http://www.orlandosentinel.com/orl-biodiesel1707apr17,0,4223949.story? 
track=mostemailedlink
'Farming our fuel'
Officials from a local company will tout the jatropha plant today in 
Tallahassee. "We're doing things right here in Orlando that are going 
to change America."

Rich Mckay | Sentinel Staff Writer
Posted April 17, 2007

ABOUT BIODIESEL
What is it?
Biodiesel is a fuel made from rendered vegetable oils or animal fats 
refined through a chemical reaction with an alcohol.
What can be used to make it?
Soybean oil is used to make most of the biodiesel in the U.S. 
Restaurant grease or any vegetable oil such as corn, canola, 
cottonseed, mustard oil also can be used. Jatropha oil is widely used 
in India and Asia. Other companies are developing ways to make 
biodiesel out of algae, restaurant scraps and even animal carcasses.
Why bother?
Biodiesel is considered an alternative to petroleum diesel because it 
can be grown, rather than pumped from a well. It is also considered a 
neutral gas. It doesn't put back into the atmosphere anything it 
didn't absorb when it was part of the environment.
Is it as powerful as diesel?
It is considered to have the same power as petroleum diesel.
What engines can use it?
It can be mixed with petroleum diesel and used in unmodified diesel 
engines. Engines can be modified to run 100 percent on biodiesel.
What does biodiesel smell like?
That depends its source. Some say it smells like french fries. 
Biodiesel made from jatropha doesn't have a strong odor.
SOURCE: Sentinel research
 
America, meet your next tank of gas -- made from superpowered seeds.

A couple of Orlando entrepreneurs say that a Malaysian variety newly 
approved for U.S. import could help solve America's energy woes and 
boost Central Florida's economy with a new cash crop.

State Agriculture Commissioner Charles Bronson, along with executives 
from the Orlando-based Xenerga Inc., are scheduled to introduce a 
patented version of the jatropha plant today in Tallahassee.

"We're doing things right here in Orlando that are going to change 
America," said Dave Jarrett, a company spokesman. "Just wait and see."

The oil pressed from the jatropha nut can be used to make biodiesel, 
producing six to eight times the amount of energy extracted from 
soybeans -- the most common crop used for biodiesel in the U.S.

Xenerga president Jason Sayers and his business partner Victor Clewes 
have the exclusive patent on the high-octane version of the plant 
with seeds that grow inside bunches of fat green pods the size of 
peach pits.

It can produce 1,600 gallons of biodiesel per acre, compared with 
soy's 200 gallons, Sayers said.

A Lake Wales farmer is ready to grow 5,000 acres of the genetically 
enhanced jatropha, Jarrett said. And unlike soy, which takes lots of 
tending, fertilizer and water, the jatropha plant can grow happily in 
arid soil, with little water and almost no tending.

"Think of it as farming our fuel," Sayers said.

President Bush mandated that refineries should have renewable fuels 
blended into 7.5 billion gallons of the nation's fuel supply by 2012.

Only about 75 million gallons of biodiesel were sold in the U.S. last 
year, compared with about 6 billion gallons of petroleum diesel, 
according to the National Biodiesel Board, a trade organization.

"Biodiesel is huge in Europe and Asia," Sayers said. "America is just 
now catching up."

So Sayers and his associates are also launching a venture with 
Xenerga that will sell prefabricated mom-and-pop biodiesel refineries 
for about $2 million.

Their plan is to sell turnkey operations, manufactured in Germany and 
shipped here, and promise a steady supply of raw materials and 
customers. They have contracts to build about 16 of the refineries. 
Each refinery, if running at capacity, can produce 5 million gallons 
of biodiesel a year. Jarrett said they already have a slew of 
inquiries and expect to have 100 refineries throughout the country up 
and running in 18 months.

Besides the jatropha nut, his other sources will include a plentiful 
supply of restaurant grease. Through Sayers' other business, 
FiltaFry, which cleans restaurant fryers, he spotted a potential 
energy source in leftover grease.

The National Biodiesel Board said the industry is growing fast, with 
about 90 plants operating now and another 60 under construction.

While Xenerga won't have its first plant, in Kissimmee, up and 
running for two more months, Silver Bullet Energy has a small plant 
in Groveland that started making biodiesel this year out of grease 
extracted from sewage.

Another company, Southeast BioDiesel, plans to make about 6 million 
gallons of fuel a year from restaurant grease or soybean oil. It 
expects to be up and running in Sanford this summer.

And MetroWest developer and entrepreneur Kevin Azzouz said he's 
getting into the business with a company called Clean Fuel. He 
envisions using restaurant grease at a plant in Orange County that 
would create about 400 jobs.

Azzouz already made the rounds to potential customers, including 
Orange County Public Schools, which runs 1,000 buses each school day 
using a total of 14,000 gallons of diesel.

"We buy our diesel by the tanker-truck load," said Arby Creach, a 
transportation manager for Orange County schools.

School Board member Karen Ardaman said that biodiesel is promising, 
especially if produced locally.

"If it's cost-effective, hopefully it would help us stretch our 
dollars," she said.

Rich McKay can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED] or 407-420-5470.


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