Thursday, July 24, 2008

Zubiri: Jatropha Seeds as Biofuels Source


Wednesday, July 09, 2008

THE PHILIPPINES - With no end in sight to the skyrocketing of fuel prices, the national government is looking into alternative fuel sources to avert a looming economic catastrophe.
This was stressed by Senator Juan Miguel Zubiri who discussed the benefits of using jatropha seeds as a source of bio-fuel during the 49th Araw ng Lanao de Norte celebration.

"Just three kilos of jatropha seeds will already produce a liter of bio-diesel and it will also raise the income of our marginalized farmers," revealed the senator from Bukidnon.

The Republic Act 9367 or Biofuels Act of 2006 was unanimously passed on both houses of Congress and it outlined the use of biofuels and the establishment of the biofuel program.

Identified as possible sources of biodiesel are jatropha seeds and copra (the dried white flesh of the coconut). Sources of ethanol, which is used in gasoline powered vehicles, include cassava and sugarcane which are currently in surplus production.

In the biofuel program, abandoned agricultural lands and non-food producing areas will be used as plantation for jatropha trees. This will help solve the denudation of forested areas caused by illegal logging and uncontrolled cutting of trees for use as firewood.

"This will also be a good reforestation program since trees planted during our reforestation effort will only be harvested after one year for use as firewood," stressed Senator Zubiri.

A conversion kit is now readily available thru Glenn Yu of Seaoil Corp. that converts gasoline-consuming vehicles into vehicles that can run on both pure gasoline or pure ethanol.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

The Jatropha Curcas L belt

Jatropha growing won’t be at expense of food crops


Monday July 7, 2008

KOTA KINABALU: Jatropha cultivation in Sabah for the production of biodiesel will not be done at the expense of food crops.

Sabah Land Development Board (SLDB) general manager Jhuvarri Majid, however, said that at the same time research into Jatropha must be stepped up as fossil fuel (petrol and diesel) was a quickly diminishing resource and becoming increasingly costly.

He said this when briefing Chief Minister Datuk Musa Aman who was visiting SLDB’s Jatropha-centred booth in conjunction with Farmer’s Day.

Jhuvarri also said that the setting up of the Agro Research and Development Complex in Nabawan was a priority.

“While this complex will remain focussed on R&D of Jatropha, it will also include research into food crops such as padi, fruits and cash crops so as to make Sabah self-reliant in food production,” he said.

According to Jhuvarri, initial results from the SLDB Jatropha trial plot in Binakaan, Nabawan, was encouraging, prompting the agency to go into its second phase to set up the R&D complex and plant Jatropha on a large scale.

“We are in the process of acquiring some 800ha of land in Nabawan for this purpose and hope to start soon.

“There can be no denying that we need to research further into Jatropha as it can be the most suitable feedstock for biodiesel as it is a non-edible oil and be grown on marginal land,” he added.

He said that Jatropha could be a good plantation material for eco-restoration in overlogged land and in forests damaged by fire or over-cultivation.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Japan to embark on jatropha project in Kenya


11/19/2007 10:33:14 AM GMT

KENYA: Japan is about to embark on Kenya's first large scale commercial biodiesel project, which aims to grow jatropha on up to 100,000 hectares (247,105 acres) of land, media reports said quoting a spokesperson from Japan's largest biodiesel producer, Biwako Bio-Laboratory Inc.

Chief Executive Officer Mitsuo Hayashi said the company is confident of starting on a project that will see the planting of 30,000 hectares (74,132 acres) of jatropha curcas plantations to feed biodiesel plants within the next six months to a year, based on the results of a recent feasibility study.

The 30,000 hectares (74,132 acres) of jatropha plantation, which will employ some 10,000 workers, will support the production of some 200,000 tonnes (220,000 tons) of biodiesel per year. Biwako Bio-Laboratory aims to expand the plantation to 100,000 hectares (247,105 acres) within 10 years, Hayashi said.

Monday, July 21, 2008

Jatoil growing more jatropha in Asia


By Hwee Hwee Tan
Filed from Singapore
5/23/2008 1:39:26 PM GMT

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA: Australia-listed Jatoil Ltd. is banking on jatropha to deliver on its promise as a next generation biofuel feedstock. Jatropha can be grown on arid lands and will not compromise food production, according to Jatoil's Chairman, Dr. Michael R. Taverner. The company is working with business partners to acquire jatropha plantations in Southeast Asia.

In early May, Jatoil and partner, GreenEnergy Biofuels (GEB) established a joint venture, the GreenEnergy Joint Stock Co. to cultivate jatropha in Vietnam. GEB has been actively researching and experimenting with five to six jatropha varieties sourced mainly from Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam over the last four years, according to sources close to the development.

The first phase of the project will see the cultivation of jatropha on four test plots covering 100 hectares (247 acres) of leased land in Vietnam. The joint venture is preparing to plant jatropha in Ninh Thuan, northeast of Ho Chi Minh City, over a four-month period prior to the wet season. The partners will also establish further 25-hectare (62-acre) test plots in the central and southern provinces of Binh Tuan and Hao Binh.

The test plots will allow the partners to facilitate the transition of local farmlands into jatropha plantations during the second phase of expansion. The joint venture intends to acquire 5,000 hectares (12,355 acres) of jatropha plantations through contracts with commercial planters and independent producers.

Meanwhile, Jatoil is also seeking to start up jatropha plantations in Indonesia. Jatoil and its local partner PT Biodiesel Austindo are sourcing for suitable planting sites in Indonesia. The partners have started planting jatropha in about 100hectares (247 acres) of land in the country.

New biodiesel crop Jatropha taking off in S.W. Florida


By LAURA LAYDEN
5:55 p.m., Saturday, April 5, 2008

The roots for a new energy crop in Southwest Florida have been planted.

In LaBelle, a company called My Dream Fuel LLC is cultivating Jatropha curcas, a tree-shrub that shows promise as a new biodiesel crop in the U.S. that could one day power engines and generators.

Nearly 1 million seedlings are in the ground at a nursery in Hendry County and promoters are looking for farmers – here and across the country – to raise them as oil-producing plants.

Researchers say the plant can produce four times more fuel per acre than soy, and 10 times more than corn.

The demand for oil from the plant already is strong, said Paul Dalton, a former child advocate and attorney who owns My Dream Fuel.

“There are about 100 buyers for every gallon you produce,” he said.

His company soon will open a $1.5 million, 15,000-square-foot center for seed crushing and plant cloning at the State Farmers’ Market off Edison Avenue in Fort Myers.

The Jatropha tree, native to Mexico and Latin America, has been grown in other countries, such as India and Africa, for fuel and medicine. It produces fruit with oily seeds that can be crushed to make biodiesel.

In India, there are large plantations with millions of Jatropha trees and My Dream Fuel has a contract with the government to train 1,500 farmers to grow the trees. In China, there are now more than 1 million acres of Jatropha growing.

Locally, Dalton has so much faith in the trees that he expects to put another 1 million in the ground in LaBelle before June.

His company is one of the first to do large plantings of trees in the U.S., he said.

Some of the trees came from a cloning plant in Mysore, India, and some came from the company’s own testing program.

The cloning plant here will be able to churn out plants at the rate of 1 million a month, Dalton said.

“We studied our mother trees that we use to clone for over six years, and we have over 500 of them. So we have the largest bank of mother trees in the world, of any company,” he said.

In Southwest Florida and across the state, more crushing plants are planned to keep up with the expected growth in demand for Jatropha oil.

In Collier County, the small farming town of Immokalee is being scoped as a possible site for a processing plant that would produce biodiesel from the oil.

Leading that effort is Golden Gate Estates resident Dave Wolfley, the owner of Sunshine Biofuels, a start-up company formed two years ago to build an alternative fuel plant.

The biggest issue had been finding the feedstock.

Jatropha is just what Wolfley has been searching for.

“There is a ton of money in it,” he said.

He’s searching for large landowners in Southwest Florida who are willing to give Jatropha a try. He said he’s found a few, but he won’t reveal their names.

Concerned about pollution and the country’s dependence on foreign oil, Wolfley has developed a small processing plant in his garage where he uses waste vegetable oil from restaurants to cook up his own biodiesel to fuel a Jeep and a Ford pickup truck.

Dalton expects his seedlings to go quickly. Last year, his company sold its entire inventory of about 12,000 trees in four days, he said. Back then, the trees were in pots and there wasn’t a nursery.

“We know of a couple of groups from New York and from Spain that want to plant in Texas and Brazil. So in the next couple of weeks, we may exhaust our current supply,” Dalton said.

In Southwest Florida, Dalton is targeting citrus growers with diseased trees and cattle ranchers looking to diversify.

The dreaded canker and greening diseases have left thousands of acres of citrus land sitting bare, which could be used to grow the new energy crop. The hardy Jatropha is more resistant to disease and can survive a three-year drought.

The Jatropha crop has the potential to be more profitable than citrus, Dalton said.

The average farmer can gross a little more than $2,000 an acre annually at current prices, and the plants live 40 to 50 years, he said.

The main expense for the grower is the plant itself. A seedling costs $3, with a $2 planting fee.

My Dream Fuel offers to plant and harvest the trees mechanically for growers. Under the arrangement, growers prepare the fields and maintain them. The plants require an occasional watering and virtually no fertilizing.

“It’s such an easy tree to care for. It doesn’t really require much at all,” Dalton said.

For the first 500 gallons of oil produced, larger growers get all the profits. After that, there’s a sharing arrangement.

In all, My Dream Fuel has about 1.5 million trees in the ground in Southwest Florida.

Eight months ago, Dalton donated 1,500 seedlings to Lee County for several test plots, including one on a nearly 1-acre farm in the Buckingham area.

LaBelle Grove Management in Hendry County also purchased young trees for an experiment of its own.

The test projects have gone well, Dalton said.

A few other growers are trying Jatropha in Southwest Florida, but they’re keeping it quiet, in part because they want to stay ahead of the competition, he said.

Ron Hamel, executive vice president of the Gulf Citrus Growers Association, representing growers in a five-county region, said he hasn’t heard that growers are jumping all over the idea.

But the potential for a new crop has created a buzz in the industry.

“I haven’t heard anything negative about it,” Hamel said.

Locally, environmentalists don’t seem to be raising a big fuss about Jatropha.

“If it lives up to its promise of being a very productive source for biofuel, then great,” said Brad Cornell, a policy advocate for Audubon of Florida and the Collier County Audubon Society.

The society doesn’t support growing corn for ethanol because there’s no efficient way to do it, and there are concerns about greenhouse gas emissions, he said.

Roy Beckford, an agricultural and natural resource agent for the University of Florida/IFAS in Lee County, has pushed Jatropha as an alternative crop for South Florida growers for years.

He said it’s actually good for the environment because one acre of plantings, which is about 600 trees, will remove four metric tons of carbon dioxide gas from the air a year.

Beckford is overseeing several experiments with Jatropha in Lee County. He’s also working with a few farmers with plans to grow the trees commercially on 10-acre plots in North Fort Myers and Arcadia.

One grower in Lee County has set aside 200 acres for the promising crop, Beckford said.

“Certainly in our area we are kind of pioneering this whole thing,” he said.

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Sunday, July 20, 2008

China to subsidize jatropha planting for Biodiesel


BEIJING (Reuters) - China will promote planting of jatropha, a woody plant, across southwestern provinces to help produce biodiesel and reduce China's dependency on imported crude oil, a spokesman for the State Forestry Administration said.
By 2020, jatropha and other forestry products will be able to provide 6 million tonnes of biodiesel and generate 1,500 megawatts of power, he said in a news conference on Tuesday.
Farmers will get subsidies and seedlings in Yunnan, Guangxi, Sichuan, Hunan and Guizhou provinces and regions to plant jatropha, Cao Qingyao told Reuters.
Chinese oil giant China National Petroleum Corp., or CNPC, and grains trader Cofco will invest in plants to process the biodiesel.
Jatropha can grow in dry areas and is used to produce non-edible oil for making candles and soap, as well as biodiesel. It is seen as a promising plant for making biofuels since it is able to grow on poor land, and therefore is less likely to displace food crops.
China has not yet released a long-awaited blueprint for biofuel development in the five years through 2010, amid debate over how to balance biofuels with other energy and agricultural policies. Planners concerned that grains-based biofuels would unacceptably lift grains prices have already shifted the focus of the plan to other crops.
Total acreage planted with jatropha could reach 13 million hectares, or about the size of England.
Other promising plants include sugar grass, which can grow in saline and other low-quality land across northern China, the China Daily said this week.
Jatropha will be grown on land reserved for forestry, as well as on land "unsuitable for agriculture," including reclaimed mining areas and oil fields, Cao said, but would not displace remaining original forests
Vast swathes of Yunnan and Guizhou have been completely denuded of trees since the mid-1990s. Some of the plans to replant have focused on crop trees, while in other areas villages have been paid to allow regrowth on critical areas like hilltops above rice paddies.
A unit of offshore oil firm China National Offshore Oil Corp., or CNOOC, already plans a $290 million, 100,000 tonne-per- year biodiesel plant in Panzhihua, Sichuan Province.