SunOpta Providing Steam Explosion Technology
 for Worlds First Cereal-Straw Ethanol Plant
 10 August 2005 
 http://www.greencarcongress.com/2005/08/sunopta_providi.html 


 World's First Commercial Cellulosic Ethanol Plant
 February 8, 2006
 DJ FOCUS: World's First Commercial Cellulosic Ethanol Plant
 
http://www.agriculture.com/ag/futuresource/FutureSourceStoryIndex.jhtml?storyId=42200421
 
    
     CENTRAL CITY, Neb. (Dow Jones)--Opening of the world's first commercial
   cellulosic ethanol plant is slated for this fall in northern Spain, even 
though
   costs of producing alcohol fuel via the emerging technology are still 
estimated
   to be about 50%-100% higher than that for plants which use grain as a
   feedstock. 
    
     The Ontario-based SunOpta BioProcess Group (formerly Stake Technology), a
   division of SunOpta Inc. (STKL), announced last week that plans for start-up 
of
   a wheat straw-to-ethanol plant near Salamanca, Spain, are proceeding on
   schedule. 
    
     The facility, which represents the first commercial cellulosic ethanol
   production plant on the planet, is being supplied to Abener Energia S.A. of
   Seville, Spain, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Abengoa S.A. (ABG.MC). Abengoa 
is
   the largest ethanol producer in Europe, the second largest in the world, and
   operator of a research and development division in St. Louis. 
    
     The Spanish facility, which is scheduled to be operational in the fall of
   2006, is located adjacent to a cereal grain-to-ethanol plant operated by
   Abengoa, which is currently coming on-line. Manufacturing of major equipment
   for the cellulosic module is currently being completed and will be shipped to
   site in coming weeks. 
    
     Although President George W. Bush revived a 60-year-old idea of using 
alcohol
   fuel drawn from "wood chips and stalks, or switchgrass," to replace foreign 
oil
   during his State of the Union address last week, it turns out very little of
   the world's energy is actually being produced via the technology thus far. 
    
     Small research facilities focused on cellulosic ethanol have intermittently
   been in operation or are in development in several U.S. states -- such as
   Louisiana, California, Idaho and Nebraska. The only other factory on earth 
that
   currently generates energy from the breakdown of plant fibers, rather than
   sugar, or sugar derived from grain starches, is a demonstration facility
   operated by the Iogen Corporation in Ottawa, Canada. 
    
     Industry experts estimate that the Iogen facility produces about 200,000
   gallons of ethanol from straw annually, as opposed to the 54 million gallon
   capacity planned for the forthcoming Spanish plant. 
    
     Although Brazil has successfully replaced 45% of its gasoline with fuel
   alcohol since about 1990, experts point out that all Brazilian-produced 
ethanol
   is currently derived from the simple fermentation of sucrose, rather than
   cellulose from cane stalks or other fibrous materials. 
    
     Sugar cane juice is simply squeezed from cut stalks and fermented by yeast
   into ethanol. The waste cane stalks, known as bagasse, are burned as fuel to
   provide the power plant with energy for the process. 
    
     By contrast, U.S. ethanol manufacturers utilize starch from feedstock, such
   as corn, grain sorghum or wheat, which must be converted into sugar using
   enzymes, for the ultimate fermentation into ethanol by simple yeast. 
    
     Cellulosic ethanol production involves a highly technical three-step 
chemical
   process which begins by extracting the cellulose from biomass -- such as corn
   stalks, rice straw, wheat straw, switchgrass, corn fiber, soy fiber and the
   like -- which is basically glued together with a tough compound known as
   lignin. 
    
     To produce ethanol, the cellulose must first be "unglued" using a
   pre-treatment process, such as dilute acid hydrolysis, autohydrolysis, or
   ammonia fiber explosion. The cellulose is then converted to sugar using 
special
   enzymes costing 500% to 1,000% more than those commonly needed to process
   starch. The resultant sugar is then fermented into cellulosic ethanol 
utilizing
   a genetically modified form of yeast. 
    
     Estimates concerning the cost of producing ethanol via this process vary
   widely. 
    
     "Most viewers see present cost of cellulose ethanol as around $3.50 per
   gallon - double cost from carbohydrate," said Harrison Cooper president of 
the
   Bountiful Applied Research Corporation in Bountiful, Utah. "There has been
   mention (that) cellulose enzyme/fermentation costs might be (reduced) to as 
low
   as $1.30, but this is based on hopeful conjecture." 
    
     Murray Burke, vice president and general manager of SunOpta's BioProcess
   Group, disagrees with those figures, estimating that modern grain alcohol
   plants being built today may have a breakeven as low as 90-95 cents per 
gallon,
   compared to a cost-of-production which likely ranges from $1.40-$1.60 per
   gallon for a commercial-scale cellulosic facility, such as the Spanish 
plant. 
    
     Nevertheless, mere mention of the technology by Bush has given further
   impetus to the biomass ethanol industry, which was first developed by the 
U.S.
   during World War II and was already under active development in Europe. 
    
     "Every single country in Europe is looking into this," said Burke. "Energy
   security, greenhouse gas emissions and an eventual limit on corn and
   grain-based ethanol supply are all contributing to the push for cellulosic
   ethanol. We are seeing unprecedented interest in our (cellulose) pretreatment
   technology in the United States, Canada, Europe and Asia." 
    
     Although no economically viable method has yet been found to directly
   integrate the usage of corn residue, or stover, into the U.S. ethanol-making
   process, Cooper points out, "a study is under planning in Nebraska on making
   paper mill fiber from chemically pulped stover - a process known to be
   practical - with the waste biomass from pulping used as power plant fuel for
   both ethanol and pulping operations." 
    
     Cooper says if documented as a profitable enterprise, this approach should
   become attractive to corn-based grain ethanol producers as means of utilizing
   corn stalks -- which currently have little value, apart from low-quality
   livestock forage -- as an independently marketable product, providing a cheap
   fuel comparable to bagasse in Brazil. 
    
      -By Gary Wulf; Dow Jones Newswires; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
    
     (END) Dow Jones Newswires
 -------------------


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