published: Friday, October 17, 2008
Ethanol plant south of LP to be open within 2 years
By TREY CHRISTY
trey.christy@newssun.com
LAKE PLACID -- The intersection of U.S. 27 and State Road 70, now only populated by two gas stations, is on track to explode with activity
According to Bradley Krohn, president of Florida-based United States Envirofuels LLC, the company's ethanol plant is scheduled to open within two years.
"The project is a win, win, win," he said. "A win for the growers, a win for the local economy of Highlands County, it's a win for the environment."
It will also be a win for the consumer, he said, by making ethanol available for Floridians and helping to keep the cost of gasoline down.
Ethanol is a premium liquid renewable fuel derived from grain, sugar and biomass crops and is mixed with gasoline, or used by itself, for fuel.
The president and a press release from his company both mentioned Brazil and their model of ethanol usage.
"We should look at the Brazil model, where ethanol production has allowed Brazilians to completely eliminate the importation of foreign oil altogether," the press release said.
Ethanol paired with the nation's deep-water oil reserves have made it energy independent.
The cars in Brazil use either 100 percent ethanol or gasoline blends that contain between 20 and 25 percent of the fuel, further decreasing the need for oil.
This leads to a large thirst for ethanol, which is taken care of by hundreds plants.
"There are 300 of them in Brazil," Krohn said. "None of them use fossil fuel."
Krohn is referring to ethanol made from corn, which requires fossil fuels to be converted to useable fuel, resulting in a 1.6-to-1 energy balance -- one unit of energy spent to make 1.6 units.
The Highlands county plant will use sweet sorghum and sugar cane, a process that combusts the stalks to produce steam and electricity, Krohn said, resulting in a much more efficient 8-to-1 energy balance.
Brazil has large areas of land available for their 300 plants, with a country of 3.3 million square miles.
Initial production figures from the proposed Highlands County plant are 20 million gallons per year (mmgy) and it will be designed for expansion to 40 mmgy.
To produce the smaller figure of 20 mmgy, 25,000 acres will have to be set aside to grow sugar cane and sweet sorghum.
This is roughly 40 square miles, nearly four times the size of the city of Sebring.
Krohn said most of the growers will be in Highlands County.
"We have worked very hard over the last six months meeting with numerous local growers and developing a grower base," the press release said. "Building relationships with local growers and land owners takes tremendous time, dedication and commitment that is required for the project's success."
The company has selected its top candidates for designing and building the plant, to be the first fuel ethanol plant in the state to use locally grown foodstocks not linked to food use.
Currently, 60 percent of gasoline in America is blended with 10 percent ethanol.