Jinglebob
Well-known member
Small Scale Biodiesel
Tuesday, 29 May 2007
Bill Webster of Biodiesel Fuels of Mississippi in Meridian, Miss. told the New Orleans Times Picayune that soybean oil had priced itself out of the fuel market. Webster's company had been making 3000 gallons a day from purchased soybean oil but had recently reduced his production to only 3000 gallons a month made from used restaurant grease. Webster gathers the used cooking oil from some 40 local restaurants for his plant. Biodiesel can be made from restaurant grease for about 64 cents a gallon and sells for between $3 and $3.35 a gallon, or about a 10 cent premium over fossil diesel. Using biodiesel from waste cooking oil reduces greenhouse gas emissions by up to 78% compared to regular diesel. However, biodiesel from soybeans can actually increase greenhouse gases due to the fuel used to plant and harvest the crop. David Pimental, a professor of ecology and agriculture at Cornell told the New Orleans paper that planting soybeans for biodiesel requires 27% more fossil energy than the fuel produces. The beauty of used cooking oil is that biodiesel can be made from extremely small backyard facilities the paper said. Biodiesel Resource in Belle Chasse, Louisiana, sells kits to individuals who wish to make their own biodiesel.
Tuesday, 29 May 2007
Bill Webster of Biodiesel Fuels of Mississippi in Meridian, Miss. told the New Orleans Times Picayune that soybean oil had priced itself out of the fuel market. Webster's company had been making 3000 gallons a day from purchased soybean oil but had recently reduced his production to only 3000 gallons a month made from used restaurant grease. Webster gathers the used cooking oil from some 40 local restaurants for his plant. Biodiesel can be made from restaurant grease for about 64 cents a gallon and sells for between $3 and $3.35 a gallon, or about a 10 cent premium over fossil diesel. Using biodiesel from waste cooking oil reduces greenhouse gas emissions by up to 78% compared to regular diesel. However, biodiesel from soybeans can actually increase greenhouse gases due to the fuel used to plant and harvest the crop. David Pimental, a professor of ecology and agriculture at Cornell told the New Orleans paper that planting soybeans for biodiesel requires 27% more fossil energy than the fuel produces. The beauty of used cooking oil is that biodiesel can be made from extremely small backyard facilities the paper said. Biodiesel Resource in Belle Chasse, Louisiana, sells kits to individuals who wish to make their own biodiesel.