.. to the question, do community co-ops matter? the answer is: YES!

Do Community Co-Ops Matter?
RFS2 mandates biodiesel production, but local communities need a cooperative 
approach

Eric Williams used to work as a civil engineer in a building owned by a farmer 
co-op that, among many things, made soy biodiesel. Today, Williams works in 
energy efficiency in Omaha and every Friday night he joins up with the members 
of his own co-op, architects, graduate students, financial consultants and 
anyone else interested in making biodiesel. “We realized that it is more 
effective to process the fuels then it would be for any of us to work alone,” 
Williams says. With the help of those architects and financial consultants, he 
formed the Omaha Biofuels Coop, a licensed producer-consumer operation that 
touts the motto: producing, using and promoting biofuels. Back in 2006 as a 
civil engineer, Williams says he also realized that even with large biodiesel 
production facilities scattered across the country, “there were very few 
options for cars in the area to use biodiesel.”


Times have changed since 2006, and today the average driver has greater access 
to biodiesel than ever before (which, unfortunately in some cases, still isn’t 
that great). But, more gallons of available biodiesel haven’t put an end to 
stories like those of Williams and the Omaha Biofuels Coop. In fact, more 
biodiesel co-ops are meeting on Friday nights, sometimes on the loading dock of 
their industrial buildings, than ever before. For a nominal fee, co-op members 
can fill up their Volkswagen diesels, Ford F-250s or even their John Deeres, 
but don’t confuse their stories with a nice back-page feature in the Sunday 
Life section of the local newspaper.


Biodiesel co-ops are doing their part in the continued growth of the industry 
one 5-gallon jug of waste vegetable oil (WVO)  biodiesel at a time. If the 5 
MMgy producers are working to provide an advanced biofuel for mass use, it’s 
the 5-gallon folks who are working to help the end-users understand why such a 
fuel is so special in the first place. Don’t believe it? Think about all the 
times someone you know, or have read about, has made a misinformed statement 
about a biofuel’s negative properties. Eric Williams speaks to people like that 
every day, and every day, he says, his co-op is growing.


Keeping it Rural Matters


Christian Thalacker wasn’t a civil engineer before he started the Louisville 
Biodiesel Cooperative, he was an energy consultant who bought and sold for a 
large wholesale energy company. And, unlike Williams, Thalacker doesn’t cater 
to urban drivers (although he would). Thalacker, along with co-founder Marc 
Verdi, is aiming to supply biodiesel and grow his cooperative by providing 
farmers, particularly family farmers, with biodiesel. His approach is to keep 
his fuel local, and help small cattle operations or horse ranchers in the 
region save a few dollars by purchasing biodiesel from his cooperative that he 
says will be priced lower than the going rate for petro diesel today “You look 
at all the pressures that family farms have, and family ranchers have,” he 
says, “and $4 petrodiesel seems insane.”


Thalacker estimates that the average local farmer in his area uses roughly 
3,000 gallons of fuel per season. Although his co-op is rather new, it started 
in November, he says that farmers in his area (about 70) would love to have 
biodiesel available and “as soon as it is ready,” he adds, “they are ready to 
buy.” The Louisville Biodiesel Cooperative offers up one of the greatest 
benefits of the growing number of co-ops across the country Their model of 
staying local, and being as green and transparent as possible is one that 
nearly every co-op is adopting in its own way, and is a positive medium to 
create a network of public and private relationships of businesses and 
consumers, all holding the same opinion of biodiesel.


“There is a resonance with the restaurants,” he says of the places he collects 
the WVO used to produce his product. “There is a resonance with the big 
commercial-size kitchens,” a mutual feeling he says both parties believe in. 
Thalacker says he isn’t reinventing the wheel though, he’s simply trying to 
mimic the operational standards of arguably the most successful biodiesel co-op 
in the country, Piedmont Biofuels, a co-op he’s talked with several times. He’s 
also trying to take the same approach as people in places like Austin, Texas, 
or Chapel Hill, N.C., who he says are giving back to the restaurants that 
donate their WVO to the co-ops by performing as much marketing as possible for 
those establishments.


While Thalacker does say he has to compete in his area with “the big players” 
who collect WVO for use as animal feed, he might be encouraged to know that 
people like John Campbell, vice president of government relations for Ag 
Processing Inc., an original player in the biodiesel industry, and the model of 
how a successfully run, corporate cooperative should look, are in support of 
community-scale co-ops. “People like to hear and see small energy ventures,” 
Campbell says. “I think the neat thing about biodiesel is that there are a lot 
of different business models under the biodiesel tent and there isn’t just one 
size fits all.”



The Community Cooperative


As both Thalacker and Williams can attest, the model is based on sweat equity, 
finding funding and getting the word out. To do that, Williams and his team try 
to have information readily available for people with questions. He says having 
a Web presence has been helpful, as has sending out a weekly newsletter, “the 
scoop,” that lets people know about biofuels-related happenings in the area, 
including their own production reports and significant national stories. “We go 
to a number of different events, a number of person to person networking 
meetings,” he says. “Going out and actually meeting people in person, giving 
presentations, has been very effective for us.”


Thalacker takes farm visits and spends plenty of time speaking with the farmers 
that come into his wife’s food co-op to drop off their produce. “It is a tough 
business at the co-op level until you are making money, and even then you are 
looking at any ways to make as much revenue as possible.” To start the co-op in 
Louisville, Thalacker decided to go the nonprofit route, but even for 
community-scale cooperatives, the old adage in biodiesel is still true, 
feedstock is king. To make the fuel, some use reactors like those made by 
Springboard, but both Williams and Thalacker chose to reuse or make their own 
reactors that work in a batch process.


Starting an average-size co-op costs, Thalacker estimates, between $50,000 and 
$75,000 on the low side. The model for growth all happens (after finding 
feedstock of course) by adding members. But, for each co-op, the type of 
members will determine the success of the project and the project’s goals. For 
an urban-based co-op, the more members, the better. But for those like 
Thalacker, who cater to rural drivers and farmers, finding the right members is 
key. “If we got 300 club members, that would be great,” he says, but would be 
more costly to get the word around. From Thalacker’s perspective, the large 
farm operations or corporate partners that will come to fill up in the hundreds 
and thousands of gallons would be better than giving a Volkswagen driver three 
5-gallon jugs.


Regardless of who the members are or how many gallons they are using, the 
significance of the community-scale biodiesel cooperative to the overall 
biodiesel industry may best be seen by what Campbell points out about his 
company’s history. Back in 1995-’96, Campbell says there was really no reliable 
supply of biodiesel. “Our board and management elected to go out on a limb and 
build the first purpose-built biodiesel plant in North America,” adding that 
“there was an enthusiasm for it at our company to take the risk early.” Other 
people obviously came along, he points out, “but those first steps were 
inspired by our pretty close connection to the farmers.”


In Louisville, it’s the same. “The more connected we get to consumers and 
producers who care, the better,” Thalacker says.


“It doesn’t hurt for us to have those kinds of things (small-scale co-ops) 
around,” Campbell says, “because it has a certain amount of appeal and that 
helps all of us.”  That appeal may be growing from different sources—one, the 
industry’s large producers ramping up to meet the RFS2’s mandate calling for 
the use of massive amounts of biodiesel, and the other, from places like 
William’s biodiesel shop on the southeast part of Omaha on a Friday night where 
members can watch the crew preprocess the oil before production, only to drive 
off in their cars or trucks fueled by a sustainable fuel and have a first-hand 
understanding of how biodiesel works—and more importantly, what to tell others 
about it. 


http://biodieselmagazine.com/articles/7925/do-community-co-ops-matter

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Christian Thalacker
co-owner, co-operator
Louisville Biodiesel Cooperative
Direct telephone: (502) 727-5673
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
AIM: cethalacker
SKYPE: cethalackers

Visit us: http://www.louisvillebiodieselcoop.com/ 

My biodiesel blog: http://web.me.com/cethalackers

Our value 
proposition: https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&pid=explorer&chrome=true&srcid=0B83-0weSlvJvMzBmMjNmYWYtZDUzOS00NzkwLTlhMWUtZWRlNDkzYjU4ZjA3&hl=enP

Search Louisville's Green 
Directory:http://www.greenlistlouisville.com/directory/louisville-biodiesel-cooperative/
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