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U.S. Fuel Ethanol Market Overview. U.S. demand for fuel ethanol has surged past 4 billion gallons in 2005U.S. production capacity is expected to exceed 5 billion gallons per year in 2006Over 50 production facilities under construction in the U.S. in 2006The U.S. will surpass Brazil in production
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1. Fuel Ethanol in Texas: Opportunities & Challenges “Road to Renewables ‘06”
Ethanol & Biodiesel Workshop and Expo
James Peeples
Austin Airport Hilton
February 15, 2006
2. U.S. Fuel Ethanol Market Overview U.S. demand for fuel ethanol has surged past 4 billion gallons in 2005
U.S. production capacity is expected to exceed 5 billion gallons per year in 2006
Over 50 production facilities under construction in the U.S. in 2006
The U.S. will surpass Brazil in production & use of fuel ethanol in 2006
Third generation technologies emerging to use wide range of feedstocks in addition to grains & other crops (biomass, energy crops, MSW, etc.)
3. U.S. Fuel Ethanol Market Overview Fuel ethanol now used in >15% of all U.S. gasoline
Fuel ethanol is lowest net cost octane enhancer to reduce SI engine emissions
Fuel ethanol is most cost-effective diesel fuel oxygenate (E diesel®) for emissions reduction
Fuel ethanol (E85) is most available, lowest cost alternative fuel
“Renewable Fuel Standard” (RFS) calls for 7.5 bgy remewable fuels by 2012 -- easy
Fuel ethanol is projected to hit 25 – 30 bgy production in 20 years – more difficult, but achievable
4. U.S. Diesel Market Overview Diesel engine exhaust emissions under global assault (public health, etc.)
Aggressive environmental policies challenge all players in diesel industry & customers
Targeted emissions: NOx, PM, CO, air toxics
Ultra-low sulfur diesel (ULSD) required starting mid-2006 to enable OEMs to lower emissions
New exhaust devices required for MY07 on-road diesel engines
Fleets of all kinds now face stricter emissions control regulations
U.S. market size: >55 bgy & growing fast (Texas is biggest market)
Diesel fuel & engine technology is now & will be for decades to come the lowest-cost means of moving goods to market, providing public transport, and serving the U.S. economy
5. Why E diesel®? Global environmental drivers forcing rapid change that no one fuel technology can fully address today
Oxygenating diesel with ethanol offers immediate emissions and performance benefits
World diesel demand growing faster than gasoline, due to greater efficiency, lower relative cost
Current RFS – and proposed “Renewable Diesel Standard” (RDS) -- offer expansion opportunities
Ethanol is plentiful & available everywhere in U.S.
E diesel® is a cost-effective, drop-in “flex fuel” option for centrally-fueled fleets in nonattainment areas
6. What Is E diesel®? Up to 15vol% fuel-grade ethanol (ASTM D 4806);
Up to 5.0vol% stabilizing additive(s); and
Blended with any commercially available diesel fuel (ASTM D 975), including No.1, No.2, ULSD, TxLED, CARB diesel products
Cetane adjustment required to match base diesel
Fuel is easily blended at terminal rack, just like ethanol-gasoline blended fuels, and delivered to centrally-fueled fleet customers as they are accustomed
7. Performance Benefits of E diesel® Offers “premium diesel” characteristics
Enhanced fuel lubricity (SLBOCLE, HFRR)
Excellent cold temperature operability
Good fuel detergency
Good fuel stability (water content & temperature)
Good corrosion protection (NACE)
Good thermal stability (Octel F-21 test)
Outstanding fuel conductivity
8. Typical E diesel® Engine Emissions Test Results - Summary Compared to EPA No.2 & CARB diesel fuels, and depending on specific engine & testing protocols, E diesel® achieves:
Up to 8% reductions in oxides of nitrogen (NOx)
Up to 46% reductions in particulate matter (PM)
Up to about 30% reductions in carbon monoxide (CO)
Up to about 70% reductions in visible smoke (soot)
. . . with no significant change in BHP or fuel efficiency
9. E diesel®: Performance in the Field Proven ease of logistics, distribution & handling
“Fill & go” clean diesel solution
Little or no infrastructure modifications required
Excellent cold & hot weather operability
Immediate & visible emissions benefits (soot)
Good engine performance & driveability
Fully fungible with any diesel, biodiesel, etc.
No mileage/fuel economy demerits
Excellent fleet fuel economics
Few additional costs required to launch fleet program!
10. E diesel® Technical Agenda Managing flashpoint & safety issues (Class 1 fuel)
Addressing all OEM fuel durability & materials compatibility concerns, questions (John Deere, etc.)
Establishing uniform storage & handling policies
Setting ASTM/NCWM fuel specifications & test methods
Completing all federal & state regulatory requirements
Anticipating all emerging new diesel fuel, engine, and exhaust aftertreatment technologies
Complying with all federal, state & local requirements
11. E diesel® Consortium Established in 2003 to guide industry efforts to meet all OEM, government & industry requirements for E diesel® commercialization
Comprised of large fuel ethanol producers, agricultural interests, OEMs (John Deere), additive suppliers, industry trade groups, etc.
Managed under aegis of Renewable Fuels Foundation (Renewable Fuels Association)
Coordinates E diesel® industry research, regulatory compliance, and outreach activities
See www.e-diesel.org for more
12. Texas Ethanol Report Card: 2006 Biofiuels producer incentive passed & finally funded (2001 – 2005)
Ethanol-gasoline blending as CO control strategy, started in 1989, continues in El Paso
E85 fleet sales begun in San Antonio (CPS) in 2003; new public refueling station opens 2005
DOE Pantex Lab (near Amarillo) using 50,000 gals./year of E85 in its fleet
NASA opens E85 refueling station in Houston (2005)
Texas-produced ethanol being used in Texas today, and more on the way
13. Biofuels in Texas: Conclusions Environmental Benefits
Clean fuel for RFG, TxLED, and as alt. fuel
Only fuels capable of reducing GHG emissions
Reduced air toxics
Can be produced from wide array of feedstocks available in Texas (corn, grain sorghum, switchgrass, “waste” products, etc.)
Economic Benefits
Lower cost per ton of emissions reduced
Immediate availability in Texas
Proven economic benefits (agriculture sector, industrial jobs, local energy diversity)
14. Biofuels in Texas: Conclusions Strategic Benefits
Renewable fuels produced in the United States
Reduced dependence on foreign sources of energy/fossil fuels
Seamless integration into all aspects of existing liquid fuel infrastructure
No significant changes in fuel supply or added cost required
15. Thank You! James E. Peeples
Transportation Fuels Consultant
6530 Dearborn Drive
Falls Church, Virginia 22044 USA
(703) 256-4497 (office)
(703) 628-1503 (mobile)
Peeples95@ aol.com (e-mail)