McLain Farms and Foothills Bio-Energies have recently entered into a collaborative arrangement to process oil from locally grown oilseed crops into biodiesel fuel.
McLain Farms, located in Iredell County, implemented expeller-crush equipment and facilities into their operations in 2008 to process locally grown canola, sunflower, and soybeans into high-quality meals and oils. The meals are available to local milling and livestock operations, offsetting current statewide deficits for protein meals. The oils can be used for biodiesel, adding value to the farm and agricultural lands.
Foothills Bio-Energies, located in Caldwell County and operational since 2006, is a regional biodiesel refinery using locally produced feedstock such as vegetable oils and poultry fat to produce ASTM quality biodiesel fuel.
Biodiesel is the only renewable fuel which meets EPA Health Effects Testing and also has a significant positive energy balance (3.2:1). Using existing agricultural lands to augment and satisfy local food needs while using the oil as feedstock for biodiesel is a sustainable and food-friendly energy and economic model.
Working together, McLain Farms and Foothills Bio-Energies look forward to helping North Carolina achieve its goals of reducing imported energy sources while supporting sustainable economic development in rural communities.
For further information, please contact Phil McLain at 704-876-6667 or Randy Dellinger at 828-759-7101.
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Thursday, March 5, 2009
Got Alternative Fuel?
Want to fill up your vehicle with biodiesel, ethanol, CNG, Hydrogen, etc.? The US Department of Energy (DOE) developed a website friendly to mobile devices that lists alternative fueling stations. It is easy to use. Give it a try at http://www.afdc.energy.gov/afdc/locator/m/station
The mobile station locator was developed by DOE's National Renewable Energy Laboratory as part of the Alternative Fuels and Advanced Vehicles Data Center web site.
The mobile station locator was developed by DOE's National Renewable Energy Laboratory as part of the Alternative Fuels and Advanced Vehicles Data Center web site.
Wednesday, March 4, 2009
Mt. Herman Landfill Project Under Way
Residents who live near the old Mt. Herman landfill may have noticed construction traffic headed into and out of the previously dormant site during recent weeks. In a few months, when construction is complete, the public-private partnership to capture and destroy polluting greenhouse gases at the former landfill site officially will begin.The project, announced in 2008, will tap methane gas from within the old landfill and burn it using flares. The initiative cuts the amount of harmful greenhouse gases that reach the atmosphere. At the same time, it will create valuable greenhouse gas offset credits for Internet search and applications leader Google, which operates a data center in Lenoir.
Chad Leatherwood with SCS Engineers, the construction contractor for the project, describes recent activity as the first phase of the project. Using a 36-inch auger, crews have drilled gas extraction wells. Next, a series of underground pipes will tie those wells to an existing methane flare, which will burn the methane and other organic compounds. Burning off the gas reduces the amount of pollution emitted from the landfill.
“Methane has about 21 times the global warming potential of carbon dioxide,” Leatherwood said. “By turning the methane into carbon dioxide by burning it, you achieve significant greenhouse gas reductions.”
To quantify the greenhouse credits for Google, the methane gas collection and flaring will be measured using flow meters and temperature sensors, said David Belcher, of Greenhouse Gas Services LLC of Arlington, Va.
“We will take frequent methane concentration measurements,” he said. “That’s where it provides assurance to all the stakeholders that something good is happening.” While the effort has immediate benefits for the planet, through reducing greenhouse gases, it also helps Caldwell County in ongoing economic development efforts. Environmentally- responsible corporations such as Google often prefer to locate in communities where such partnerships are available and encouraged.“For the project owner, Caldwell County, there was a recognized need to expand the gas capture system,” Belcher said. “When you can align those interests, that’s what makes the project successful.”
The project also places Caldwell County in the forefront of a national drive to create “green” jobs and investment. Efforts to cut down on harmful methane emissions began several years ago when flares were brought to the Mt. Herman landfill site. The partnership, announced in 2008, will enable Caldwell County to expand the project even more.
Belcher estimates a 10-year project timeline based on the amount of methane that is estimated within the old landfill. The overall goal is to capture approximately 120,000 tons of methane. The Mt. Herman project is within a portfolio of greenhouse gas reduction projects by Greenhouse Gas Services LLC that includes other landfill gas collection and combustion systems, as well as animal waste digester systems.
Agreements allowing the start of project were finalized in January. Completion is expected late this spring.
Background data: Greenhouse Gas Services LLC (GHGS), a venture between GE Energy Financial Services, a unit of GE (NYSE: GE), and The AES Corporation (NYSE: AES), announced in September that it had signed a master agreement with Google to co-develop projects that reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and produce GHG credits. As one of the first emissions reduction co-development projects in the United States, Greenhouse Gas Services (GHGS) will design, build and operate it. The project will use the GHGS Standard of Practice to govern the creation, management and retirement of the credits. Google will add these offsets to its carbon portfolio to advance its goal of company-wide carbon neutrality.
For more information about this news release, or any other Caldwell County-related story, contact Public Information Officer Edward Terry at 828-759-7879 or eterry@caldwellcountync.org.
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