Jatropha: Another potential biofuel competitor

SLAM: debunk creationism, pseudoscience, and superstitions. Discuss logic and morality.

Moderator: Alyrium Denryle

Post Reply
User avatar
Soontir C'boath
SG-14: Fuck the Medic!
Posts: 6844
Joined: 2002-07-06 12:15am
Location: Queens, NYC I DON'T FUCKING CARE IF MANHATTEN IS CONSIDERED NYC!! I'M IN IT ASSHOLE!!!
Contact:

Jatropha: Another potential biofuel competitor

Post by Soontir C'boath »

New York Times wrote:By LYDIA POLGREEN

KOULIKORO, Mali — When Suleiman Diarra Banani’s brother said that the poisonous black seeds dropping from the seemingly worthless weed that had grown around his family farm for decades could be used to run a generator, or even a car, Mr. Banani did not believe him. When he suggested that they intersperse the plant, until now used as a natural fence between rows of their regular crops — edible millet, peanuts, corn and beans — he thought his older brother, Dadjo, was crazy.

“I thought it was a plant for old ladies to make soap,” he said.

But now that a plant called jatropha is being hailed by scientists and policy makers as a potentially ideal source of biofuel, a plant that can grow in marginal soil or beside food crops, that does not require a lot of fertilizer and yields many times as much biofuel per acre planted as corn and many other potential biofuels. By planting a row of jatropha for every seven rows of regular crops, Mr. Banani could double his income on the field in the first year and lose none of his usual yield from his field.

Poor farmers living on a wide band of land on both sides of the equator are planting it on millions of acres, hoping to turn their rockiest, most unproductive fields into a biofuel boom. They are spurred on by big oil companies like BP and the British biofuel giant D1 Oils, which are investing millions of dollars in jatropha cultivation.

Countries like India, China, the Philippines and Malaysia are starting huge plantations, betting that jatropha will help them to become more energy independent and even export biofuel. It is too soon to say whether jatropha will be viable as a commercial biofuel, scientists say, and farmers in India are already expressing frustration that after being encouraged to plant huge swaths of the bush they have found no buyers for the seeds.

But here in Mali, one of the poorest nations on earth, a number of small-scale projects aimed at solving local problems — the lack of electricity and rural poverty — are blossoming across the country to use the existing supply of jatropha to fuel specially modified generators in villages far off the electrical grid.

“We are focused on solving our own energy problems and reducing poverty,” said Aboubacar Samaké, director of a government project aimed at promoting renewable energy. “If it helps the world, that is good, too.”

Jatropha originated in Central America and is believed to have been spread around the world by Portuguese explorers. In Mali, a landlocked former French colony, it has been used for decades by farmers as a living fence that keeps grazing animals off their fields — the smell and the taste of the plant repel grazing animals — and a guard against erosion, keeping rich topsoil from being blown away by the harsh Sahel winds. The Royal Tropical Institute, a nonprofit research institution in Amsterdam that has been working to develop jatropha as a commercial biofuel, estimates that there are 22,000 linear kilometers, or more than 13,000 miles, of the bush in Mali.

Jatropha’s proponents say it avoids the major pitfalls of other biofuels, which pose significant environmental and social risks. Places that struggle to feed their populations, like Mali and the rest of the arid Sahel region, can scarcely afford to give up cultivable land for growing biofuel crops. Other potential biofuels, like palm oil, have encountered resistance by environmentalists because plantations have encroached on rain forests and other natural habitats.

But jatropha can grow on virtually barren land with relatively little rainfall, so it can be planted in places where food does not grow well. It can also be planted beside other crops farmers grow here, like millet, peanuts and beans, without substantially reducing the yield of the fields; it may even help improve output of food crops by, among other things, preventing erosion and keeping animals out.

Other biofuels like ethanol from corn and sugar cane require large amounts of water and fertilizer, and factory farming in some cases consumes substantial amounts of petroleum, making the environmental benefits limited, critics say. But jatropha requires no pesticides, Mr. Samaké said, little water other than rain and no fertilizer beyond the nutrient-rich seed cake left after oil is pressed from its nuts.

The plant is promising enough that companies across the world are looking at planting millions of acres of jatropha in the next few years, in places as far flung as Brazil, China, India and Swaziland. A company based in Singapore has announced plans to plant two million hectares, about 4.9 million acres, of jatropha in the Philippines.

Here in Mali, a Dutch entrepreneur, Hugo Verkuijl, has started a company with the backing of investors and assistance from the Dutch government, to produce biodiesel from jatropha seeds.

Mr. Verkuijl, 39, an economist who has worked for nonprofit groups, is part of a new breed of entrepreneurs who are marrying the traditional aims of aid groups working in Africa with a capitalist ethos they hope will bring longevity to their efforts.

“An aid project will live or die by its funders,” Mr. Verkuijl said, but “a business has momentum and a motive to keep going, even if its founders move on.”

His company, Mali Biocarburant, is partly owned by the farmers who will grow the nuts, something he said would help the business to succeed by giving the farmers a stake.

It takes about four kilograms (about 8.8 pounds) of seeds to make a liter of oil, and Mr. Verkuijl will sign contracts with farmers to buy the seeds in bulk. The fuel he produces will cost about the same as regular diesel, he said — more than $1 a liter, which is about 1.06 liquid quarts. He will also return the nutrient-rich seed cake, left after the seeds are pressed for oil, to the farmers to use as fertilizer. He said he hoped to produce 100,000 liters of biodiesel this year and 600,000 a year by the third year.

Even if jatropha proves a success in Mali, it is still not without risks. If farmers come to see it as more valuable than food crops, they could cripple the country’s food production.

These kinds of worries led a recent United Nations report on biofuels to conclude that “the benefits to farmers are not assured, and may come with increased costs,” the report said. “At their worst, biofuel programs can also result in a concentration of ownership that could drive the world’s poorest farmers off their land and into deeper poverty.”
Reuters India wrote:India pins biofuel hope on jatropha, output to rise
By Naveen Thukral and Niluksi Koswanage

KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - India is forecast to produce 2 million tonnes of biodiesel by 2012 as it aggressively plants wild jatropha oilseed to meet growing hunger for energy, a senior industry official said on Thursday.

The nation has identified 64 million hectares of wasteland that can be planted with jatropha, a non-edible oilseed which grows even on arid land in most warm climates and needs little care.

"India has 64 million hectares of wasteland and we asked the government to just provide 20 percent of the wasteland for planting jatropha," said Rajiv Gulati, vice president of Biodiesel Association of India.

In anticipation of the rapidly evolving biofuels market, dozens of private firms are contracting villagers to grow the hardy, oil-rich plant in their mostly barren plots of land. But now several corporates, farmer groups and cooperatives were taking the plunge as states were allocating wasteland for oilseed cultivation, Gulati said.

"Some state governments have already started giving land to interested parties, but it comes with conditions," Gulati told Reuters in an interview.

"Some of the conditions include growing jatropha plantations within a set time frame."

TO REPLACE DIESEL

India plans to replace around five percent of its current 40 million tonnes of annual diesel consumption with jatropha biodiesel within about five years.

Jatropha is seen as a good bet for India if it wants to cut back on oil imports that account for 70 percent of its needs.

Gulati said India has planted jatropha on some 2 million hectares in the last three years but oil production will only start by 2012.

"Two million hectares planted, but you will not see a single kilogram of seeds today," he said on the sidelines of an industry meeting in the Malaysian capital.

"The seeds are harvested and used for planting more trees, we have vast area that needs to be covered."

He said three biodiesel plants with a combined capacity of about 300,000 tonnes have started in India but many firms were delaying projects in absence of feedstock.

"Initially, they were supposed to use palm oil but seeing the high prices, a lot of the plants have slowed down construction," said Gulati, who runs a biodiesel unit in the northern state of Haryana.

"By the time jatropha production starts we expect the capacity to go up to 2 million tonnes."

Experts say Jatropha, a tough bush with oil-bearing fruit, has plenty of small scale potential but needs more research before it can be grown on a large scale.

Cultivated on a small scale, jatropha can provide oil to power a generator to pump irrigation water and it has an advantage over other energy crops like palm or soyoil as it is not edible and so using the oilseed as fuel does not compete with food uses.

But jatropha is a labour-intensive crop as fruits on the same bush mature at different stages so they cannot be picked by a machine.

And Gulati said that is an issue even in India with billion-plus people.

"Labour is an issue, manual agriculture is very expensive. There is migration from the countryside, so there is scarcity of labour."
Reading these two articles, it looks very promising. It doesn't need to be grown on rich soil and the major downside is the need for labour.
I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro's great stumbling block in his stride toward freedom is not the White Citizen's Counciler or the Ku Klux Klanner, but the white moderate, who is more devoted to "order" than to justice; who constantly says: "I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action"; who paternalistically believes he can set the timetable for another man's freedom; who lives by a mythical concept of time and who constantly advises the Negro to wait for a "more convenient season."
User avatar
Admiral Valdemar
Outside Context Problem
Posts: 31572
Joined: 2002-07-04 07:17pm
Location: UK

Post by Admiral Valdemar »

Any large agricultural monoculture for industry is typically a bad thing when it comes down to it. For the most part, it butchers bio-diversity as any intensive monoculture will. While it is more efficient than the other bio-fuels out there, I can't see this being anything but a stop gap. It will lead to us overshooting more than we would have and make the crash that much harder.

Personally, they should focus on EVs rather than more liquid fuel powered vehicles and look more into sustainable living, rather than growing ever more of this weed until we hit the wall further down the line.
User avatar
ThatGuyFromThatPlace
Jedi Knight
Posts: 691
Joined: 2006-08-21 12:52am

Post by ThatGuyFromThatPlace »

sounds good, but in all likelihood it's just another solution the Good Ole' American Corn Farmers won't go for.
[img=right]http://www.geocities.com/jamealbeluvien/revolution.jpg[/img]"Nothing here is what it seems. You are not the plucky hero, the Alliance is not an evil empire, and this is not the grand arena."
- The Operative, Serenity
"Everything they've ever "known" has been proven to be wrong. A thousand years ago everybody knew as a fact, that the earth was the center of the universe. Five hundred years ago, they knew it was flat. Fifteen minutes ago, you knew we humans were alone on it. Imagine what you'll know tomorrow."
-Agent Kay, Men In Black
User avatar
Jadeite
Racist Pig Fucker
Posts: 2999
Joined: 2002-08-04 02:13pm
Location: Cardona, People's Republic of Vernii
Contact:

Post by Jadeite »

ThatGuyFromThatPlace wrote:sounds good, but in all likelihood it's just another solution the Good Ole' American Corn Farmers won't go for.
Can it even grow this far north? Every place mentioned in the article was closer to the equator than the US.
Image
Post Reply