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POET to Use Corn Cobs - Not Natural Gas - to Power Cellulosic Ethanol Plant

By Kirsten Korosec | Jun 17, 2009

POET has figured out what the rest of the corn-based ethanol industry has failed to grasp: relying on price-volatile fossil fuels to power its plants is bad for business. POET announced Wednesday it will use corn cobs – specifically the liquid waste created in the cob-to-fuel conversion process — to power its cellulosic ethanol plant in Emmetsburg, Iowa.

Why is this small step so important? The world’s largest ethanol maker is moving towards a sustainable business model that is necessary for survival in an industry plagued with bankruptcies, triggered last year by low gasoline prices, skyrocketing corn and energy costs and a global credit crunch.

The traditional model – using fossil fuels to power ethanol plants — places far too much reliance on a volatile commodity. And as Robert Rapier over at R-Squared points out: the industry must get away from inputs that track gasoline if it ever hopes to break free from subsidies.

That’s not to say this latest project won’t rely on government support — aka dollars — to get it going. The $200 million cellulosic ethanol plant in Emmetsburg was funded in part by the Department of Energy. And Sioux Falls, S.D.-based POET is working with the DOE to find ways to help farmers buy equipment needed to harvest the corn cobs, which are typically left on the fields, CEO Jeff Broin said during a conference call Wednesday at the Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo in Denver, Colo. The company already has 40 farmers in the Emmetsburg area who are willing to collect corn cobs, Broin said. 

But the project could be successful since POET is tapping into a product it already as ample access to.

POET is producing cellulosic ethanol using corn cobs as a feedstock at its pilot plant in Scotland, S.D. The company recently installed an anaerobic digester that will use the liquid waste, made during the cellulosic ethanol process, to produce methane gas. For further description, POET made a short documentary on its plant.

Eventually, the digester will be installed at the Emmetsburg plant, dubbed Project Liberty. Methane gas produced via the digester will power the Project Liberty plant as well as an adjacent grain facility. The Liberty plant in Emmetsburg is on schedule to produce 25 million gallons of cellulosic ethanol a year in 2011. It also will produce 100 million gallons of corn-based ethanol.

DuPont and Danisco, in a joint venture, also are building a pilot cellulosic plant that will use corn cobs, and later shift to switchgrass, according to Agriculture Online.

Broin also announced at the expo the launch of a new biomass division devoted entirely to the collection, transport, storage and delivery logistics for corn cobs. Scott Weishaar, the company’s vice president of commercial development, will head POET Biomass.

Of course, the success of cellulosic ethanol producers and their ability to meet federal mandates starting in 2010, hinges on the Environmental Protection Agency raising the current 10 percent ethanol-gasoline blend wall to 15 percent, Broin said. The federal Renewable Fuel Standard mandates 100 million gallons a year of cellulosic biofuels starting in 2010. The target rises from there to 250 million gallons/year in 2011.

“If we don’t move that blend wall, cellulosic ethanol will be impossible to finance,” Broin said during the conference call.

See BNET’s previous coverage of the biofuels industry:

Kirsten Korosec has been a print and online journalist for more than 10 years covering education, politics and business.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • POET Launches New Biz to Power Cellulosic Ethanol Plant With Corn Cobs

    Earth2tech.com - 157 days 7 hours 57 minutes ago

    Call it ethanol-on-the-cob. Corn ethanol giant Poet announced plans today to power its cellulosic ethanol plant in Emmetsburg, Iowa, with methane derived from corn cobs — rather than natural gas. Never before have corn cobs been used as a feedstock in this way, Poet CEO Jeff Broin said today in a press conference at the Fuel Ethanol Workshop...

  • Corn-based ethanol producer says it will soon compete with gasoline

    Washington Post - 3 days 11 hours 40 minutes ago

    The nation's largest producer of corn-based ethanol said it has slashed the cost of producing cellulosic ethanol from corn cobs and that it will be able to compete with gasoline in two years. POET, which currently produces 1.5 billion gallons a year of ethanol from corn, said its one-year old pilot plant has reduced the cost of making ethanol...

  • Department of Energy Awards POET $6.85 Million

    Domestic Fuel - 54 days 10 hours 20 minutes ago

    The Department of Energy (DOE) awarded POET $6.85 million to help establish a market for corn cobs. This is the first portion of the funds which are expected to provide an additional $13.15 million next year. Cobs are the feedstock for POET’s effort to commercialize cellulosic ethanol which is officially dubbed Project LIBERTY and under

  • Corn Ethanol Takes Another Hit

    Clusterstock - 291 days 11 hours 26 minutes ago

    A new study by the University of Minnesota puts another dent in the already banged up corn based ethanol industry: StarTribune: Scientists and economists looked at life-cycle emissions of growing, harvesting, producing and burning different fuels, and concluded that ethanol made from switchgrass and other plant materials is far better than...

  • New Study Tallies Corn Ethanol Costs

    New York Times - 289 days 14 hours 53 minutes ago

    In the latest installment of the debate over the emissions impact of corn-based ethanol, researchers from the University of Minnesota and other institutions found that corn ethanol is worse for health and the environment than regular gasoline, and far worse than cellulosic ethanol. The study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy...

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