BusinessGreen.com: How would you describe
Primafuel?
Rahul Iyer: We are focused on providing the infrastructure that
underpins the biofuels industry. There has been a huge amount of focus on the
biofuels themselves and the various production processes being developed, but
one of the major issues facing the industry is getting the infrastructure in
place to effectively distribute biofuels. One of the initiatives we're involved
in is an infrastructure project to connect biofuel suppliers in the mid west
with consumers on the west coast.
How so?
Currently, regions like California, consume a large amount of ethanol blended
with gasoline but there is a shortage of infrastructure to transport and store
ethanol. We have a major biofuel project at the port of Sacramento underway,
which will have a big impact on the local biofuel market from an infrastructure
point of view, integrating the biofuel industry with the petroleum industry.
We're also working on of developing smart infrastructure that allows us to track
where biofuels are sourced. If biofuels are to be significant in the energy mix,
we need to understand where they are manufactured and sourced - currently it's
often impossible to identify different biofuels from different companies.
Are you also involved in biofuel production technologies?
On the technology side, we're very active in selling equipment to corn ethanol
producers to boost their efficiency. The most common biofuel is corn ethanol in
the US and biodiesel in the EU. There are great opportunities to boost economic
and environmental performance and tremendous room to incorporate more waste
streams into products, which helps address some of the concerns over the
environmental sustainability of biofuels. With biodiesel you can also use waste
streams to make higher value products- we're hoping to go to market with
technologies in this area next year.
There are numerous technical challenges in generating biofuels from
waste plant materials. How will Primafuel's technology work?
We're pursuing a thermal reaction approach rather than looking to use enzymes.
This gives you greater feedstock flexibility as you tend to have to use specific
enzymes for specific plant matter. If the process is feedstock specific we still
have commodity market problems of demand and price. The feedstock you use really
must be flexible.
Why are you looking to move towards using waste material for
biofuels?
We believe in order to create sustainable biofuels, the focus has to be away
from edible feedstock. Instead, we have to utilise waste streams from
agriculture and sewage for example. Unfortunately, these materials have very low
energy density per tonne so shipping this type of biofuel at the moment takes
too much energy and makes no financial sense.
How do you get round this problem and deliver a commercial
proposition?
The answer is appropriate localised scale operations. Thermo-chemical systems
work much faster than enzymatic systems – a parallel can be drawn with burning
and digesting material – and that speed means you can develop much smaller scale
reactors. Then refinery modules could be dispatched to the location of feedstock
making the whole process economically viable.
Biofuels are getting a lot of flak at the moment. How do you see the
future of the industry developing?
I think we'll see a shift towards greater use of waste matter and
perhaps
algae,
but not anytime soon. There are millions of species of algae out there, but the
systems needed require much more than putting algae in a bucket and hoping it
grows. You have to create a micro ecosystem – it's not really about finding a
magical strain of algae. The engineering part presents the biggest challenge in
terms of how much it will cost to develop and its lifespan. Turning algae into a
useful economically viable biofuel would mean you'd have to produce many
different types of product from one material, more like a bio-refinery. It will
take years to develop.
What will be the most commercially viable biofuel?
It's way too premature to guess which will work best. You are getting a lot of
competition in the industry as a result of that uncertainty, but that leads to
more creativity and more investment. It is very difficult to predict the long
term impact of biofuels based on today's technologies – just as it was
impossible to imagine how the internet would take off based on one modem. As a
result, it's important people take a broader approach than a simple for or
against view at this stage of development. With the food versus fuel debate for
example it is important to debate the issue but it is worth remembering things
can change in a very short period of time at such an early stage of an
industry's development.
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