Biodiesel demystified

Being in the construction and real estate industry Biodiesel has come on strong as an alternative energy source. This time last year the general population barely heard of the word. Now, more than ever it is on every companies road map, especially in construction.

There are some misconceptions and myths regarding what biodiesel is and isn’t. Let’s see how you stack up on a few questions that are common fallacies.

Q: Biodiesel has no standard formula.
A: False - Biodiesel actually meets the ASTM (American Socitey for Testing Materials) specification.

Q: Biodiesel is too young and has not been tested properly.
A: False – Rigorous testing has taken place by Universities and the US Dept of Energy & Agriculture.

Q: Biodiesel is very similar to ethanol.
A: False – Ethanol acts as a gasoline additive, whereas biodiesel is derived from chemical processing from plant oils, animal fats etc…

So there you have it Biodiesel demystified, half my readers will think this post is boring, but I wanted to share what will be in heavy equipment by 2012

Biodiesel from algae



solix
Biodiesel from algae continues to be all the rage. One company I stumbled across has as much potential as Sapphire Energy, Live Fuels and Green Fuel Technologies in my opinion. Solix is a Biofuel company that descended from U.S. Department of Energy’s Aquatic Species Program started in 1978 to explore ways to produce Biodiesel from algae. Solix’s answer of “why algae?” is one of the simplest I have researched.

Algae can be found almost everywhere — oceans, ponds, swimming pools, and common goldfish bowls. And while not truly plants, these single-celled organisms have the same photosynthetic ability to convert sunshine into chemical energy. For some species of algae, this chemical energy is in the form of oils very similar to common vegetable oil. What’s the big deal? These oils can be processed and used to produce Biodiesel.

In the current marketplace, Biodiesel from algae offers tremendous strength over conventional petro-diesel. Petroleum-based diesel fuel is at a competitive disadvantage in the $70 – $100 a barrel range. We’re around $146 as of this posting for a barrel of crude. In December 1996 the spot price for a barrel of crude was $25.390. This is the same year the U.S. Department of Energy closed the Biodiesel from algae program with the final results of the program stating “the high cost of algae production remains an obstacle”.

The other major strength for algae is lowering the United States dependency on petroleum products. Foreign oil dependency needs to be dramatically reduced or eliminated for the United States to continue as a global leader in the world market.Theoretically, algae can yield 1,000 to 20,000 gallons of oil per acre. This could mean 20 million acres of non-agricultural soil could generate enough Biodiesel to replace imported oil.