| Canadian Company Sells Ethanol Made
of Farm Waste |
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| Wednesday, April 21, 2004 01:19 AM
ET |
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| MONTREAL -- Iogen Corp., a Canadian firm at the
forefront of efforts to turn agricultural waste into ethanol,
is expected to announce today that it has become the first
supplier of such biofuel to the commercial fuel market,
Wednesday's Wall Street Journal reported.
The moderate initial shipment marks a milestone in the
development of so- called cellulose ethanol, made from farm
refuse such as wheat straw and corn stalks, instead of the
corn or other grains used for the ethanol now commonly blended
with gasoline. Turning farm waste into fuel for automobiles
has long been an alluring, but technically tricky,
prospect.
Iogen officials have said they hope to begin work on a
full-scale commercial plant next year, but significant hurdles
remain.
Iogen is ahead of other firms seeking to commercialize
ethanol from farm waste, said John Ashworth, an official of
the Department of Energy's National Renewable Energy
Laboratory in Golden, Colo., which has a pilot plant where
companies test cellulose-ethanol concepts. Iogen's much-larger
plant in Ottawa is the only demonstration plant for the
technology, he said.
Iogen, a closely held maker of industrial enzymes, has been
fine-tuning production processes at its plant in the past
three years. The plant, which has an annual production
capacity of 260,000 gallons, began about two weeks ago to turn
wheat straw into ethanol that meets Canadian fuel
specifications, according to people familiar with the
situation.
Wall Street Journal Staff Reporter Christopher J. Chipello
contributed to this report.
Dow Jones Newswires
04-21-04 0119ET
Copyright 2004 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights
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