Here's an interesting article on Celanese chemical company buying a patent to make ethanol from coal. This is not a new idea, but a patent that apparently allow this conversion with fewer emissions to the atmosphere. Chemical companies currently manufacture ethanol. However, the ethanol from corn industry was apparently given protection by refusing chemical companies from manufacturing ethanol for fuel blending use. I suspect we may see lawsuits soon to deal with this unfair monoply. You just know the large ethanol lobby group, Growth Energy will fight any efforts to open ethanol fuel blending by chemical companies.
"Pete"
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Celanese up on ethanol pact; takes aim at U.S. for new tech
July 19,
2012, 4:24 PM
Shares
of Celanese Corp. rose 5% Thursday after the materials company announced a new pact
with Indonesia to use its TCX technology to produce ethanol from coal.
Using a closed process that keeps emissions lower than other coal
technologies, the TCX technology produces ethanol at a price of
about $1.50 to $2 a gallon.
Once
the ethanol is produced, it burns more cleanly than petroleum products and
helps reduce emissions from cars and trucks.
Mark
Oberle, senior vice president of corporate affairs for Celanese, said the
company’s TCX process could produce ethanol from multiple sources including
natural gas, depending on whatever’s most economical in a given market.
“It’s
a breakthrough technology that allows us to produce ethanol cost-effectively
using a variety of feedstocks,” he said.
Currently,
the U.S. Renewable Fuel Standard restricts coal as a raw material, or
feedstock, to make ethanol, but Celanese would like that to change, Oberle said.
For now, the king of American renewable fuels remains corn-based ethanol, which
is blended in gasoline at a rate of up to 15%.
For
the time being at least, Celanese has plenty on its plate with its new ethanol
deal in Indonesia. U.S. regulators may not go along with classifying coal as a
renewable fuel, but if the TCX process proves its worth overseas, policy makers
could warm up to it.
Thursday, July 19, 2012
Retailers Are Concerned About Liability in Selling E-15
Good morning readers! Some of you may have heard that the 1st gas station to sell 15% ethanol (E-15) opened for business about two weeks ago in Kansas. It is NOT MANDATORY for stations to sell E-15. And, many retailers have told me they are very apprehensive to even consider selling this gas due to the tremendous liability concerns. This new fuel will likely be priced about $0.10/gallon cheaper than E-10 and may tempt customers to try it without considering the consequences. I'll have an updated article about E-15 on my website's "Ethanol Articles" page in a few days. The best thing I can offer to consumers when they see the new E-15 pump label on a fuel pump is "BUYER BEWARE"!
Here's an article about retailers liability concerns regarding this new fuel:
Retailers want liability protection before considering E15
Here's an article about retailers liability concerns regarding this new fuel:
Retailers want liability protection before considering E15
By Kris Bevill | February
22, 2012 – Ethanol Producer Magazine
Liability issues surrounding the use of E15 remain a major concern
for many retailers when considering offering the fuel to customers driving 2001
and newer vehicles. The U.S. EPA recently approved required health effects and
emissions testing for E15, bringing the fuel one step closer to commercial
availability for those drivers, but before retailers can begin selling the fuel
for 2001 and newer vehicles, additional requirements must be met, including EPA
approval of a misfueling mitigation plan for retailers. State regulations also
need to be amended to allow E15 to be sold and retail infrastructure must be
approved to store and dispense the fuel. The ethanol industry is working to
overcome all of these hurdles, but it remains unclear when the process will be
complete.
Iowa is expected to be the first state in the nation to allow E15
to be sold for 2001 and newer vehicles. The blend is already available at
numerous blender pumps in the state for use in flex-fuel vehicles, giving those
retailers a head start in offering it to other customers when they are able.
The ethanol-friendly state also offers incentives to retailers who sell
mid-level blends of ethanol and has a statewide renewable fuel standard, which
further spurs retailers to make alternative fuels available. The ethanol industry
has also been successful there in working through the procedural issues
surrounding E15’s legality. “We have been looking at state policies and have
modified the necessary policies and requirements to be in a position to offer
E15 fairly soon after it goes through the formal approval process and all of
the registration and other requirements have been met,” said Lucy Norton,
managing director of the Iowa Renewable Fuels Association. “We have moved
forward very quickly to put the pieces together here to enable retailers to put
E15 in this market so consumers have additional fuel choices.”
For Iowa retailers, the main issue now is gaining approval of a
misfueling mitigation plan, according to Norton. The Renewable Fuels
Association submitted a mitigation plan to the EPA on Feb. 16 which the group
said could serve as a model plan for fuel retailers to follow in order to
demonstrate regulatory compliance, but it is unclear when the EPA might approve
the RFA’s plan. And some retailers say they will need even further assurance
before they begin offering E15.
Minnesota-based CHS Inc., a cooperatively owned diversified
energy, grains and foods business which supplies fuel to approximately 1,400
branded retail petroleum outlets and is the nation’s leading E85 retailer
through its 800 Cenex-branded convenience stores located throughout the
Midwest, said it will continue to support retailers’ decisions to install
blender pumps but, as a company, it won’t consider selling E15 until multiple
factors are addressed. Issues of concern include liability issues for vehicles
and equipment, potential gasoline compatibility issues related to Reid Vapor
Pressure levels and state and local fuel regulations, according to Lani Jordan,
director of corporate communications at CHS, who added that the business
remains committed to providing fuel that meets the broad needs of consumers now
and in the future.
Jeff Lenard, vice president of industry advocacy for the National
Association of Convenience Stores, said the potential for misfueling liability
and the cost of acquiring equipment to sell E15 are two significant hurdles for
retailers, but his group is also concerned about consumer acceptance of the
fuel. “Retailers must obtain the appropriate storage tanks and dispensers to
sell the product, and this can be a very expensive investment,” he said. “In
order to justify such an investment, a certain level of consumer demand must
exist. Given the opposition of the auto manufacturing industry to E15 and their
concerns about the use of the fuel in current vehicles, it is very difficult to
evaluate potential consumer demand.” Lenard added that while the NACS believes
the EPA’s misfueling regulations are practical, there is still concern that
retailers who comply with those regulations won’t receive adequate liability
protection. “NACS is pursuing legislation that will provide such legal
protection to ensure that a retailer who complies with EPA’s misfueling program
cannot be held responsible in the event a self-service customer ignores or disregards
the label and introduces E15 into a non-approved engine,” he said.
Valero Energy Corp., which produces more than 1 billion gallons of
ethanol annually, more than any other company in the U.S. aside from Archer
Daniels Midland Co. and Poet LLC, said it has no intention of selling E15 at
any of its 1,000 company-owned retail fuel stores. “Because E15 has not been
approved for use in all engines and hasn’t received warranty protection from
engine manufacturers, we can’t guarantee its performance and we won’t sell a
product we can’t guarantee,” said Bill Day, executive director of media
relations for Valero. Some Valero-branded fuel stations are independently
owned, however, and Day said those stations can choose to offer E15, but they
would have to locate the dispensers under a separate canopy.
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