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Range Fuels on Monday is expected to announce that it has received a permit to build an ethanol production plant in rural Georgia that uses wood chips as its feedstock. It plans to break ground on the plant this summer.
By next year, the company intends to have a facility capable of creating 20 million gallons of ethanol per year. The site in Treutlen County, Ga., has received a permit to produce 100 million gallons per year, and Range Fuels expects to eventually reach that production amount, according to company CEO Mitch Mandich.
"A lot of people are talking about 2009, or 10 or 11--even Secretary of Energy (Samuel) Bodman will say cellulosic ethanol is five years away," Mandich said. "We think by the time we enter production, we'll be the first, so the race is on between us and some competitors."
Several companies are pursuing techniques to make ethanol out of plants other than corn, which is how ethanol is made today in the United States. Cellulosic ethanol processes convert plant wastes, like wood chips and grasses, to ethanol.
Range Fuels uses a thermal chemical process that turns the wood material into a synthetic gas that is then mixed with a catalyst to make ethanol.
Mandich said his company's process will be less expensive than enzymatic approaches by which specially designed chemicals ferment the biomass to make ethanol. The company currently has four pilot facilities.
At its Georgia facility, Range Fuels intends to buy unusable material left after logging Georgia pine forests--about 25 percent of harvests is typically left behind as waste, Mandich said.
The cost of the plant at a capacity of 100 million gallons per year will be more than $150 million, Mandich said, without giving a specific sum. A multiyear, $76 million Department of Energy grant to Range Fuels is part of the financing.
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- Waste as a feedstock, good...
- But if it turns out that the economics of using purpose-grown materials for cellulosic ethanol are good, there would be nothing to prevent food crops from being displaced until we have a balance where both driving and eating are financially painful. Not enough land to do both at a reasonable cost with this technology.
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- Waste? Is there really such a thing?
- The trouble with cellulosic ehtanol is that the type of plant and animal waste used for these plants would have been composted and returned to the soil. Whether food crops or cellulosic waste, making ethanol turns out to be mining top soil. If we don't return the cellulosic material to compost, our farmland will be dead in a century-- the great plains will be turned into a desert wasteland of soil with no nutrients. Everybody needs to wake up to how dangerous this is!
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- 76 Million Dollar Grant
- The damn plant only costs 150 Million, and that pays for 50.6 percent of it... What am I doing wrong???
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