Petrobras to build 10 biodiesel plants by 2012
Petrobras plans to construct as many as 10 biodiesel plants by 2012 as part of a plan to become the leading producer of the fuel in Brazil with an estimated annual output of 850 million liters (224 million gallons).
Currently, the company is finalising the construction of three units that will start to operate in March of 2008, in the states of the Ceará, Minas Gerais and Bahia.
According to Petrobras' director of supply, Pablo Robert Coast, each of the new plants will have capacity of 60 million liters (15.8 million gallons) of biodiesel per year and cost between R$ 60 million and R$ 70 million (€23.2-27 / US$33.3-38.9 million).
From January onwards, all diesel fuel in Brazil is required to have a 2% biodiesel (B2) content. Today (Friday 21 December) the Brazilian government will carry out an auction to purchase biodiesel to supply the market under the new scheme. The objective is to acquire 100 million liters, to be delivered and blended into diesel between January 1 and February 28.
According to Coast, the Brazilian government could decide to start organising auctions based on a B3 target later this year, as a way to stimulate and offer guarantees to biodiesel producers. Under the Pro-Biodiesel plant, the B3 target is foreseen as a step to prepare the market to reach the B5 target to be reached in 2013. Coast says producers anticipate that this target will be reached already in 2010:
energy :: sustainability :: biomass :: bioenergy :: biofuels :: biodiesel :: social sustainabilty :: Brazil ::
The Pro-Biodiesel program is the legacy of president Lula, who, in contrast to the designers of the much older Pro-Alcool program, put social sustainability at the heart of the production chain from the start.
Under a special scheme, biodiesel producers who source their feedstock from small family farms receive incentives and a 'Social Fuel' label. According to the latest estimates the Social Fuel scheme is benefiting some 60,000 rural families in the semi-arid Northeast of the country. They are supported by agricultural experts, organised in cooperatives and registered with the government.
Crops used for the production of first-generation biodiesel are castor, jatropha, palm oil and soybean.
Petrobras meanwhile also developed a next-generation biodiesel production process called 'H-Bio' which consists of hydrogenating vegetable oils at oil refineries. This allows the use of its existing infrastructures instead of the need to build new plants.
References:
O Globo Online: Petrobras pode construir mais 10 unidades de biodiesel para atingir liderança do mercado em 2012 - December 200, 2007.
Biopact: An in-depth look at Brazil's "Social Fuel Seal" - March 23, 2007
Currently, the company is finalising the construction of three units that will start to operate in March of 2008, in the states of the Ceará, Minas Gerais and Bahia.
According to Petrobras' director of supply, Pablo Robert Coast, each of the new plants will have capacity of 60 million liters (15.8 million gallons) of biodiesel per year and cost between R$ 60 million and R$ 70 million (€23.2-27 / US$33.3-38.9 million).
From January onwards, all diesel fuel in Brazil is required to have a 2% biodiesel (B2) content. Today (Friday 21 December) the Brazilian government will carry out an auction to purchase biodiesel to supply the market under the new scheme. The objective is to acquire 100 million liters, to be delivered and blended into diesel between January 1 and February 28.
According to Coast, the Brazilian government could decide to start organising auctions based on a B3 target later this year, as a way to stimulate and offer guarantees to biodiesel producers. Under the Pro-Biodiesel plant, the B3 target is foreseen as a step to prepare the market to reach the B5 target to be reached in 2013. Coast says producers anticipate that this target will be reached already in 2010:
energy :: sustainability :: biomass :: bioenergy :: biofuels :: biodiesel :: social sustainabilty :: Brazil ::
The Pro-Biodiesel program is the legacy of president Lula, who, in contrast to the designers of the much older Pro-Alcool program, put social sustainability at the heart of the production chain from the start.
Under a special scheme, biodiesel producers who source their feedstock from small family farms receive incentives and a 'Social Fuel' label. According to the latest estimates the Social Fuel scheme is benefiting some 60,000 rural families in the semi-arid Northeast of the country. They are supported by agricultural experts, organised in cooperatives and registered with the government.
Crops used for the production of first-generation biodiesel are castor, jatropha, palm oil and soybean.
Petrobras meanwhile also developed a next-generation biodiesel production process called 'H-Bio' which consists of hydrogenating vegetable oils at oil refineries. This allows the use of its existing infrastructures instead of the need to build new plants.
References:
O Globo Online: Petrobras pode construir mais 10 unidades de biodiesel para atingir liderança do mercado em 2012 - December 200, 2007.
Biopact: An in-depth look at Brazil's "Social Fuel Seal" - March 23, 2007
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