrol and diesel in 2012.

Biofuel is any fuel derived from biomass, recently living organisms or
their metabolic byproducts, such as cow manure. It is a renewable energy
source.

"This is really about keeping our options open," said Peter Neilson,
chief executive of the Business Council for Sustainable Development.

"It provides a signal for the people working on biofuels that in 2012
there will be sufficient demand to get serious about it."

The scaling-up of biofuel additives to petrol and diesel from April 1
next year would allow would-be manufacturers to work out whether they
could produce enough fuel at the right price.

"If the price of oil stays at US$50-60 a barrel over the next three or
four years, and some of the experimental technologies for biofuel come
through, I think there will be people who will take a commercial punt
that they can make biofuels pay."

In most other countries where biofuels were being used at high level, it
was because there was a glut of a crop such as sugar cane, corn or palm
oil and governments provided "protection" to prevent import of competing
biofuels.

"You don't have to be very smart to create a biofuels industry --
creating a biofuels industry that has benefits and is competitive:
that's the challenge," Mr Neilson said.

Prime Minister Helen Clark told Parliament yesterday New Zealand has the
potential to lead the world in renewable energy, and locally-produced
biofuels could help the economy, while reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

"This initial target is considered sufficient to encourage the uptake of
biodiesel and the development of infrastructure for ethanol
distribution," she said.

Energy Minister David Parker said manufacturers were initially expected
to obtain tallow from the meat industry to make biodiesel.

"Quite a few contracts have already been signed to tie up tallow sources
so that they can turn that into biodiesel," he said.

New Zealand slaughterhouses produce sufficient tallow to produce around
5 per cent of its diesel fuel needs.

Mr Parker said ethanol for adding to petrol was expected to initially
come from milk sugars in whey -- the "waste" from casein manufacture.

Dairying already produces sufficient whey ethanol to meet around 0.3 per
cent of the nation's petrol needs.

Fonterra's Edgecumbe dairy factory in the Bay of Plenty has been
distilling ethanol from waste whey to blend in petrol.

Fonterra successfully tested petrol mixed with 10 per cent ethanol in a
1.8-litre car, in a blend approved by the Environmental Risk Management
Authority (Erma).

The Edgecumbe plant produces 30,000 litres of ethanol a day and five
million litres in a dairy season. Fonterra also produces ethanol at
Reporoa and at Tirau.

First generation biofuels -- bio-ethanol from whey and biodiesel from
tallow -- are produced from sugars, starches, vegetable oils or animal
fats from proven technology.

New Zealand researchers are also working on second generation biofuels
-- the conversion of plant lignin and cellulose into fuels by enzymes,
and the gasification of biomass material followed by a "gas-to-liquid"
process that can be used on trees, grasses, agricultural plant wastes,
straw and algae.

A deal between two Crown Research Institutes (CRIs) and a United States
company may open up the possibility of the entire vehicle fleet
ultimately running on biofuels grown and manufactured in this country.

The three parties are CRIs Scion and AgResearch, and San Diego-based
Diversa Corporation, which has pioneered the development of
high-performance speciality enzymes.

They have agreed to co-ordinate technology development to investigate
the feasibility of a transportation biofuel industry in this country
using bio-based feedstocks, such as trees and grasses.

State science company Scion, at Rotorua, and Diversa are studying how to
use enzymes to convert wood into sugars that can be fermented and
refined into ethanol.

With Agresearch they are carrying out a feasibility study for producing
biofuels from forests, identifying potential risks or barriers to
commercialisation, as well as specific technical steps.

The three companies have said they believed the forestry sector could
provide ethanol for all 3 billion litres of petrol the nation uses each
year.

They are also assessing other potential feedstocks, such as special
crops of fast-growing grass.

A biofuel company, Biojoule -- an offshoot of Genesis Research -- plans
to later this year have a trial plant turning shrubby willows into
ethanol for transport fuels.

Genesis founder Jim Watson has said it needs $5 million to build a pilot
plant to process willows already growing on trial plots near Taupo.

The 50 per cent of the cane willow which is cellulose will be used to
produce ethanol.

The rest of the wood was expected to be processed to extract lignin that
could be turned into plastics -- replacing some of the reliance on
oil-based plastics -- and xylose, a natural sweetener which can be used
by diabetics and does not cause tooth decay.

Other biofuel proposals are processing the "slash" waste from forestry
to extract ethanol: breaking down the timber waste by heating it in the
absence of oxygen to produce carbon monoxide and hydrogen that can be
further refined to give large volumes of methanol.

In Marlborough, one biotech company has been turning the scum from
sewage ponds into biodiesel, which it said could one day power much of
the vehicle fleet.

Aquaflow Bionomic Corporation has begun commercial production on a small
scale, with an eye on the start of minimum biofuel requirements from 2008.

It expected to eventually produce at least one million litres of
biodiesel per year.

While some biofuels required crops to be specially grown -- using scarce
resources of land, chemicals and fertilisers -- sufficient sewage
already existed to grow algae that could be pulped and its oils turned
into biodiesel.

Energy experts say maize is also a possible feedstock for bioethanol
production in New Zealand.

On top of that, Auckland company LanzaTech is investigating ethanol
production from carbon monoxide waste streams.

- NZPA
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