Cellulosic Ethanol Plant Opens

Tennessee Plant to Turn Corn Cobs into Fuel

By Sam Hopkins
Monday, February 1st, 2010

Corn cobs and switchgrass don't get much respect in the world of food and industry, but would-be waste is steadily being converted to fuel more cheaply than ever.

Using actual kernels of corn to produce ethanol fuel was deemed by most of the investing community to be too inefficient in its production to justify the process. Intensive water and land usage—as well as corn price surges and subsequent "tortilla riots" in Mexico—made corn a liability on large projects. At the beginning of 2010, we're seeing more momentum in more efficient sugarcane ethanol, and in cellulosic ethanol, which is made from plant-based agricultural waste.

DuPont Danisco, a joint venture between the American chemicals giant and a Danish company, is opening a demonstration plant in Tennessee in February where cellulose-rich corn cobs and switchgrass will be converted to fuel.

The goal is to churn out 250,000 gallons of renewable fuel each year, at a cost competitive with $90 a barrel oil. That means each gallon will need to take about $5.50 per gallon to make instead of the current $8, so DuPont Danisco is working closely with crop scientists and fuel experts to bring those input costs down.

By 2012, investors and researchers hope to reach the point where production can begin in earnest.

-Sam Hopkins

 

 


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Editor's Note: From solar and wind to geothermal and biofuels, Green Chip readers want to know which renewable energy resource will take over where fossil fuels leave off. The answer is...all of the above!

There is no one single solution to today's energy crisis. However, the combination of all viable renewable energy resources, coupled with energy efficiency, conservation and smart grid development will not only lead us to energy independence and a cleaner, more sustainable energy infrastructure — but also to what will soon prove to be the greatest investment opportunity of the 21st Century.







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Comments:

Comment by Pyotr Petrovich on 2010-02-01
Gosh, the cellulosic guys are moving from $8 per gallon to $5.50. Where is that going to get us with much maligned corn ethanol currently at $1.80?

Either you are bad at math or you desire to pay greater subsidies. Our government asked our farmers to produce corn ethanol, so they did in admirable fashion. Now you malign those remarkable results and ask for something which is totally unrealistic and unlikely to significantly contribute to our fuel supply. You happily throw buckets of money we don't have at an unrealistic target to make yourselves feel good. The government agencies, college professors and would be start ups are merely "farming" the government for our tax dollars.
Comment by Joe Grazzio on 2010-02-02
Yeah, talk to me about subsidies for ethanol when the government stops subsidizing petroleum. If the government didn't subsidize petroleum, you'd be paying $10 a gallon. The facts are out there. Do yourself a favor and educate yourself before you start throwing around the "subsidy" argument.
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