Tuesday, 8 July 2008

ECC approves policy recommendation for use of biodiesel as an alternative fuel

The Economic Coordination Committee (ECC) of the Federal Cabinet has approved the Policy for use of Biodiesel as an Alternative Fuel in its meeting held on 15th February 2008. The Policy Recommendation was formulated by the Alternative Energy Development Board and marks achievement of another major milestone in the Alternative Renewable Energy Sector of Pakistan. Salient features of the approved Policy are as follows:

i) Ministry of Water & Power in coordination with AEDB shall be the apex coordinating and facilitating body for the national Bio-Diesel programme.
ii) Gradual introduction of bio-diesel fuel blends with petroleum diesel so as to achieve a minimum share of 5% by volume of the total Diesel consumption in the country by the year 2015 and 10% by 2025.
iii) Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs) to purchase Bio-Diesel (B-100) from Bio-Diesel manufacturers; and sell this Bio-Diesel blended with Petroleum Diesel (starting with B-5) at their Points of Sale.
iv) Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Resources shall come up with the fuel quality standards for B-100 and blends up to B-20.
v) OGRA shall regulate the pricing mechanism of various blends of Bio-Diesel (B-5, B-10 etc.) and ensure its cost-competitiveness with Petroleum Diesel.
vi) All imported plant, machinery, equipment and selective raw material, e.g. Jatropha, for use in production of Bio-Diesel shall be exempted from Customs Duty, Income Tax and Sales Tax.

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Current Status of Biodiesel Project in Pakistan

Current Status of Biodiesel Project

Alternative Energy Development Board (AEDB)’s project to electrify villages using Bio-Diesel on the basis of self generation is underway in Goth Umar Din Arain, in Tehsil Ghora Bari, Sindh. In this pilot project a Bio-Diesel production plant has been installed in the village for the purpose of village electrification.

The villagers are growing their own seeds for production of 70 liters of BioDiesel per batch that will be used for operating 15 KVA diesel generator. The energy produced form the generators will be used to electrify village.

Fig: Umar Din Arain Goth (Thatta)
The project equipment has been designed and fabricated as shown in Fig.

Locally Fabricated Biodiesel Plant (Patented)

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Alternate Energy Development Board of Pakistan

Resource Potential of Biodiesel Project


Alternative Energy Development Board carried out the initial research on bio-diesel resources in Pakistan through private sector. There are many resources used for biodiesel production in the world. These resources can be classified on the basis of availability and their yield. In Pakistan these resources mainly classified due to availability from oil crops, waste vegetable oils and animal fats. Historically animal fats were used in Pakistan, having been replaced by vegetable oil due to increase in population and per capita consumption. By studying all these aspects biodiesel resources can be classified into following two classes.

• CLASS-I: BIO-DIESEL FROM OIL SEEDS

• CLASS – II: BIO-DIESEL FROM WASTE OILS
CATEGORIES OF CLASS - I
Due to diverse ecological conditions of Pakistan, lucky to have over a dozen oil seed crops of which it can afford to grow one or the other in all season of the year. Depending upon the historical cultivation and production the oil seed crops were classified into conventional (i.e. traditional), non traditional, industrial and wild crops.

CATEGORY A – CONVENTIONAL CULTIVATED OIL YIELDING CROP

• Rape Seeds
• Ground Nut
• Sesame Seeds
• Rocket seeds
CATEGORY B – NON CONVENTIONAL CULTIVATED OIL YIELDING CROPS
• Sun flower
• Soybean
• Safflower
CATEGORY C – Industries Based Crops
• Linseed
• Castor beans
• Cotton seeds
CATEGORY D – Wild Plant Resources
• Pongame tree
• Olive tree
• Hemp oil
• Oat seeds
• Milk Thistle
• Carthamus seeds
• Jatropha

TABLE-1 SHORT LISTING / SELECTION OF RESOURCES FROM CLASS - 1
S.No. Botanical Name English Name Local Name Family
1 Pongamioa Pinnata Pongame Sukhh Chain Fabaceae
2 Brassica campestris Mustard Sarson Brassicaceae
3 Brassica alba White Mustard Chiti Sarson Brassicaceae
4 Brassica nigra Black Mustard Kali Sarson Brassicaceae
5 Brassica napus Canola Canola Brassicaceae
6 Ricinus communis Castor Bean Arond Euphorbiaceae
7 Helianthus annuus Sunflower Suraj Mukhi Asteraceae
8 Gossypium hirsutum Cotton Kappa Malvaceae
9 Jatropha curcas Jatropha Karanga Euphorbiaceae
Fig 1: Castor bean and castor plant
Fig 2: Pongamia Pinnata (Sukh Chane)
Fig 3: Jatropha seeds and plant in Pakistan
AVAILABILITY OF CLASS – II RESOURCES

Waste Vegetable Oil (WVO) can be recycled, cleaned and reused as bio diesel. WVO is available in large quantities from restaurants, hotel chains, confectionaries and domestic cooking. WVO is one of the cheaper sources for biodiesel in developed countries, where the cooking oil is used only once. Pakistan is basically an agricultural country and due to diverse ecological conditions, the population is heavily dependent on agricultural products. For cooking purposes edible oil yielding crops and plants are cultivated on a large scale in the country. These edible oils are utilized in hotels, huts, local shops and every home of Pakistan. So these are the major sources for collection of WVO. According to one survey, average consumption of edible oil in Pakistan is 10 liters per month by each family. This gives rise to an estimated quantity of 240 million litres of WVO available in Pakistan every year (assuming that 10% of edible oil in Pakistan becomes waste). Estimating an 80% yield of Bio-diesel from WVO (as supported by our experiments), a minimum approximate quantity of 150 million liters of Bio-diesel from WVO can be produced in Pakistan.

From the marketing point of view there is a chain of dealers for collection and further selling of WVO. Price for 1 liter of WVO from these sources may vary from Rs. 20 – 45, depending upon the quality and quantity of WVO (some hotels etc. reuse edible oil several times before disposing off their WVO, while others use them once or twice). There are minor constraints in collection of WVO, including cost constraints. But these can be overcome by developing strategies for coordination between dealers, stakeholders and users of WVO. Fixing of raw material rates by the GOP might be required, as will be subsidies on the production and sale of Bio-diesel.

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ECC exempts bio-diesel production items of duty

ISLAMABAD: The Economic Coordination Committee (ECC) of the Cabinet on a Summary, tabled by the Ministry of Water and power regarding use of bio-diesel as an alternative fuel, has allowed exemption of whole of customs duty and sales tax on import of plant, machinery, equipment and specific items used in production of bio-diesel. The aforesaid decision of the ECC has been implemented and Federal Board of Revenue has issued SRO 474(1)/2008 dated the 21st May, 2008, allowing exemption to aforementioned goods used in production of bio-diesel.

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Bio diesel plant to energise village

HYDERABAD, June 17: Government efforts to explore new vistas of alternative energy and overcome energy crisis has been further strengthened with a bio-diesel project launched by the Alternative Energy Development Board (AEDB).

A pilot project to electrify a village using bio diesel on the basis of self-generation is underway in Goth Umar Din Arain of Ghora Bari taluka, Thatta district.

According to the AEBD website, the Economic Coordination Committee of the Federal Cabinet has approved a policy to introduce the use of bio diesel as an alternative fuel.

According to policy recommendation formulated by the AEBD, the project is envisaged to be gradually developed into a national programme. It has been decided that bio diesel will be gradually blended with petrol to a point that it may achieve a minimum share of five per cent of the total diesel consumption in the country by 2015 and 10 per cent by 2025.

As per policy, oil marketing companies will be required to purchase bio diesel from bio diesel manufacturers and sell bio diesel blended with petroleum diesel at their sale points scattered across the country.

Bio diesel is a clean alternative fuel produced from renewable resources and it can be blended with petroleum diesel or could be used directly.

It can also be used in compression-ignition (diesel) engines with little or no modifications. Bio diesel is simple to use, biodegradable, non-toxic and essentially free of sulphur and aromatics.

There are many resources used for bio diesel production in the world and these resources can be classified on the basis of availability and their yield.

In the country oil crops, waste vegetable oils and animal fats are easily available to produce bio diesel. Historically animal fats were used in the country but they have been replaced by vegetable oil due to increase in population and per capita consumption.

The project of producing energy through bio diesel could help in catering the increasing need of electricity as the country is experiencing massive shortage in energy production.

The Alternate Energy Development Board has already launched projects of producing solar and windmill energy in Tharparkar and Thatta districts, respectively.—APP

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Bio-diesel research begins in Pakistan

KARACHI, July 7: The Pakistan State Oil (PSO) has initiated research and development work on its bio-diesel project to meet government’s deadline of blending five per cent bio-diesel with conventional diesel by 2015 and 10 per cent by 2025.

The Economic Coordination Committee (ECC) had taken a decision on the issue in its meeting on Feb 15 in Islamabad.

Bio-diesel would be extensively tested in the auto industry of Pakistan, and depending upon its favorable results, scope of its supply would be extended throughout the country as a standard practice.

At PSO, after the production of bio-diesel from Jatropha oil, an in-house testing has already begun on one vehicle. However, results would be known later.

A PSO official involved in the project told Dawn that it would take some time to produce bio-diesel in Pakistan on such a large scale because it needs mass cultivation of Jatropha and other non-edible seeds for which commitment/concerted efforts of the government is required.

He said a separate department, alternative energy and new projects, has been established within the company to identify and take initiatives in terms of cheaper renewable and alternative energy projects and to address the country’s energy crisis and lessen the fuel import bill which would result in saving of precious foreign exchange.

PSO has selected only non-edible plants/seeds species, such as castor (Arind), Pongame (Sukh Chain), Jojoba, Jatropa (Karanga), etc., for production of bio-diesel. However, the company is currently focusing on Jatropha plant/seed for its better qualities as a substitute of petroleum diesel.

The officials added that many countries in Europe, US, Brazil, Malaysia, and India are using Jatropha as well as other edible and non-edible plants/seeds for production of bio-diesel.

The official said that out of these plants, Jatropha can be grown on marginal land, thus its plantation would not compete directly with other food crops, such as wheat, corn, sugarcane, rice and cotton besides helping in poverty alleviation and improving land utilisation.

Pakistan consumes approximately eight million tons of diesel per annum; of which around three million tons is imported.

There will definitely be incentives for consumers with regards to bio-diesel pricing, its effect on the environment and the vehicle performance, he said.

The official said that spiraling effect of fossil fuel prices world over continues to adversely affect economies of many countries.

This has provided incentives to search for alternative fuels derived from vegetable and non-vegetable oils, i.e. ‘bio diesel’, which offers several distinct advantages as an alternative fuel for diesel engines.

Economically it reduces imports and would afford improved security of energy supplies.

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Saturday, 10 November 2007

Poison plant could help to cure the planet

The jatropha bush seems an unlikely prize in the hunt for alternative energy, being an ugly, fast-growing and poisonous weed. Hitherto, its use to humanity has principally been as a remedy for constipation. Very soon, however, it may be powering your car.

Almost overnight, the unloved Jatropha curcushas become an agricultural and economic celebrity, with the discovery that it may be the ideal biofuel crop, an alternative to fossil fuels for a world dangerously dependent on oil supplies and deeply alarmed by the effects of global warming.

The hardy jatropha, resilient to pests and resistant to drought, produces seeds with up to 40 per cent oil content. When the seeds are crushed, the resulting jatropha oil can be burnt in a standard diesel car, while the residue can also be processed into biomass to power electricity plants.

As the search for alternative energy sources gathers pace and urgency, the jatropha has provoked something like a gold rush. Last week BP announced that it was investing almost £32 million in a jatropha joint venture with the British biofuels company D1 Oils.

Even Bob Geldof has stamped his cachet on jatropha, by becoming a special adviser to Helius Energy, a British company developing the use of jatropha as an alternative to fossil fuels. Lex Worrall, its chief executive, says: “Every hectare can produce 2.7 tonnes of oil and about 4 tonnes of biomass. Every 8,000 hectares of the plant can run a 1.5 megawatt station, enough to power 2,500 homes.”

Jatropha grows in tropical and subtropical climates. Whereas other feed-stocks for biofuel, such as palm oil, rape seed oil or corn for ethanol, require reasonable soils on which other crops might be grown, jatropha is a tough survivor prepared to put down roots almost anywhere.

Scientists say that it can grow in the poorest wasteland, generating topsoil and helping to stall erosion, but also absorbing carbon dioxide as it grows, thus making it carbon-neutral even when burnt. A jatropha bush can live for up to 50 years, producing oil in its second year of growth, and survive up to three years of consecutive drought.

In India about 11 million hectares have been identified as potential land on which to grow jatropha. The first jatropha-fuelled power station is expected to begin supplying electricity in Swaziland in three years. Meanwhile, companies from Europe and India have begun buying up land in Africa as potential jatropha plantations.

Jatropha plantations have been laid out on either side of the railway between Bombay and Delhi, and the train is said to run on more than 15 per cent biofuel. Backers say that the plant can produce four times more fuel per hectare than soya, and ten times more than corn. “Those who are working with jatropha,” Sanju Khan, a site manager for D1 Oils, told the BBC, “are working with the new generation crop, developing a crop from a wild plant — which is hugely exciting.”

Jatropha, a native of Central America, was brought to Europe by Portuguese explorers in the 16th century and has since spread worldwide, even though, until recently, it had few uses: malaria treatment, a windbreak for animals, live fencing and candle-mak-ing. An ingredient in folk remedies around the world, it earned the nickname “physic nut”, but its sap is a skin irritant, and ingesting three untreated seeds can kill a person.

Jatropha has also found a strong supporter in Sir Nicholas Stern, the government economist who emphasised the dangers of global warming in a report this year. He recently advised South Africa to “look for biofuel technologies that can be grown on marginal land, perhaps jatropha”.

However, some fear that in areas dependent on subsistence farming it could force out food crops, increasing the risk of famine.

Some countries are also cautious for other reasons: last year Western Australia banned the plant as invasive and highly toxic to people and animals.

Yet a combination of economic, climatic and political factors have made the search for a more effective biofuel a priority among energy companies. New regulations in Britain require that biofuels comprise 5 per cent of the transport fuel mix by 2010, and the EU has mandated that by 2020 all cars must run on 20 per cent biodiesel. Biodiesel reduces carbon dioxide emissions by nearly 80 per cent compared with petroleum diesel, according to the US Energy Department.

Under the deal between BP and D1, £80 million will be invested in jatropha over the next five years, with plantations in India, southern Africa and SouthEast Asia. There are no exact figures for the amount of land already under jatropha cultivation, but the area is expanding fast. China is planning an 80,000-acre plantation in Sichuan, and the BPD1 team hopes to have a million hectares under cultivation over the next four years.

Jatropha has long been prized for its medicinal qualities. Now it might just help to cure the planet.

- D1 Oils, the UK company leading the jatropha revolution, is growing 430,000 acres of the plant to feed its biodiesel operation on Teesside — 44,000 acres more than three months ago, after a huge planting programme in India. It has also planted two 1,235-acre trial sites this year in West Java, Indonesia. If successful, these will become a 25,000-acre plantation. Elloitt Mannis, the chief executive, says that the aim is to develop energy “from the earth to the engine”.

Jatropha: costs and benefits

- Jatropha needs at least 600mm (23in) of rain a year to thrive. However, it can survive three consecutive years of drought by dropping its leaves

- It is excellent at preventing soil erosion, and the leaves that it drops act as soil-enriching mulch

- The plant prefers alkaline soils

- The cost of 1,000 jatropha saplings (enough for one acre) in Pakistan is about £50, or 5p each

- The cost of 1kg of jatropha seeds in India is the equivalent of about 7p. Each jatropha seedling should be given an area two metres square.

- 20 per cent of seedlings planted will not survive

- Jatropha seedlings yield seeds in the first year after plantation

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