Bioenos to build 32,000 tonne multi-feedstock ethanol plant in Germany
In Germany, Bioenos said announced its plant to build a 32,000 tonne per year multi-feedstock ethanol plant in Werdau-Süd. The plant would utilize sugar beet, potato and grains from local sources.
Germany background
• A 95 Mgy Südzucker ethanol plant, the largest in Europe, commenced production in Zeitz. The plant uses sugar beet syrup as a feedstock, and will also produce its own biogas that will power special burners that eliminate all aromatic compounds associated with the production process.
• Cropenergies announced the purchase of Ryssen Alcools from Sudzucker and said that it would increase ethanol production by nearly 30 Mgy in France. The company said that it will produce a total of 185 Mgy in 2008/09.
• The proposed 150,000 tonne Biodiesel Süd plant in Marbach/ Ludwigsburg has been delayed due to financing difficulties. The company is currently investigating the production of using waste oil or fat as feedstock, and commencing production at a technology park in Neckar as an alternative.
• In Brazil, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Brazilian President Lula da Silva signed a biofuels cooperation agreement. The partnership establishes sustainability criteria for biofuels, and provides more than $140 million in financing for a renewable energy R&D partnership between the two countries, as well as rainforest preservation efforts in the Amazon.
Chancellor Angela Merkel recently told Bloomberg that “Millions of people are becoming wealthy, and when 100 million Chinese start drinking milk then that’s going to have an impact on food prices…rising global food prices have nothing to do biofuels.”
Recently, the CEO of the VDB, a biofuel trade association, called on the German government to prevent cheap Brazilian ethanol from entering the German market, saying that German firms could not compete and that their existence was threatened. Germany mandates an E2 blend in all gasoline, but grain prices have made German ethanol uncompetitive with Brazil’s sugarcane-based product. According to the Guardian, Germany produced 310,000 tonnes of bioethanol last year, down 10 percent from 2006.
• In Germany, our European correspondent reports that the Agricultural and Economic Cooperation and Development ministries are at war over biofuels. The state secretary for Agriculture, while conceding a link between ethanol production and corn prices, is cautioning against over-reaction. Meanwhile, the ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development has called for a halt in using oilseeds and grains for biofuel.
Free Subscription to the Daily Biofuels Digest e-newsletter
Subscribe FREE to the world's most-widely read biofuels daily. Enter your email in the box below,
Related Stories
Hot Topics
The Hottest 50 Companies in Bioenergy
Latest algae-to-energy news
Latest jatropha news
Latest Waste-to-energy news
Entry Information
Filed Under: International
Post a Comment | Trackback URL
You must be logged in to post a comment.


