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Entries from August 2008

Get Ready for the Second Generation of Renewable Fuels

August 25th, 2008 No Comments

We all remember the great food vs. fuel debate of 2007. Many critics were quick to point at corn-based ethanol as the primary culprit for a rise in food prices. Although most experts will agree that higher fuel costs have a greater impact on food prices, it still forces renewable energy proponents to continuously look for improved sources of clean energy. As a part of this ongoing trend, recently a large step was taken toward the production of a cleaner burning ethanol that does not require any food-based inputs.

During this month’s American Coalition for Ethanol conference in Omaha, Neb, Poet – one of the world’s largest ethanol companies – announced it has neared completion on one of the country’s first cellulosic ethanol plants. [Poet is not a client of Tunheim Partners]

Although the plant will be considered a pilot operation, producing only 20,000 gallons, it is the first significant step toward the commercial production of cellulosic ethanol. Using corn cobs and stalks for its primary input, the plant is scheduled for completion by the end of the 2008 and will be adjacent to Poet’s already existing 9-million-gallon ethanol plant located in Scotland, S.D.

Photograph of a cornfield

Why is this significant? Because with the rising demand for ethanol (a federally mandated 36 billion gallons per year by 2022), there simply is not enough corn to meet this need. Nearly 21 billion gallons per year will need to be produced by cellulosic ethanol. Also, creating ethanol from alternative inputs such as woods, grasses and non-edible plants parts will help alleviate high corn prices and allow farmers to market new inputs traditionally thought to be waste.

Once the technology is perfected, Poet plans to implement the same process to other plants across the Midwest. If successful, Poet’s new type of hybrid plants will be able to take corn into one side of the plant and corn stalks into another, and use both inputs to increase the overall plant production of ethanol. According to Poet, this new cellulosic technology is capable of producing 11 percent more ethanol from each corn bushel and 27 percent more ethanol from an acre of corn.

“It is no longer a question of if, but of when we will produce cellulosic ethanol,” commented Poet CEO and President Jeff Broin. “I don’t know if I could have said that even one year ago.”

According to the DTN Ethanol Center, Poet was one of six companies awarded a total of $385 million in grants from the U.S. Department of Energy in February 2007, to develop the first generation of cellulosic ethanol plants. [Full disclosure, DTN is a client of a Tunheim Partners]

Since that announcement only one other ethanol company, Canadian-based Iogen Corp, has made plans to build its first commercial wheat straw-to-ethanol plant in British Columbia.

Although analysts believe the complete introduction of commercialized cellulosic ethanol is still at least two or three year away, this first step by Poet will definitely be a push for the other major U.S. ethanol companies to speed up their own cellulosic research and development efforts.

[Click here to listen to an interview with Poet CEO Jeff Broin]

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