Politics

Jet fuel from timber scraps? Sounds like the perfect Northwest marriage

Gov. Chris Gregoire just signed a law authorizing a test using timber scraps to make "green" jet fuel. Now the project just needs a facility, some timberland, and favorable economics.

Jet fuel from timber scraps? Sounds like the perfect Northwest marriage
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John Stang

Gov. Chris Gregoire just signed a law authorizing a test using timber scraps to make "green" jet fuel. Now the project just needs a facility, some timberland, and favorable economics.

Can wood scrap become a good source for jet fuel? In a few weeks, Washington's state  government and its two biggest universities plan to map out a  test project on the concept.

Last Friday (April 29), Gov. Chris Gregoire  signed into law a bill greenlighting the project, which will set up  a small facility to take the development of biofuels forward a step  — seeing if the leftover scraps from harvested timber can become a  green source of jet fuel.

So far, no facility site has been  identified, said Craig Partridge, policy and government relations director  for the state Department of Natural Resources (DNR). Nor has a plot of harvested  timberland been lined up. And there are no detailed goals for what this pilot  project is supposed to achieve — except that the  resulting fuel must be ready for use in jet airplaines.

Washington's natural resources and  commerce departments, plus experts from the University of Washington  and Washington State University, are expected to meet in the near future  to discuss how to tackle the pilot project.

The allure is that jet biofuel emits a  significantly lower level of greenhouse gases than petroleum-based fuels do.

The idea of refining fuel from  vegetation has been around since 1896, when Henry Ford used a type of  ethanol from corn to run one of his first cars. People have tinkered  with vegetable oils as fuel since the early 20th Century. A Brazilian  scientist received the first patent for an industrial biodiesel production  process in 1977. The first commercial jet to use biofuel was a Boeing  747-440 using a fuel based on palm oil to fly from London to Amsterdam in 2008.

Canola, nuts, soybeans, and algae  have been used as sources for biofuel.

Camelina — a type of mustard seed  capable of squeezing out more petroleum-like oils than other feedstock  crops — has become a popular source. And it is not a food crop. It  can be grown in fields that are fallow between growing food crops. Plus  camelina-based jet fuel creates about 20 percent of the carbon emission  of petroleum-based jet fuel.

Current technology can produce biofuel  ready for use in jets or ready to be blended with petroleum-based fuel.

"It's not a question of if jet  planes are going to fly and use biofuel. It's happening now.…It's  a question of how much of the supply chain will be in our state," Partridge told the state House Technology and Energy Committee during this year's legislative session.

"We want to make Washington  the leader in bio-aviation fuel," Washington's Lands Commissioner  Peter Goldmark told the committee.

Amy Bann, a jet biofuel expert at  Boeing, told the same committee: "Five years ago, we didn't think  it could be done. Three years ago, it was 'maybe.'  Now, we're  ready."

She said routine commercial use of  jet biofuel — in small amounts and not merely as tests — is expected to begin this year. Boeing is participating in the Commercial Aviation  Alternative Fuels Initiatives (CAAFI), a 5-year-old consortium of airlines,  federal agencies, universities, and others, to develop biofuels for use  in jet planes.

The military successfully tested  camelina-based jet fuel in its planes beginning in 2009. Many Navy jets  flying over Libya use a 50-50 blend of bio- and petrolem-based fuels.

But the RAND Corporation studied  the military's use of biofuels and concluded that the fuel wold not  be cheap enough or available in large enough quantities for at least  a decade, according to a ClimateWire story that ran in The New York Times in January. The military  has invested hundreds of millions of dollars into the development and  testing of biofuels, the RAND report was quoted as saying.

"Demonstrating technical viability  is easy; consider the history of photovoltaic power and fuel cells.  But demonstrating affordable and environmentally sound production …  is difficult," ClimateWire quoted the report as saying.

But the Navy vigorously defended its biofuel ventures in the story.

Tom Hicks, deputy assistant secretary  of energy for the Navy, said: "We have been engaged with  the biofuels industry. We know what they are capable of doing, and we  are confident they will be able to deliver the fuels at the quantities  and at the price point that we need."

Last year, President Barack Obama  announced an initiative to increase the nation's production of all biofuels — of which jet fuel is just a small fraction of — from 11.1 billion  gallons in 2009 to 36 billion gallons by 2022. That initiative includes plans to expand grants, loans, and other financial aid to farmers  growing crops for biofuels.

"There's a lot of ramping up  due to the presidential initiatives," said Darrin Morgan, Boeing's director  of sustainable fuels strategy.

Morgan believes jet biofuel is a  much-needed counter to the fact that the world's supply of petroleum  is not endless. As the availability of oil decreases, its price will  rise, he noted. Meanwhile, as the crops needed to create biofuel increase  in acreage, prices should go down.

But biofuel has a long, long  way to go before it becomes a halfway significant source jet fuel.

Morgan said CAAFI's goal is  for biofuel to make up 1 percent of all jet fuel by 2025. A major step will be for the agricultural  world to get more comfortable with the idea of growing crops for fuel  as well as growing them for food.

Farmers will go with whatever is more  profitable to grow — food or feedstock for fuel. The fluctuating petroleum  market, agricultural costs, food prices, and numerous other economic  factors make it extremely difficult to predict whether farmers will  opt for fuel feestock crops or food crops, said Rick Kment, an ethanol  industry analyst for Omaha-based industry watcher DTN.

One camelina feedstock advantage  is that it can use land that is too marginal for growing crops, Morgan  said.

Biofuel does have a steep mathematical  mountain to climb to become more than a bit player in the jet fuel picture.

It takes an acre of camelina, canola,  or another vegetable-oil crop to produce 60 to 120 gallons of jet fuel,  said John Gardner, vice president for advancement and external affairs  at Washington State University. Washington harvested 20,000 acres  of camelina in 2009, the state agriculture department says.

Just to make the math easy, assume  an acre of camelina becomes 100 gallons of jet fuel. So 20,000 acres  becomes 2 million gallons of jet fuel — 0.0001 percent of the more than  20 billion gallons of jet fuel produced annually in the United States.

Meanwhile, AltAir Fuels — a bio-jet  fuel producer — plans to build a plant to manufacture 100 million  gallons  of jet biofuel a year. So Washington's annual camelina  crop produces only 2 percent of the plant's possible camelina needs.

The state's two commercial jet biofuel  refining ventures — AltAir and Imperium Renewables, both of Grays Harbor  County — declined through a common spokesman to be interviewed  for this story.

Meanwhile, Sustainable Oils Inc., a biotech marriage between Seattle-based Targeted Growth and Houston-based  Green Earth Fuels, believes there are between 5 million and  10 million acres of land suitable for growing camelina, which the corporation's website equates to roughly 650 million  gallons of jet biofuel on an annual basis. Sustainable Oils has contracts with the U.S.  Navy and U.S Air Force to provide almost 600,000 gallons of jet biofuel.

If Sustainable Oils is correct in estimating that 650 million gallons of fuel could be produced each year from camelina, that would equate to about 3 percent of the 20 billion gallons  of U.S.-produced jet fuel per year.

The Rand report concluded that 10  percent of the United States' cropland would be needed to produce 1  percent of the nation's jet fuel, the ClimateWire story said. Algae  is a promising biofuel source, but more work is needed to develop it  as a feedstock, the report said.

Meanwhile, AltAir signed a letter  of intent in 2009 to provide up to 750 million gallons of camelina-based  fuel to 14 airlines in the United States, Canada, Mexico and Germany.

Several weeks ago, Brian Sherbacow,  CEO of AltAir, told the House Technology and Energy Committee that the  company expects to begin building the Grays Harbor plant in 2012 and to finish it in 2013, enabling  production of 100 million gallons of fuel annually. At the same hearing, John Plaza,  president of Imperium Renewables, which provides biodiesel for motor  vehicles, said his company — which has been refining various types of biodiesels  since 2007 — expects to have  jet fuel for Boeing to use this year.

However, Imperium Renewables' record also shows the ups and downs faced by the biofuel industry. Some other biodiesel companies have declared bankruptcy, and an unfriendly marketplace stopped  a scheduled 2008 IPO offering by Imperium. In 2009, the economy and European tariffs on American biodiesel led to layoffs. And late that year, an operator mistakenly added too much sulfuric acid to a 10,000-gallon  glycerin tank and it exploded, though it did not catch fire.

The plant was back online three months later. Now there are plans to expand, eventually  to 195 million gallons, Plaza told the House committee.

John Stang

By John Stang

John Stang is a freelance writer who often covers state government and the environment. He can be reached on email at johnstang_8@hotmail.com and on Twitter at @johnstang_8