RENEWABLE METHANOL HERE AND NOW
 14-Sept-04 
 Source: Methanol Institute
 http://www.fuelcellsworks.com/Supppage1122.html 

 (Arlington, VA, September 14, 2004) Each year, 12 billion gallons of methanol 
are
 consumed worldwide for the production of hundreds of essential chemical 
commodities.
 Most methanol is produced from natural gas or coal in large manufacturing 
plants
 with capacities often exceeding several hundred million gallons per year.
 Also known as ãwood alcohol,ä methanol can be made from a host of renewable 
 feedstocks. Recent technology developments are making renewable methanol a more
 economically attractive alternative. 

 ãWhat do fast-growing trees, sugar beets, pig manure, scrapped cars, black 
liquor,
 landfill gas, and German marks have in common? They are all being used to 
produce
 renewable methanol,ä stated Methanol Institute President and CEO John Lynn.
 ãUsing renewable feedstocks to produce a high-value chemical like methanol 
makes
 a lot of sense. Looking ahead, as fuel cell technologies enter the market to 
power
 our laptop computers and cars, renewable methanol will fill a central role in 
the
 hydrogen economy.ä 

 ãThere are many ways to diversify our nationâs energy portfolio, and finding 
renewable
 feedstocks for producing basic chemicals and fuels is a critical activity,ä 
said Rep.
 Mark Udall (D-Utah), co-chair of the U.S. House Renewable Energy and Energy 
Efficiency
 Caucus ãThe methanol industry is responding to this challenge by encouraging 
the
 development of an array of biomass resources for methanol production.ä 
 Here are just a few examples of the latest developments in the 
commercialization of
 renewable methanol production technologies: 

 Firm Green Energy (FGE) of Irvine, California is awaiting final construction 
permit
 approval to build a five million gallon per year green methanol plant in Grove 
City,
 Ohio. Sited near the Solid Waste Authority of Central Ohioâs Franklin County 
landfill,
 the plant will use renewable landfill methane gas as a feedstock for methanol 
production.
 One-fourth of the methanol will be used to produce biodiesel fuel on-site. The 
 remaining methanol will be sold on the wholesale market. The project also will
 incorporate cogeneration by generating electricity from reciprocating gas 
engines
 running on landfill gas. 

 BEST BioFuels, LLC of Austin, Texas will use manure from over 250,000 pigs in
 Southern Utah to produce methanol. The plant will process 25 tons of manure 
per day
 through a digester to produce enough methanol to generate 7,500 gallons of 
methanol daily,
 or nearly three million gallons per year. Smithfield Foods, which owns the 
Utah farm
 and is the largest hog producer in the world, is considering other sites for 
 introducing this technology. 

 Atlantic Biomass Conversions, Inc. of Frederick, Maryland has received funding 
from
 the State of Maryland and the U.S. Department of Agriculture to develop a 
genetically
 enhanced bacteria that can directly convert sugar beet pulp waste into 
methanol.
 The genetic engineering process can be easily integrated into existing sugar 
beet
 processing plants. With a low value to sugar beet producers and processors, 
enough sugar
 beet pulp is generated in the U.S. to produce 250 million gallons of methanol 
per year. 

 In Japan, Chubu Electric Power Co. is collecting driftwood at dams and other 
wood
 wastes which are then ground into a fine powder. The powder is then 
incinerated at
 a temperature of 1,000¡C in a furnace to produce a gas stream that is used for
 methanol production. 

 Also in Japan, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd. is operating a pilot plant to 
gasify
 110-pounds per day of biomass for the production of methanol. Various biomass 
products
 such as Italian Ryegrass and rice straw have been successfully synthesized 
into methanol
 in this pilot plant. 

 Australiaâs national science agency devised a computer model to show that 
harvesting
 fast-growing trees planted over 74 million acres of forest land could produce 
enough
 methanol to replace 90% of the nationâs transportation fuels. The development 
of a
 methanol economy would successfully ãdecarbonizeä economic growth in Australia,
 while creating 400,000 direct jobs and total savings on energy imports by 2050
 of $18 billion. 

 In Sweden, Nykomb Synergetics and Chemrec will soon start-up a 20 tons per day
 development plant gasifying black liquor ö a pulp-rich slurry from paper mill
 waste ö into methanol. A staggering 28 million tons of methanol could be 
produced
 from black liquor in the U.S. alone, equally todayâs total world production of 
methanol. 

 In Germany, a refuse reprocessing plant is receiving one to 1.5 tons ö up to 
100 million
 marks ö of shredded notes per day from the Berlin office of the central bank, 
and turning
 them into methanol. The Schwarze Pumpe plant near the Polish border, has a 
history of
 turning unusual items into methanol including car bumpers and dashboards, a 
wooden ship
 that ran aground, and even drugs seized by police. The material is all 
shredded, a small
 amount of coal is added, and then the mixture is heated to 1,600¡C, with the 
resulting 
 gas used to make methanol. 

 In the future, the worldâs oceans may become a feedstock source for methanol
 production. Large-scale seaweed farming on the Eastern Pacific equator could be
 used to generate significant quantities of methanol, while sequestering and
 recycling carbon dioxide and helping to control climate change. Deep under the
 ocean floor, methane gas is trapped in ice-like crystals that one day may be
 extracted for methanol production. By some estimates, methane hydrates could
 provide an energy source for thousands of years. 

 ãNo other alternative fuel offers as many conventional and renewable production
 pathways as methanol,ä said Mr. Lynn. ãOur national security, economic vitality
 and environmental future demand that we diversify our energy portfolio. We need
 look no further than methanol. With the ability to use methanol in todayâs car
 engines and electric turbines, and as a hydrogen carrier fuel for tomorrowâs
 fuel cell technology, methanol is the clear alternative.ä 

 Formed in 1989, the Methanol Institute serves as the trade association for the 
global
 methanol industry. Join us at the Methanol Forum, October 13-14, 2004, in 
Houston, Texas.
_______________________________________________
Biofuel mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://wwia.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/biofuel

Biofuel at Journey to Forever:
http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html

Biofuel archives at Infoarchive.net (searchable):
http://infoarchive.net/sgroup/biofuel/

Reply via email to