Global biodiesel report identifies industry trends
A Houston based energy intelligence and mana- gement consulting firm has published its 380-page Biodiesel 2020: A Global Market Survey [prospectus: *pdf format, flashpaper format]. The study looks at biodiesel production trends in the EU, the US, Brazil, India and China.
"The global market for biodiesel is poised for explosive growth in the next ten years. Although Europe currently represents 90% of global biodiesel consumption and production, the U.S. is now ramping up production at a faster rate than Europe, and Brazil is expected to surpass U.S. and European biodiesel production by the year 2015," says William Thurmond, the author of the market study and Director of Management Consulting at Emerging Markets Online.
It is possible that Biodiesel could represent as much as 20% of all on-road diesel used in Brazil, Europe, China and India by the year 2020. If governments continue to aggressively pursue targets; enact investor-friendly tax incentives for production and blending; and help to promote research & development in new biodiesel feedstocks such as algae biodiesel, the prospects for biodiesel may become realized faster than anticipated. Biodiesel 2020 finds that each of these variables will be essential to the eventual success of these targets" author William Thurmond notes.
In the USA, the market for biodiesel is growing at an alarming rate. Biodiesel consumption in the U.S. grew from 25 million gallons per year in 2004 to 78 million gallons in 2005. Biodiesel production in the U.S. is expected to reach 300 million gallons by the end of 2006, and to reach approximately 750 million gallons per year in 2007:
biodiesel :: biofuels :: sustainability :: USA :: Brazil :: Europe :: China :: India :: market study ::
Demand for biodiesel in the U.S. has grown so fast in the first half of 2006 that the sixty five or so existing major biodiesel plants are barely able to keep up. To meet this demand, over fifty new, larger-scale plants are in construction and are expected to come online between late 2006 and 2008. Not only will these fifty plants more than double the U.S. production capacity, but the size and production volumes of the new plants are much bigger on average.
The new study Biodiesel 2020 observes geographic shifts in biodiesel production plants, distribution facilities and downstream locations into new areas and coastal regions. The biodiesel market in the U.S. has a significant amount of room to grow to reach the status of its European counterparts. In Europe, biodiesel represents 2% of total on-road transportation fuel consumption and is expected to reach 6% by 2010. The total biodiesel being sold in the U.S. amounts to less than 1/2 of 1% of all petro-diesel on-road consumption in 2005.
In this regard, there are promising growth indicators for the future of the U.S. biodiesel markets. The number of retail outlets for biodiesel in the U.S. grew more than three fold from 300 in 2005 to over 950 retail sites so far in 2006. Another growth push in the U.S. biodiesel industry is coming from all-star promotional campaign including Willie Nelson and Barry Switzer (both investors and executives in biodiesel companies) as well as Julia Roberts, Daryl Hannah, Luke Perry and Neil Young. U.S. politicians, prompted by concerns for energy security and environmental issues, are also making news promoting biodiesel as a vital renewable energy source.
In other parts of the world, biodiesel is becoming increasingly important as governments react to growing petroleum import dependency and enact new alternative fuels policies and targets. Economic and environmental security concerns are giving birth to new government targets and incentives in China, India, Brazil and Europe, aimed at reducing petroleum imports and increasing the consumption and production of alternative and renewable fuels.
Biodiesel is a natural fit in places like Europe, China, India and Brazil where diesel fuel is more commonly used in than it is in the U.S.
In these markets, the prospects for biodiesel as a replacement for diesel are not only bigger in terms of total market share, but also in terms of conversion rates among existing drivers.
Biodiesel 2020: A Global Market Survey tracks the U.S. and global markets for biodiesel growth, and provides 5 to 10 year forecasts for biodiesel demand, consumption and production. Brazil and Europe are illustrated as "case studies" for strong biofuels growth with advanced biofuels infrastructure, installed plant capacity, and mature market economics.
With an eye on the future, Biodiesel 2020: A Global Market Survey provides forecasts and scenarios to the year 2020 for the U.S. and European markets as well as the "big emerging markets" of China, Brazil and India.
For Brazil, China and India, the study includes long-term forecasts and year 2020 scenarios, each measuring growth in the diesel and biodiesel markets, as well as focusing on the potential for biodiesel growth.
For each of the global markets, this study has developed proprietary forecasts as a baseline to produce 2020 "Scenarios" for the U.S., Europe, China, India and Brazil.
The initial results from the study Biodiesel 2020: A Global Market Survey find that new developers, farmers, feedstock providers, producers, and investors who can meet growing demands for supply are expected to benefit from this emerging market. In addition, this study finds key advantages in the future will be available to producers and investors to supply future needs with new and improved technologies; alternative feed stocks with higher yields such as palm oil and algae biodiesel; production scalability and flexibility options; supply chain, distribution and co-location strategies; innovative risk management strategies; and industry-friendly government targets and tax incentives committed to promoting the awareness and growth of the industry.
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"The global market for biodiesel is poised for explosive growth in the next ten years. Although Europe currently represents 90% of global biodiesel consumption and production, the U.S. is now ramping up production at a faster rate than Europe, and Brazil is expected to surpass U.S. and European biodiesel production by the year 2015," says William Thurmond, the author of the market study and Director of Management Consulting at Emerging Markets Online.
It is possible that Biodiesel could represent as much as 20% of all on-road diesel used in Brazil, Europe, China and India by the year 2020. If governments continue to aggressively pursue targets; enact investor-friendly tax incentives for production and blending; and help to promote research & development in new biodiesel feedstocks such as algae biodiesel, the prospects for biodiesel may become realized faster than anticipated. Biodiesel 2020 finds that each of these variables will be essential to the eventual success of these targets" author William Thurmond notes.
In the USA, the market for biodiesel is growing at an alarming rate. Biodiesel consumption in the U.S. grew from 25 million gallons per year in 2004 to 78 million gallons in 2005. Biodiesel production in the U.S. is expected to reach 300 million gallons by the end of 2006, and to reach approximately 750 million gallons per year in 2007:
biodiesel :: biofuels :: sustainability :: USA :: Brazil :: Europe :: China :: India :: market study ::
Demand for biodiesel in the U.S. has grown so fast in the first half of 2006 that the sixty five or so existing major biodiesel plants are barely able to keep up. To meet this demand, over fifty new, larger-scale plants are in construction and are expected to come online between late 2006 and 2008. Not only will these fifty plants more than double the U.S. production capacity, but the size and production volumes of the new plants are much bigger on average.
The new study Biodiesel 2020 observes geographic shifts in biodiesel production plants, distribution facilities and downstream locations into new areas and coastal regions. The biodiesel market in the U.S. has a significant amount of room to grow to reach the status of its European counterparts. In Europe, biodiesel represents 2% of total on-road transportation fuel consumption and is expected to reach 6% by 2010. The total biodiesel being sold in the U.S. amounts to less than 1/2 of 1% of all petro-diesel on-road consumption in 2005.
In this regard, there are promising growth indicators for the future of the U.S. biodiesel markets. The number of retail outlets for biodiesel in the U.S. grew more than three fold from 300 in 2005 to over 950 retail sites so far in 2006. Another growth push in the U.S. biodiesel industry is coming from all-star promotional campaign including Willie Nelson and Barry Switzer (both investors and executives in biodiesel companies) as well as Julia Roberts, Daryl Hannah, Luke Perry and Neil Young. U.S. politicians, prompted by concerns for energy security and environmental issues, are also making news promoting biodiesel as a vital renewable energy source.
In other parts of the world, biodiesel is becoming increasingly important as governments react to growing petroleum import dependency and enact new alternative fuels policies and targets. Economic and environmental security concerns are giving birth to new government targets and incentives in China, India, Brazil and Europe, aimed at reducing petroleum imports and increasing the consumption and production of alternative and renewable fuels.
Biodiesel is a natural fit in places like Europe, China, India and Brazil where diesel fuel is more commonly used in than it is in the U.S.
In these markets, the prospects for biodiesel as a replacement for diesel are not only bigger in terms of total market share, but also in terms of conversion rates among existing drivers.
Biodiesel 2020: A Global Market Survey tracks the U.S. and global markets for biodiesel growth, and provides 5 to 10 year forecasts for biodiesel demand, consumption and production. Brazil and Europe are illustrated as "case studies" for strong biofuels growth with advanced biofuels infrastructure, installed plant capacity, and mature market economics.
With an eye on the future, Biodiesel 2020: A Global Market Survey provides forecasts and scenarios to the year 2020 for the U.S. and European markets as well as the "big emerging markets" of China, Brazil and India.
For Brazil, China and India, the study includes long-term forecasts and year 2020 scenarios, each measuring growth in the diesel and biodiesel markets, as well as focusing on the potential for biodiesel growth.
For each of the global markets, this study has developed proprietary forecasts as a baseline to produce 2020 "Scenarios" for the U.S., Europe, China, India and Brazil.
The initial results from the study Biodiesel 2020: A Global Market Survey find that new developers, farmers, feedstock providers, producers, and investors who can meet growing demands for supply are expected to benefit from this emerging market. In addition, this study finds key advantages in the future will be available to producers and investors to supply future needs with new and improved technologies; alternative feed stocks with higher yields such as palm oil and algae biodiesel; production scalability and flexibility options; supply chain, distribution and co-location strategies; innovative risk management strategies; and industry-friendly government targets and tax incentives committed to promoting the awareness and growth of the industry.
Article continues
Saturday, September 30, 2006
WWF: Brazil's biofuel plan is unsustainable
Giulio Volpi of WWF-Brazil later responded to the President's vision and partly disagrees. He says the Brazilian government is promoting the use of biodiesel produced from soya beans to reduce its dependence on fossil fuels, by clearing large areas of Amazonian rainforest to grow soybeans. This is too high an environmental price for this policy to be sustainable.
Volpi: Brazil's President Lula rightly recognises that one of the greatest challenges of the 21st century is reducing our dependence on climate-polluting fossil fuels, such as coal and oil. Currently Brazil's per capita greenhouse gas emissions are less than half the world's average, but this is largely due to its historic focus on energy efficiency, hydropower and sugar-based ethanol.
While President Lula said that Brazil has responded to the future energy challenge by "using clean, renewable, alternative energy sources to an ever-greater extent", Brazil seems to favour increasing fossil-fuel power generation. For example, coal, diesel oil and natural gas-fired thermoelectric plants will supply about two-thirds of the 3,200 megawatts of new electric power which was put out to bidders by the Brazilian government last December. Once built, these plants will emit over 11 million tonnes of CO2 per year - an 11% growth, which is not only bad for the global climate but also for the national economy.
Research shows that if Brazil was to implement an aggressive energy efficiency policy it could reduce the growth in power demand by as much as 40%, achieve energy savings of more than US$37bn per year, and stabilise its power-sector related CO2 emissions by 2020. This may seem radical, but in 2001, under the threat of power blackouts, Brazilians slashed electricity demand by 20% in a couple of months, without reducing their quality of life:
ethanol :: biodiesel :: biomass :: bioenergy :: biofuels :: energy :: sustainability :: deforestation :: Brazil ::
President Lula said biofuel "is significantly less polluting than conventional petroleum-based diesel". But Brazil is set to produce most of its biodiesel from soya beans, which have virtually no advantage over conventional fuels in terms of overall greenhouse gas emissions, let alone the millions of hectares of tropical forest that have been cleared for large-scale soya plantations.
Automatically classifying biofuels as renewable energy regardless of how they are produced is dangerous. We cannot afford to address climate change while creating another environmental problem, deforestation - itself the source of 80% of carbon emissions in Brazil. The world must promote only those biofuels which offer the greatest environmental benefit, such as sustainably produced forest and wood products in temperate countries, and sugar-based bioethanol in tropical ones.
A mandatory eco-certification scheme for biofuels must be established, applying to all biofuels regardless of where they are produced. This system must be based on environmental and social criteria, and be easy to apply and flexible enough to meet local conditions.
Lula says that through investment in ethanol and biodiesel, Brazil is determined to "plant the oil of the future". But for biofuels to play a key role in a new carbon-free energy future, policy makers - both in the North and South - must ensure that biofuels are produced in an environmentally and socially friendly way. In Portuguese we have an expression which sums this up: Biocombustíveis sim, mas não de qualquer jeito! This means: yes to development but not to any development, yes to biofuels but not to any biofuels!
The Guardian: Soya is not the solution to climate change
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posted by Biopact team at 2:17 PM 1 comments links to this post