 POET's ethanol is currently produced from waste corn cobs. The company produced 20,000 gallons of cellulosic ethanol last year. (Source: AG Week)
 The company has cut cost at its pilot plant from $4.13/gallon to $2.35/gallon in only a year. The company will soon launch a commercial-scale 25 million-gallon-per-year cellulosic ethanol plant in Emmetsburg, IA. (Source: Biofuel STP)
Company is working on commercial plant and targeting $2/gallon production costs
While GM's
partner Coskata may be stealing the most glory in the cellulosic
ethanol industry, claiming that it will soon be offering ethanol at a
production
cost of $1/gallon, other companies are quietly making impressive
gains of their own with different approaches.
POET
ethanol is among those whose future is looking particularly bright.
The company recently built a pilot-scale plant in Scotland, SD which
opened just over a year ago on November 18, 2008. In the year
since, the plant produced 20,000 gallons of cellulosic ethanol from
plant waste (corn cobs).
When the plant first started
production, its per-gallon costs were $4.13 per gallon -- decent, but
hardly something to write home about. Now, its costs are $2.35
per gallon, and the company is determined to reach $2 per gallon by
the time it opens its first commercial scale plant. In other
words, the company is finally set to start raking in profits by
offering a relatively affordable non-food source-derive alternative
fuel on a broad scale.
The company will soon open a 25
million-gallon-per-year cellulosic ethanol plant in Emmetsburg, IA.
The project, dubbed Project Liberty, will likely make POET among the
nation's largest suppliers of the new biofuel. Describes Jeff
Broin, CEO of POET, "POET has been working on cellulosic ethanol
for close to a decade and there were some days that I wasn’t sure
we’d be successful. While we still have some challenges ahead, I
can say unequivocally that Project LIBERTY will be commercially
viable by the time we start up the plant."
The pilot
plant cut its costs drastically in many ways. First it used
alternative energy (wind/solar) to provide all of its electricity and
the energy used to produce the fuel was cut in half over the year.
Second, it cut its chemical raw materials costs, reducing the cost
per gallon by $0.20. Finally, the biggest cuts came from
reducing the cost of the enzymes that POET uses. The cost of
enzymes has already been cut in half, and POET expects that number to
drop lower.
Dr. Mark Stowers, Senior Vice President of Science
and Technology for POET, says his company isn't done cutting costs.
He states, "There are still several opportunities to make the
process more efficient, particularly in fermentation. Additionally
our enzyme partners have committed to significant additional cost
reductions. But significant gains can also be made once we start up
the commercial facility and POET uses its 20+ year history in
biorefining to drive cost reductions and efficiency improvements in
the process."
While there's significant doubts about the
economic
and social impact of adopting some alternative energy
technologies or alternative fuels, cellulosic ethanol certainly seems
a smart pick. First, it does not use any food sources, limiting
any economic impact. Secondly, it promises to put to use energy
stored by plants that typically goes to waste in the form of wood
waste, landscaping waste, and farm waste. Third, it provides
the opportunity to harvest fuel from fast growing renewable sources
such as switchgrass. In this respect, the effort parallels the
efforts to produce biofuel
from algae.
Despite its promise, the cellulosic
ethanol industry won't launch without effort -- its success will
require innovation like that demonstrated by POET.
We don't know how to make a $500 computer that's not a piece of junk." -- Apple CEO Steve Jobs
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