Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Disposal problem is a profit center

Perhaps the National Restaraunt Association's “Conserve” environmental initiative would be wise to have a "roadmap" on how to convert used cooking oil to biodiesel? The fuel can be marketed to
  • municipal and county departments (fire, ambulance, transit, street/highway) and
  • organizations that use diesel fuel in boiler operation as a means to reduce their petro-diesel costs.

Biodiesel

  • is also less toxic than salt
  • biodegrades as fast as sugar and
  • releases far fewer pollutants when burned compared to petro-diesel.
Liquid used cooking oil is filtered, tested for FFA and water content, then put in a processor for conversion. A processor can produce as few as 30 gallons (in a large closet) or as much as 275 gallons (in a backroom) of the fuel.

In a mall a central facility could occupy several thousand square feet off in a remote corner of a parking lot.

Ted Turner and others at a National Restaurant Association conference on going green mentioned "environmental stewardship and local sustainability" and '“the plus one' attitude emphasizes using local/regional sources." Producing biodiesel for city and county vehicles through "restaurants going green would have an even bigger impact."

PR would be fantastic and used cooking oil disposal costs would be replaced by profits from long-term contracts for biodiesel purchases.

Why throw away a fuel source at a time when "product-innovation and profitability have become even more important staples of successful restaurants."?

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

No more cheap oil, No. 2

This continues from yesterday's post-

The Wall Street Journal, p. C10; 'The Mother of All Bubbles'? by Gregory Meyer.
  • the speed of the ascent of the price of a barrel of crude oil to nearly $117 has forced banks and brokers to repeatedly revise their oil price forecasts up-ward.
  • some analysts continue to warn that oil prices may fall to $80 per barrel as the world's oil supply and demand balance rights itself- could be seen by June [2008].
  • $50 per barrel could be reached if pent-up supply in Iraq, Nigeria, Venezuela, and other producers makes it to market.
[Historic political / religious conflicts are major stumbling blocks to that happening.]
  • pricing sentiment seems to ignore the signs of a supply surplus through the end of 2008.
Tim Evans, energy analyst, Citigroup: "There is no supply-demand deficit."

[but] global demand is expected to be 1.3 million barrels per day higher in 2008 than 2007.

Michael Lynch, Strategic Energy & Economic Research, thinks the supply / demand situation justifies a price of $30 - 40 per barrel
  • local and geopolitical events double that price.
"We are stuck in this rut of an upward market until something major changes in the macro picture," advises Adam Robinson, energy research analyst, Lehman Brothers.

theoildrum.com comments on a The Wall Street Journal article - "Oil Officials See Limit Looming on Production," posted by Gail the Actuary on November 19, 2007

"A growing number of oil-industry chieftains are endorsing an idea long deemed fringe: The world is approaching a practical limit to the number of barrels of crude oil that can be pumped every day. Some predict that, despite the world's fast-growing thirst for oil, producers could hit that ceiling as soon as 2012."

[We started refining oil about 100 years ago] "with a finite amount of oil, and this is gradually being depleted. As it gets depleted, it becomes more and more difficult to extract economically, so production tends to decline [and prices quickly climb]."

"The WSJ article quotes Randy Udall:

Randy Udall, co-founder of the U.S. chapter of the Association for the Study of Peak Oil and Gas, has written that these unconventional oil supplies are like having $100 million in the bank, but 'being forbidden to withdraw more than $100,000 per year. You are rich, sort of.'"

"This is a good way of understanding our current problem. There is a lot of oil in the ground [North Dakota, Alaska, offshore Florida, Brazil], but it is complex oil to get out. It is expensive, and requires a lot of trained workers. We are rapidly reaching the point where we cannot pull as much oil out of the ground, because the 'easy oil' is gone, and the remaining oil is in difficult locations and is hard to extract."

Fuel for action, if not thought.

Monday, April 28, 2008

No more cheap oil No. 1

In the 21 April, Monday, The Wall Street Journal, it reported on the general state of affairs of crude oil price, price speculation, and future production. The following excerpts and musings make up rough energy market info on what drives agri-energy technology.

Adequate inexpensive fuels- "cheap" fuels have now gone the way of the penny stamp and the nickel candy bar- and agriculture are necessities we can sustain if we think hard about and follow through with corridor development.

The Wall Street Journal, "Saudis wary of new oil projects pending sales forecast," by Spencer Swartz, p. C6; 21 April M 08.
  • bull market in crude oil just got a catalyst that could push prices even higher, if not prevent them from falling significantly.
  • Saudi Arabia may be reluctant to develop new oil projects after 2009
--it has no plans to increase oil production capacity beyond the 11% it will add during 2009

--it is waiting on more predictability about crude oil consumption

--it fears output / consumption of biofuels will reduce demand, which decreases the profitability of new oil field development

--the data confirming or invalidating market changes may be "several years away."
  • Asia and emerging markets are [wildcards].
  • non-OPEC producers are unable to fill in the slack created by less OPEC production.
  • Ali Naimi, Saudi Arabia oil minister- "All the latest projection- at least up to 2020- do not require [developing] anything higher [than the planned 11%]."

--Saudi Arabia hasn't, until now, laid out a timeline to when new capacity might be addedo "If you look at projections for demand, it has started going down."


[so Saudi Arabia and OPEC can work the politics of "over a barrel" as well as the degree of production.]

DrumBeat: April 18, 2008, Posted by Leanan at theoildrum.com/ tells about a few of the causes of $115+ per barrel crude oil-
  • a Nigerian rebel group said Friday it had sabotaged a major oil pipeline operated by Royal Dutch Shell and vowed to step up attacks on oil installations. * Strikers at the major southern French oil port of Fos-Lavera vowed to remain on picket lines through Saturday. The strike trapped 23 vessels, including four crude oil tankers and six refined products tankers in the port.
  • a similar strike in March lasted 17 days and forced four oil refineries with 603,000 barrels per day of combined capacity to curtail operations, helping spur a late spring rally in European diesel prices.
  • a British union will launch a two-day strike on April 27 at Ineos Grangemouth refinery, forcing it to shut down with a reduction of delivery by the North Sea Forties pipeline system, which terminates there.
"All of the techniques [for estimating global oil reserves and production] seem to be converging to show a likely decline in production in the next few years, or even starting about 2005. Oil production data suggests that world oil production has been flat to slightly declining for the last two years, so it is possible the decline has already begun."

[Farm energy production / agri-energy production is highly unlikely to suffer from this kind of headache]

--to be continued

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Life and finding work in South Dakota- No. 2

Just before I went outside to shovel the “April showers” off the sidewalks, Dakota News Network reported a bit more about the I-29 technology corridor, mentioning “the South Dakota equivalent of California’s Silicon Valley.” The manufacturing and technology corridor development is to stretch from Yankton north to Aberdeen. In addition to the corridor, this eastern area of the state also has some of the best wind power of the nation- classes 4/5/6.

Whether wind development will be done to complement hydropower and power from the coal-fired Big Stone electricity plant has not been mentioned in the media, so one has to assume it hasn't been discussed by the ad hoc working group.

After shoveling and a bit of lunch I did a Google search which found about 291,000 URLs for “silicon valley economic development.” One defined the organization of development we now take for granted as “Silicon Valley” One of the pages had “An industry cluster is a symbiotic, living entity that grows best when nurtured in hothouses of like-minded companies.

"[These] leading clusters call Silicon Valley home
>> Semiconductors
>> Computer & Communications Hardware
>> Electronic Components
>> Software
>> Biomedical
>> Creative & Innovation and
>> Nano-Bio-Info Technology Convergence.”

For an I-29 technology corridor to flourish, it can use this as a proven business model and development structure. The development can adopt and modify the SV industry clusters concept with respect to our region's assets.

An overview of an industry cluster has this information
>> Industry name
>> Profile
>> Changes driving opportunities
>> Where the opportunities are
>> Major labor market trends
>> Silicon Valley Firms
>> Venture Capital Investments
>> Cluster Infrastructure and
>> Detailed Industry Components.

What industry or industries can we seed and grow much like Silicon Valley grew microelec-tronics, computers, and software? What need (actual or latent) can the I-29 technology corridor satisfy as SV meets needs?

This is food for action, not just thought in these times of triple-digit oil prices and $3 billion dollar farm bill programs. There has to be positive cash flow somewhere out there.

A focus on agri-energy in the I-29 corridor would be much like the focus on transistors and other electronic components that served as the foundation for Silicon Valley's successes. Both are regional "fits;" both are "spheres of economic activity" that satisfy needs. In SV's case the needs became "all things digital." I-29 can address energy availability in parallel with meeting needs for foods and fibers.

Life and finding work in South Dakota- No. 1

Yep, it's definitely spring in South Dakota. The snow is wetter. During the night of 10 April 08 nearly 6" of snow fell; people who owned four-wheel drive pickups and SUVs had one more reason to drive like maniacs, so they did. Robins, which I have seen around here for a week or so, must be wondering WTH is going on, where's the "global warming?"

With temperatures in the low-30s Farenheit, the streets and avenues of Watertown are deep with slush, the ruts of which keep a compact car like mine going that way when I need to turn this way. 'Tis not a problem if indeed you want to go "that way," but can be a struggle to get out of the slush rut. As you try to angle through the stuff the car slides somewhat in the direction it was initially going. The worst-case is sliding into an on-coming car or one parked at the curb; the car could slide into the curb or just get stuck. Lotta details to keep in mind whilst driving here.

Wagon trains heading west faced ruts and individual wagoneers struggled, too, when they wanted, say, to go to St. Loius rather than stay on the Oregon Trail. (Oh sure, that's a "reach" to compare a 21st century city-driver with 19th century pioneers since our situations are only marginally similar, but we both bumped and jolted across ruts to get where we want to be.

They wanted to start new lives "out West," and I need to start a new job, being unemployed now since the end of November 2007. I have applied for work at a number of companies here, in Sioux Falls, Aberdeen, and outside South Dakota. Even with all of the rejections and shaken (not stirred) self-confidence, I know I'm only hosed if I stop slinging applications and "beating the bushes" by writing "food for thought, if not action" letters. I am an information researcher / writer to support customer service and /or business development. I'm never without "something to do" with this as my "work title."

At this point I am skilled in researching information and have a talent for organizing the results of my research into written ... abstracts? summaries? tracts? screeds? missives? monologues? blatherings? Yeah, something like that.

"That" is what I do well (think I do well) and enjoy doing. The Watertown Regional Library is the best place on the planet; every library is the best place on the planet. I've been a patron at King County Library, Salt Lake County Library, Tucson Public Library, Murray Library, and others. In them I can find an answer to nearly every question and a solution to nearly every question. (Religious strife, political logic, clean coal, effective schools, and other oxymorons are in the "nearly" categories.)

Don't let what you don't have prevent doing what you can do." Lou Holtz.

Always follow your passion. Rush Limbaugh.

Keep on chasing that dream; even though you're right behind it, you might not find it. The band they named a city after, Boston.

Thursday, March 20, 2008

A new purpose and intent

Former Senators Bob Dole (R-KS) and Tom Daschle (D-SD) released New Markets for American Agriculture, a report by the 21st Century Agriculture Project, sponsored by the Bipartisan Policy Center. The report highlights investing in biofuels and wind farms to provide farmers and ranchers with new and diversified sources of income.

The report addresses ways to improve economic prospects for agricultural producers with a focus on clean energy development.

Amidst these many challenges, lay many opportunities, for a strong agricultural sector is a pillar of America’s growing economy
  • providing a secure domestic food supply
  • helping to reduce our dependence on foreign oil
  • generating renewable energy
  • increasing exports and
  • providing needed income to rural communities.
USDA identified those clean energy types that people in rural America can develop for meeting local and/or national needs
  • anaerobic digestion (Methane Recovery)
  • biogas
  • biofuels production
  • biodiesel
  • solar biomass
  • geothermal
  • solar electric power
  • thermal conversion
  • waste vegetable oil (WVO) for biodiesel production and
  • wind power.
With the price of a barrel of crude oil at $110 or so, these energy types can be put to work generating electricity or replacing some petro-diesel with biodiesel.

WVO disposal is a problem where ever food is made for the public in cafeterias, restaurants, pubs, and the like. Individuals can recycle used cooking oils into biodiesel for small- and medium-sized engines. This can make a difference in getting things done or paying more every year to get those things done. We can act or we can have some cheese with our whine.

The methods, processes, equipment, and experts are on the Web. Perhaps at one time the doing was cheaper than today, but it has never been easier. Energy production is perennial practice that will complement existing ag production.

One example
"Spray-On Solar-Power Cells Are True Breakthrough," Stefan Lovgren, National Geographic News, January 14, 2005.

"Scientists have invented a plastic solar cell that can turn the sun's power into electrical energy, even on a cloudy day."

"The plastic material uses nanotechnology and contains the first solar cells able to harness the sun's invisible, infrared rays. The breakthrough has led theorists to predict that plastic solar cells could one day become five times more efficient than current solar cell technology."

"With further advances, the new plastic "could allow up to 30 percent of the sun's radiant energy to be harnessed, compared to 6 percent in today's best plastic solar cells," said Peter Peumans, a Stanford University electrical engineering professor, who studied the work."

"At a current cost of 25 to 50 cents per kilowatt-hour, solar power is significantly more expensive than conventional electrical power for residences."

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

About second chances- "Slouching Toward Fargo"

Initially assigned by Rolling Stone magazine to produce a "hatchet job" about Bill Murray and his part-ownership of a minor league baseball team, Slouching Toward Fargo instead was written by Neal Karlen to highlight the fun and good times that should be the heart and soul of baseball.

Even though the St. Paul Saints baseball team was like an "old-time carnival" and consistently sold-out its home, Midway Stadium, offering second chances was the result. Darryl Strawberry, Kevin Gardner, and J.D. Drew were on the roster for a time, as were Ila Borders (first woman pitcher in men's professional baseball), Dave Stevens, and Wayne "Twig" Terwilliger.

Mike Veeck- sounds like wreck- ensured that the fans "got their money's worth" with Tobias, the fresh-baseball delivery pig and inflated sumo-suit wrestling. Veeck, Murray (who attended games when his movie career allowed), athletes, and many other talented front-office people made Midway the best destination of the "Twin Cities" of St. Paul and Minneapolis, Minnesota.

----------------------------------------

In many ways, farm energy production is a second chance the U.S. to regain a bit of energy self-sufficiency. Wind energy in SD carries an estimated 1,030 billion kWhs of power each year; ethanol production and biodiesel production bring better prices for commodities as well as a means to solve a waste-disposal problem by converting used cooking oil into biodiesel. These two forms of energy are abundant in many states and remain "underperforming assets."

Local electricity generation and local biodiesel production for use in transit, fire fighting, mail delivery, and other and services will reduce municipal electricity bills and fuel costs. And the air might smell more like fried chicken than diesel fumes by the end of each day.

But no freshly mown ballpark grass here; today the temperatures are sub-zero and the skies sunny. Standing next to a south-facing wall makes me almost smell that grass; walking back to my car (it's not a St. Paul Saints "Northern League car") instantly snaps me back to "the real world." My footsteps "eek-auk" up to the driver's-side door which groans, as it always does when it is not just cold out there; it's damn cold.

(About now I wish Summer had a second chance.)