STORY LEAD:
Biofuel Gets Less Expensive

___________________________________________

ARS News Service
Agricultural Research Service, USDA
Jim Core, (301) 504-1619, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
April 16, 2002
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Biodiesel is traditionally made from agricultural lipids such as fats and
oils. These highly refined edible oils are renewable resources that reduce
air-polluting emissions from diesel engines.

Now, scientists at the Agricultural Research Service have developed a
biodiesel fuel produced from soybean soapstock, an abundant but
underutilized byproduct of vegetable oil refining. The new biodiesel's
composition, engine performance and emissions are comparable to those of
biodiesel fuels now on the market.

Scientists at the ARS Eastern Regional Research Center in Wyndmoor, Pa.,
have studied the use of lower-value lipids from animal fats, vegetable oils
and recycled greases as raw materials for biodiesel production. ARS research
chemist Michael J. Haas and biologist Karen M. Scott teamed with Scott
Bloomer, then at Cargill in Minneapolis, Minn., to develop a chemical method
that converts all forms of fatty acids found in the lipids of soybean
soapstock into simple methyl esters, a compound in biodiesel fuel. The
researchers were recently granted a patent for the process.

Many commercially available biodiesel fuels are made from refined soy oil
and added to diesel, typically at levels of 20 percent of the mixture's
volume. According to Haas, studies show that biodiesel, used alone or in
such blends, can provide much-needed lubrication to fuel systems, while also
reducing the production of polluting exhaust emissions. Now Haas, Scott and
Bloomer have modified the technology to allow the use of lower-value,
less-pure lipids, such as soapstock, as starting materials.

Soybean oil soapstock is a plentiful and relatively inexpensive byproduct of
edible oil refining. About 100 million pounds of the soapstock are produced
in the United States every year, and it can cost as little as one-tenth or
less of the price of refined vegetable oil. Currently, it is used mostly as
a cheap source of fat in livestock feeds. However, by implementing processes
such as that developed by Haas and Bloomer, the agents in soapstock could
one day serve as the source of diesel engine fuel or fuel additives and in
other applications such as cleaning agents and organic solvents.

More information can be found in the April 2002 issue of Agricultural
Research magazine, on the World Wide Web at:
http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/AR/archive/apr02/biofuel0402.htm

ARS is the U.S. Department of Agriculture's chief scientific research
agency.

___________________________________________

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