Tag Archives: alternative

EU Carbon Nears 2-Week High as Lawmakers Consider Surplus Fix

By Mathew Carr – May 29, 2013 European Union carbon permits rose to their highest level in almost two weeks as lawmakers reconsidered a plan to temporarily curb supply in the market that they failed to endorse last month. Allowances for December advanced as much as 3.6 percent to 3.78 euros ($4.87) a metric ton on the ICE Futures Europe exchange in London and were at 3.74 euros a ton at 11:22 a.m. Certified Emission Reduction credits for December rose 1 cent to 40 euros cents a ton, taking weekly gain to 18 percent. A draft measure to delay EU emission-permit auctions, known as backloading, is the first step toward strengthening the world’s biggest cap-and-trade market after prices slumped to all-time lows in April. It is scheduled for a new vote in the environment panel of the European Parliament on June 19 and then in the full assembly on July 2. Carbon is also being supported by advancing German power, as well as a lack of supply today because there are no permits being sold at auction, said Mark Owen-Lloyd, a trading director at Clean Energy Group Ltd. in London. There’s a “bit of euphoria creeping into the market,” he said today by e-mail. The EU leaders summit on May 22 and comments by the European People’s Party show carbon markets will continue to be central to the region’s plans to tackle climate change, Daniel Rossetto, the London-based managing director of emissions markets adviser Climate Mundial Ltd., said today by e-mail. “This is bullish news for the market,” Rossetto said from the Carbon Expo conference in Barcelona. “There’s a very clear sense now emerging that comprehensive emissions-trading-system reform will have cross parliamentary support.” To contact the reporter on this story: Mathew Carr in London at m.carr@bloomberg.net To contact the editor responsible for this story: Lars Paulsson at lpaulsson@bloomberg.net Continue reading

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Miscanthus For Biofuels

Scientists develop ‘green’ pretreatment By: Phyllis Picklesimer , University of Illinois URBANA, Ill. — Two University of Illinois scientists have developed an environmentally friendly and more economical way of pretreating Miscanthus in the biofuel production process. “We pretreat the biomass with switchable butadiene sulfone in the presence of water to break down the plant cell wall, which consists of cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin, the source of biofuels and value-added products,” says Hao Feng, a University of Illinois professor of food science and human nutrition who also has extensive research experience with biofuels. The new technique is a green alternative to current industry practices because butadiene sulfone can be recovered at potentially high yields since the solvent’s decomposition gases are also the raw materials for its production. This means that butadiene sulfone can be re-used after pretreatment, he says. The commercial availability for both production and recovery of this chemical should allow for a transfer of these operations into a biorefinery, Feng says. “It’s a big advantage in terms of both economy and environmental impact,” he adds. The current chemical pretreatment process uses relatively harsh conditions to break down the tough structure of grass and other biomass. Enzymes are then used to release the sugars that are converted to fuels through a fermentation process, Feng explains. “These chemicals not only produce compounds that are toxic to fermenting microorganisms, they often result in byproducts that have negative environmental impact,” he says. Why is this new solvent so important? “Pretreatment is the most expensive step in the production of biofuels and chemicals from lignocellulosic biomass,” says J. Atilio de Frias, co-author of the study and a doctoral student in the Feng laboratory. According to de Frias, butadiene sulfone has the unique ability to “switch” in equilibrium to 1,3-butadiene and sulfur dioxide at relatively low temperatures, forming sulfurous acid in the presence of water. Using this relatively inexpensive and recoverable chemical to pretreat biomass in one step under mild conditions is definitely a step in the right direction, he says. “At temperatures ranging from 90 degrees Celsius to 110 degrees Celsius, the sulfurous acid hydrolyzes hemicellulose. Then butadiene sulfone helps to solubilize lignin with most of the cellulose preserved for downstream enzymatic hydrolysis,” he explains. The scientists say their data shows promise for the separation of hemicellulose and lignin and for the preservation of cellulose. They were able to remove up to 58 percent of lignin and 91 percent of hemicellulose and preserved 90 to 99 percent of cellulose. Feng says this is the first time this solvent has been successfully used as a pretreatment in biofuel production. “We look forward to its testing and adoption by biofuel manufacturers that are working with Miscanthus and other biomass crops,” he says. Editor’s note: Picklesimer is a media/communications specialist for the College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences at the University of Illinois in Urbana. Continue reading

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Lignol Energy Increases Stake In Territory Biofuels Through Private Placement

Published 28 May 2013 Lignol Energy (LEC), a Canadian advanced biofuel technology firm, has increased its stake in Territory Biofuels (TBF) acquiring additional 2.67 million shares for A$1m ($963,620) through a TBF private placement offering. Following the completion of this transaction, LEC will become the majority stakeholder in TBF with about 56% of the issued shares of TBF and 60% on a fully diluted basis. Commenting on the developments, LEC CEO and chairman Ross MacLachlan stated that the company through this acquisition will lend support to restart the Darwin refinery. “Our goal is to have the refinery come back on line in Q4 2013, and incorporate upgrades to process lower cost feedstocks that will enhance profitability in 2014,” added MacLachlan. The Darwin refinery is expected to produce up to 150 million liters of biodiesel per year at full capacity. LEC, meanwhile, having gained majority ownership in TBF is eligible for Difference Capital Funding’s increase in the existing credit line to $6m from previous $1m. Continue reading

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