Nipah ethanol project receives major investment
One of last year's most exotic stories came from Perak state, in Malaysia. There, a company is investing in a project to produce ethanol from the mysterious mangrove palm, also known as nipah (Nypa fruticans) (earlier post). Nipah palms are known for their extreme productivity: year round, they yield thousands of liters of sugar-rich sap, which is traditionally used to make alcohol and sweet liquors. Some researchers have found theoretical yields of 15,000 to 20,000 liters of ethanol per hectare of nipah stands.
Pioneer Bio Industries Corp Sdn Bhd, the company that invented a process to delay the spontaneous fermentation of tapped nipah sap, has now announced the scale of its investment. The company is committing not less than 1.4 billion ringgit (€304/US398 million) to set up the country’s first refinery plant to produce nipah ethanol on a large scale.
ethanol :: biomass :: bioenergy :: biofuels :: energy :: sustainability :: Nypa fruticans :: nipah :: sugar :: Malaysia ::
Badrul adds that "ethanol is now much sought after in view of the increasing awareness among countries on the need to switch to biofuel to protect the environment. Besides, its usage could also help to save a country’s non-renewable oil reserve."
Local demand for ethanol would mainly come from the medical-related industry. Pioneer Bio Industries is a subsidiary of Pioneer Vaccination Biotech Corp Sdn Bhd, which has been in the biotechnology business since 2003.
Tajol Rosli, state governor, said the state government would share profits from the ethanol production based on land ownership. "We are only giving the company the right to tap nipah sap while maintaining the titles of all the sites they are operating on. Based on our share of land equity in the project, we expect an annual income of at least 324 million ringgit (€70.5/US$92.2 million)." Besides royalties for the state, the project is expected to bring a considerable number of jobs (earlier post).
Pioneer Bio Industries has also been given the right to tap the sap from 14,000ha of nipah trees found in the state’s coastal areas. Finally, the company is allowed to convert 1,000ha of coconut smallholdings in Bagan Datoh to plant nipah on a commercial scale.
Pioneer Bio Industries Corp Sdn Bhd, the company that invented a process to delay the spontaneous fermentation of tapped nipah sap, has now announced the scale of its investment. The company is committing not less than 1.4 billion ringgit (€304/US398 million) to set up the country’s first refinery plant to produce nipah ethanol on a large scale.
- the factory will be built in the 1,000ha area where some 6,000 wild nipah trees were found growing in abundance in Trong, about 12km from the city of Taiping
- scheduled to be in operation by early next year
- capacity to process some 1.8 billion litres (475.5 million gallons) of ethanol per year; this is roughly 21,700 barrels of oil equivalent per day
- major portion of the ethanol will be exported while only a small percentage would be marketed locally
ethanol :: biomass :: bioenergy :: biofuels :: energy :: sustainability :: Nypa fruticans :: nipah :: sugar :: Malaysia ::
Badrul adds that "ethanol is now much sought after in view of the increasing awareness among countries on the need to switch to biofuel to protect the environment. Besides, its usage could also help to save a country’s non-renewable oil reserve."
Local demand for ethanol would mainly come from the medical-related industry. Pioneer Bio Industries is a subsidiary of Pioneer Vaccination Biotech Corp Sdn Bhd, which has been in the biotechnology business since 2003.
Tajol Rosli, state governor, said the state government would share profits from the ethanol production based on land ownership. "We are only giving the company the right to tap nipah sap while maintaining the titles of all the sites they are operating on. Based on our share of land equity in the project, we expect an annual income of at least 324 million ringgit (€70.5/US$92.2 million)." Besides royalties for the state, the project is expected to bring a considerable number of jobs (earlier post).
Pioneer Bio Industries has also been given the right to tap the sap from 14,000ha of nipah trees found in the state’s coastal areas. Finally, the company is allowed to convert 1,000ha of coconut smallholdings in Bagan Datoh to plant nipah on a commercial scale.
1 Comments:
keep up the good work!
Cathelijne van den Berg -
Oud-Heverlee
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