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from RenewableEnergyAccess.com
Producing approximately 5 million tons of citrus peel waste annually, the Florida orange juice industry has the potential to provide up to 60 million gallons of cellulosic ethanol for Sunshine State residents, according to Bill Widmer, a research chemist with the USDA-ARS Citrus and Subtropical Products Laboratory in Winter Haven.
Although 60 million gallons of cellulosic ethanol per year would not even come close to satisfying U.S. fuel demand, this hasn't stopped companies from seeing the economic and environmental benefits the technology would offer consumers on a regional scale.
"Really, the citrus waste conversion to ethanol, would be a local biomass source in Florida," said Widmer, noting that amount could meet a local demand for oxygenating fuel additives in central Florida as well as generating additional revenue for citrus growers.
The citrus waste, a pectin, cellulose and soluble sugar rich mixture of peel, segment membranes and seeds is available at no cost and in large volumes with potentially no transportation costs since companies like Florida-based Citrus Energy LLC, and newly incorporated Southeast Biofuels, plan to build biorefineries in the local vicinity or co-locate at the citrus processing facility itself.
"I think what you're going to see over the next fifteen years is wood plants in Georgia and Alabama; citrus plants in Florida; and corn plants in the Midwest," said Tom Endres, senior vice-president of operations at Xethanol Corporation.
Xethanol, which formed a joint venture with Renewable Spirits last year
to create Southeast Biofuels, plans to build a pilot plant this year
with the potential to produce up to 50,000 gallons of ethanol from the
citrus waste. "We're optimistic that we're going to build a pilot plant and we're
hopeful that the results and analysis are going to be economically
viable to scale it up to a commercial operation," said Endres, adding
that construction on the pilot plant will begin in the second or third
quarter of this year.
Citrus Energy LLC, which plans to build a four million gallon per year
ethanol biorefinery in Florida, notes the citrus waste to ethanol
technology is able to take advantage of a feedstock where the primary
costs of growing, harvesting and collection are supported by the
existing product stream.
"Companies don't have to buy the citrus waste," said Widmer. "Corn is
over four dollars a bushel. Two years ago it was about two dollars a
bushel. Corn costs are going up."
Currently, citrus waste from orange juice processing companies is dried
into citrus pulp pellets and fed to cattle with little or no return on
investment. In addition, during the drying process toxins are released
requiring citrus processing companies to install costly equipment to
ensure that organic emissions do not escape into the atmosphere.
However, those emissions are negated in the citrus-to-ethanol
conversion process since no drying takes place, and the by-products,
such as limonene (a valuable ingredients in commercial cleaning
products) can be marketed at an additional profit. Approximately half a
pound of peel oil is produced for every gallon of ethanol produced,
said Widmer.
"Where the process stands right now is we can break apart the complex
carbohydrates and liquefy the citrus waste. Basically what we end up
with is a four to five percent fermented stream -- or citrus beer. I
use that term 'beer' loosely. You definitely would not want to drink
that stuff," said Widmer.
Fermentation of the sugars is done using traditional brewers yeast and
the resulting 'beer' has the ethanol separated and converted to fuel
grade ethanol using a distillation and dehydration process. However,
Widmer notes there are still minor hurdles left to overcome in the
laboratory with the citrus to ethanol conversion process.
"After stripping the alcohol we still end up with a residue that we
need to get rid of -- about one-third of the solid is still there and
the short term solution right now is to dry that, and produce cattle
feed from it," said Widmer.
But with more research, material from the residue left after limonene
removal and ethanol production could be turned into other profitable
industrial products, such as building-material additives for concrete,
said Widmer.
"Will they be producing at a profit by next processing season? I don't
know," said Widmer, commenting on the likelihood of the technology
being economically viable for companies in the next one to three years.
"We haven't demonstrated everything from a raw peel to two-hundred
proof alcohol -- and stripping that ethanol out of the beer stream -- I
don't think it's a major hurdle, I think it's a minor one. But it's one
that we do have to demonstrate."
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