WBIA BLOG

Goodwill Exchange with Japan

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Here is a great opportunity that many of you may be interested in.

2008 Wisconsin Chiba sister-state Goodwill Exchange – Biomass/Renewable Energy Delegation

 

Delegation:  Wisconsin Chiba sister-state Goodwill Exchange

 

Organizer:  Wisconsin-Chiba Inc.  http://www.wisconsinchiba.org/

 

Proposed Travel Date:   November 8 – 15, 2008

 

Contact:   Beng Yeap  (Ms.) Division of Investment and Export, Wisconsin Dept. of Commerce, 608-266-1480, beng.yeap@wisconsin.gov

 

 

Cost/Expenses:

·                     Lodging, transportation and most meals are provided by the host, Chiba-Wisconsin Association (in Japan). 

·                     Participants will be responsible for roundtrip airfare to Japan, expenses not covered by the association and own personal incidentals

·                     Roundtrip Airfare approximately:  $1,400 (estimate, subject to change)

    

Delegation members:  Approximately 20  ( This is initial subject to change: 12 cultural artists/musicians, 4 biomass, 4 Wisconsin Chiba Inc. board members)

 

 

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Wisconsin Biorefinery Receives Grant

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A Wisconsin biorefinery was awarded a substantial grant from the US Department of Energy. Here is the release from the DOE:

 

DOE to Provide up to $40 Million in Funding for Small-Scale Biorefinery Projects in Wisconsin and Louisiana

Projects Show Continued Investment in Non-Food Based, Sustainable, and Cost Competitive Second-Generation Cellulosic Biofuels

 

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today announced the selection of two small-scale cellulosic biorefinery projects in Park Falls, Wis. and Jennings, La. for federal funding of up to $40 million over five years. These projects will further President Bush’s goal of making cellulosic ethanol cost-competitive with corn-based ethanol by 2012, and help reduce America’s gasoline use by expanding the availability of alternative and renewable transportation fuels.

“To meet our growing energy demand we must continue to research and advance clean energy solutions to improve our energy security, reduce greenhouse gas emissions and clean, sustainable cellulosic biofuels do just that,” DOE Assistant Secretary Andy Karsner said.  “These biorefineries will create fuel from non-food based sources to power our vehicles and reduce our dependence on foreign oil.”

On average, commercial-scale biorefineries process roughly 700 tons or more of non-food feedstock per day, with an output of approximately 15-30 million gallons a year (MMGY) of biofuels.  These smaller-scale facilities will input approximately 70 tons of feedstock per day – with outputs ranging from 1.5 to 6 MMGY. The selected small-scale projects will produce liquid transportation fuels such as cellulosic ethanol from wood, energy crops and agricultural waste products.

These two biorefinery projects are the final round of selections for DOE’s competitive small-scale biorefinery solicitation. Earlier this year, DOE selected seven other projects, comparable in size and scope, to receive up to a total of $200 million.  With the addition of the two new projects announced today, the selected biorefinery projects will receive up to a total of $240 million in DOE funding, subject to appropriations, over the next five fiscal years.  Once federal funding is combined with industry cost share, more than $735 million will be invested in these nine projects, over the next four to five years.

Today’s announcement is part of more than $1 billion in investment that DOE has announced for multi-year biofuels research and development projects. These small-scale projects complement the Department’s investment in commercial-scale biorefineries. The full-scale biorefineries focus on near-term commercial processes, while the small-scale facilities will verify integrated operations at a reduced size with diverse feedstocks using novel processing technologies.

Cellulosic ethanol is an alternative fuel made from a wide variety of plant materials or non-food based feedstocks, including agricultural wastes such as corn stover; forest wastes such as saw dust and forest thinnings; and energy crops, such as switchgrass. In studies conducted by scientist at DOE’s Argonne National Laboratory, compared with conventional gasoline, ethanol produced from cellulosic materials requires as much as 90 percent less fossil energy to produce and has the potential to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by more than 86 percent over the lifecycle.

Negotiations between the following companies and DOE will begin immediately to determine final project plans and funding levels:

Flambeau River Biofuels (FRB), LLC of Park Falls, Wis.
The proposed biorefinery will be installed in an existing pulp and paper mill in Park Falls, Wis., and will produce liquid fuels from abundant and renewable cellulosic (wood) biomass. The biorefinery will not be dependent on any food-based feedstock materials, but rather on by-product or residuals from forest and agricultural sources. When completed, the facility will produce at least 1 trillion BTUs of renewable energy for the host mill and 6 million gallons of transportation (sulfur-free diesel) fuels per year. FRB participants/investors include: ANL Consultants, Auburn University, Brigham Young University, Citigroup Global Markets, CleanTech Partners, Emerging Fuels Technology, Flambeau River Papers, Johnson Timber, National Renewable Energy Lab, Michigan Technological University, NC State University, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ThermoChem Recovery International, University of Wisconsin, and the USDA Forest Products Laboratory.

Verenium Biofuels Corporation of Jennings, La.
Construction of Verenium’s 1.5 million gallon per year demonstration-scale cellulosic ethanol facility is underway and is scheduled to be complete in late 2008.  The project is moving rapidly to commercialize its proprietary technology for the production of ethanol from a wide array of biomass feedstocks, including sugarcane bagasse, agricultural byproducts, waste wood products, and other non-food based energy crops.  The Jennings, Louisiana demonstration plant is operated by Verenium Corporation, which was formed in 2007 through a merger of Celunol Corp, and Diversa Corporation.

For more information on today’s announcement visit the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy.

Verenium Biofuels Fact Sheet
Biofuels Project Locations
Flambeau River Biofuels Fact Sheet
Small Scale Biorefineries Matrix

 
 
 

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A New Ethanol Plant Possibly on the Way

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From an online blog, here is information on a new ethanol plant that may soon be coming to Wisconsin. That would bring the total number of plants to ten. We are on our way to helping make America stronger.

Plans for Wisconsin Ethanol Plant Still Moving

The Janesville Gazette said that Wisconsin ethanol developer Global Renewable still plans to build an ethanol plant in Sharon. ” ‘We’re still in the hunt, but we’re realistic about the challenges we face,’ said Jeff Knight, director of Global Renewable. ‘There’s a better than 50-50 chance we’re still going to build.’ The company said in late December it had secured 80 percent to 90 percent of the $237 million needed to build the facility on a 200-acre parcel on Highway 67 on the western edge of the village,” the Gazette said. “The Sharon Village Board in April 2007 approved the sale of $60 million in tax-exempt industrial revenue bonds for the project. But as financial institutions face losses as a result of the spiraling economy, they’re less willing to invest in risky industrial revenue bonds, and ethanol companies that relied on the bonds for funding are forced to find more investors. ‘It changed how much we could borrow and how much we had to raise,’ Knight said. He said the market is volatile, but Global Renewable is convinced that, with time, the markets will right themselves. ‘We’re in the worst economy for ethanol you could be in, and we still feel this is good plan,’ Knight said.”

(Janesville Gazette, July 8, 2008)

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Grant Opportunity with DOE

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Here is information on a grant opportunity from the Department of Energy.

DOE Announces Solicitations for $30.5 Billion in Loan Guarantees

Second Round of Solicitations includes renewable energy, nuclear, and ‘front-end’ nuclear power facility projects

 

WASHINGTON, DC –The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today announced three solicitations for a total of up to $30.5 billion in federal loan guarantees for projects that employ advanced energy technologies that avoid, reduce or sequester air pollutants or greenhouse gas emissions.  The three solicitations are in the areas of energy efficiency, renewable energy and advanced transmission and distribution technologies; nuclear power facilities; and advanced nuclear facilities for the ‘front-end’ of the nuclear fuel cycle. This marks the second round of solicitations for DOE’s Loan Guarantee Program, which encourages the commercial use of new or significantly improved energy technologies, and is an important step in paving the way for clean energy projects.

In a Fiscal Year (FY) 2008 loan guarantee implementation plan sent to Congress in April, DOE outlined plans to issue its second round of solicitations concurrently no later than June 2008 for energy efficiency, renewable energy and advanced transmission and distribution projects (up to $10 billion); nuclear power facilities (up to $18.5 billion); and advanced nuclear facilities for the “front-end” of the nuclear fuel cycle (up to $2 billion).  Later this summer, DOE intends to issue a solicitation for loan guarantee applications for advanced fossil energy projects (up to $8 billion).  The authority to issue loan guarantees in the amounts specified in these solicitations was provided to DOE in the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008 and is consistent with the Department’s FY 2009 Congressional Budget Request.

“Loan guarantees from the Department will enable project developers to bridge the financing gap between pilot and demonstration projects to full commercially viable projects that employ new or significantly improved energy technologies,” Jeffrey F. Kupfer, the Acting Deputy Secretary of Energy, said.  “Projects supported by loan guarantees will help meet President Bush’s goal of diversifying our nation’s energy mix with energy projects that will improve the environment while increasing energy efficiency.”

The Department issued a Request for Information on April 11, 2008 and held subsequent public meetings in Washington, D.C. and Palo Alto, California to receive input on the development of the solicitation for projects in the energy efficiency, renewable energy and advanced transmission and distribution areas.

The loan guarantee process is organized into four phases: application, project evaluation, conditional commitment, and final approval and closing of a Loan Guarantee Agreement.  Selection criteria for the clean energy projects under these solicitations will focus on a project’s ability to avoid, reduce or sequester air pollutants or greenhouse gas emissions; the speed with which the technologies can be commercialized; the prospect of repayment of the guaranteed debt; and the potential for long-lasting success of these technologies in the marketplace.

Today’s round of solicitations builds off of the previous solicitation issued by DOE which supported energy efficiency, renewable energy and fossil energy projects.  DOE is currently reviewing the applications received to date as a result of the first solicitation.

Loan guarantees issued by DOE will be backed by the full faith and credit of the United States, and will facilitate the early commercial use of new or significantly improved technologies that will help fulfill President Bush’s goals of reducing our reliance on imported sources of energy by increasing energy efficiency, diversifying our nation’s energy mix, and improving the environment.

More information about this solicitation and the Department’s Loan Guarantee Program is available on the Program’s website.

 

 
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DNR Shows Support of Biofuels

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Here is a January 14, 2008 letter from DNR Secretary Matt Frank explaining that biofuel use in Wisconsin will help to lower emissions and make our environment cleaner. We are proud to have the support of the DNR as we move forward.

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Ad on Energy Independence

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EPIC and the Wisconsin Ethanol Coalition have joined together to sponsor a new 60-second advertisement that helps to explain how ethanol can free us from our dependence on foreign oil. With July 4th being recognized as Energy Independence Day, be sure to take a listen to the ad. You can list to it by clicking Energy Independence Ad.

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