Threeweight wrote:
Living in Oregon, we are quite lucky to have a major bio-diesel refiner blending the stuff to high standards.
http://www.sqbiofuels.com/ Last year our legislature passed a series of tax credits to encourage the use of bio-diesel (and unfortunately, ethanol to), and to support the growth of a home-state industry. Sequential got its start off of waste veggie oil (from a big potato chip maker here in Oregon, Kettle Foods). I'm a little dubious of their expansion into bio-diesel made with virgin oils. Oregon does not have a climate suitable for soybeans, and canola is a little doubtful. Plus the eastern 2/3 of the state is high desert, where water diversions for agriculture and development is already a big environmental problem.
Bio-diesel is in a catch 22 situation right now. There is not really THAT much demand for the stuff in the US, but there is also not that much capacity to make it, particularly to make it to high quality control standards. The investment $$ to produce larger quantities at good quality hasn't been coming in because there isn't that much demand. There isn't that much demand because the big diesel users (fleets and trucking) are nervous about the quality. There is clearly some role for the government here in encouraging the growth of the industry.
On the other hand, I don't want to see bio-diesel become an ethanol-style juggernaut that rolls on no matter what the science or economics says. Long term, the solution to our oil, national security, and environmental problems is not going to be found in technology that was developed around 1900.
Wow, despite our conflicts it appears we have the same opinion on this. I am not anti-biofuel, I am simply against it without full realization of its consequences and research into less damaging alternatives(including other biofuel alternatives). I see crop-based solutions as worse than the problems they are solving, but that does not mean there is no biofuel solution to be had.
You are correct, the real threat here is that it becomes entrenched in a non-sustainable form, which is why I tend to go after it aggressively. My fear is that we end up with a new order where we have simply replaced Shell, BP, Texaco, etc with Monosato, Con-Agra, Archer-Daniels Midland, etc. Thats not an improvement, and environmentally speaking its probably a worse trade.