Don't know if anybody saw or posted this yet... Saw posted on 
slashdot.ord

http://www.springfieldnews-
leader.com/projects/stewardship/turkey120402.html

Turkey plant finds high-tech pollution solution
Carthage company will turn poultry waste into products instead of 
effluent.

By Mike Penprase
News-Leader

Carthage ÷ There appears to be a new solution to leftover turkey: 
Turn it into 40-weight motor oil. 

Until now, the only thing processors could do with the byproducts of 
butchering turkeys ÷ the guts, feathers, grease and other waste ÷ was 
to turn it into poultry feed. That, in turn, left its own byproduct ÷ 
effluent that could pollute southwest Missouri waterways. 

Partners have high hopes for the tangle of tanks, hoppers and pipes 
being built on the Spring River near the ConAgra Butterball turkey 
plant in industrial downtown Carthage. 

After it turns the turkey waste into oil ÷ as well as diesel fuel, 
fatty acids for use in cosmetics, fertilizer and carbon black ÷ the 
only thing left over will be clean water. 

The Thermal Depolymerization Plant, or TDP, is scheduled to start up 
in January, said Paul Halberstadt of Renewable Environmental 
Resources, a joint venture of ConAgra and thermal depolymerization 
developer Changing World Technology. Halberstadt, vice president of 
technical services, makes regular runs from Michigan to Missouri to 
oversee plant construction.

A pilot plant has been operating at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard 
Business Center for three years, testing what kinds of agricultural 
wastes, known as foodstocks, can be processed, Halberstadt said. The 
Carthage plant will be the first to operate commercially.

"The predominant thing we're trying to get out of this process is the 
oil," RES president P.J. Samson said.

Estimates are the plant will produce 115,000 tons of the oil and 
diesel each year.

"The idea for thermal depolymerization has been around for a long 
time, but we believe our process has perfected it," Samson said. 

"It's no longer laboratory benchtop," he said.

At full operation, the Carthage plant will process 200 tons of 
material from the Con-Agra plant and several other businesses that 
produce waste cooking grease on a round-the-clock, 365-day schedule, 
Halberstadt said.

And, even better, it's feasible the plants could be used to process 
phosphorus-laden poultry litter as well, Halberstadt said. He said 
that while the Carthage plant would have to be tuned to take large 
amounts of the litter, RES has had inquiries from other poultry 
plants about using the process. 

How it works

The plant will mimic how oil is produced naturally by heat and 
pressure over eons, Halberstadt said.

The difference is the Carthage plant will do the same thing in hours 
by moving a slurry of wastes and water through a series of tanks that 
use a variety of heat and pressure combinations to break the organics 
down, he said.

In the first stage, material is subjected to 750 pounds per square 
inch of pressure at 500 degrees Fahrenheit, while the second stage 
uses pressure of 25 to 50 psi at 1,000 degrees.

Unlike other methods that create air emissions or other byproducts, 
the TDP is a closed system, he said.

Another advantage is the plant doesn't depend on catalysts to break 
down the wastes, eliminating the need to use chemicals that can be 
expensive, hazardous or that have to be recovered, Halberstadt said.

While methane and other gases that are produced are used to power the 
plant, all the end products except the purified water can be sold, he 
said.

"I think what we're doing is to provide an option that doesn't 
exist," he said.

Issue of economics

Sen. Christopher Bond helped obtain $5 million from the U.S. 
Environmental Protection Agency for the $15 million project. James 
Stoffer, interim chemistry department head at the University of 
Missouri-Rolla, studied the technology and said the test for the 
plant will be whether it produces as much material as billed. But he 
added that while the plant may be a "tough go" economically, it's 
worth the investment because of what it promises for the environment. 

"If it breaks even or even makes money, it saves the environment. It 
does have the potential. The science is there."

Missouri Department of Natural Resources director Steve Mahfood 
agrees.

"The issue has always been the economics," he said. "It's never been 
the technology, it's never been because it's a good idea. The point 
is, we now have reached that crossover point."

Bruce Martin, regional director of the state Department of Natural 
Resources, is hopeful economics will work for the plant. 

"I'm excited about the possibility we have a plant that's able to 
take poultry waste and turn it into useful products, he said. "If 
this plant in Carthage is success, and I hope it is, there will be 
other plants. If the market is there for these products, the 
businessmen are going to find a way to get it done."   


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Paul Halberstadt of Renewable Environmental Resources said the 
company has had inquiries from other poultry plants about the TDP 
process.
Dean Curtis / News-Leader 
   
 

Construction continues on the Thermal Depolymerization Plant on the 
Spring River in Carthage. 
Dean Curtis / News-Leader  







 



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