BIODISEL FACTS: All You Need To Know

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First Posted: 06-10-09 01:50 PM   |   Updated: 07-11-09 05:12 AM

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Biodiesel

The following is a guest post by Chelsea Green's Makenna Goodman:

I remember a time when defenseless kids with hippie moms got made fun of for using wax sandwich bags (ehem). I remember a time when it was considered uncool to be packing carrot sticks in your tote bag. When yoga was what the weird naked guys did at the hot springs in Ouray, Colorado; you know downward-facing dogs splayed out by the pool. I remember a time, in other words, when trendy things used to be not-trendy. Like BIODIESEL. The wave of the future.

You've seen it station wagons clanking around town with a sign on the back window that says, "This Vehicle Runs on Veggie Oil I'm Awesome." You probably drive by and think: Damn. Those hippies are self-important, but I'm repressing the fact that I want to be just like them. What is wrong with me? But here's the first thing you should know about biodiesel: It's not just white people with dreads who use vegetable oil to run their cars. It's a movement. Dude, my boss does it.

Know this:
*Biodiesel can be made from virtually any vegetable oil
*It can be used in any modern diesel engine
*It's America's fastest growing alternative fuel

But really, biodiesel is a tricky thing to understand, which is why many people just plain don't. Consider it worth your while to get versed on biodiesel, from the experts. And everything you need to know, Greg Pahl will tell you. He's the author of Biodiesel: Growing a New Energy Economy and The Citizen-Powered Energy Handbook: Community Solutions to a Global Crisis and knows the deal.

The following is an excerpt from The Citizen-Powered Energy Handbook: Community Solutions to a Global Crisis by Greg Pahl. It has been adapted for the Web.

Biodiesel 101

Biodiesel, a diverse group of diesel-like fuels, can be easily made through a simple chemical process known as transesterification from virtually any vegetable oil, including (but not limited to) soy, corn, rapeseed (canola), cottonseed, peanut, sunflower, mustard seed, and hemp. But biodiesel can also be made from recycled cooking oil (referred to as "yellow grease" in the rendering industry) or animal fats. One Vietnamese catfish processor is even using fish fat as a biofuel feedstock.30 There have even been some promising experiments with the use of algae as a biodiesel feedstock. As long as the resulting fuel meets the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) biodiesel standard (D-6751), it's considered biodiesel in the United States, regardless of the feedstock used in its manufacture (in Europe, the standard is EN 14214). And the process is so simple that biodiesel can be made by virtually anyone, although the chemicals required (usually lye and methanol) are hazardous, and need to be handled with extreme caution.

Simply stated, here is how biodiesel is made. The transesterification process is initiated by adding carefully measured amounts of alcohol (methanol) mixed with a catalyst (sodium hydroxide lye the same chemical used to unclog kitchen or bathroom drains) to the vegetable oil. The mixture is stirred or agitated (and sometimes heated) for a specific length of time. If used cooking oil is the feedstock, the process requires a bit more testing, lye, and filtration, but is otherwise essentially the same. During the mixing, the oil molecules are split or "cracked" and the methyl esters (biodiesel) rise to the top of the settling/mixing tank, while the glycerin and catalyst settle to the bottom. After about eight hours, the glycerin and catalyst are drawn off the bottom, leaving biodiesel in the tank. The whole idea of the process is to remove the thick, sticky glycerin from the vegetable oil, so the remaining biodiesel will flow easily and combust properly in a modern diesel engine without leaving damaging deposits inside the engine.

In most cases the biodiesel needs to be washed with water to remove any remaining traces of alcohol, catalyst, and glycerin. In this procedure, water is mixed with the biodiesel, allowed to settle out for several days, and then removed. The wash process can be repeated if needed, but it is time-consuming. Not everyone agrees on whether the water wash is necessary. A few smaller producers who are making biodiesel for themselves skip the process, while commercial producers usually must do it to meet industry standards. In the case of some larger, more sophisticated manufacturing facilities, the transesterification process itself is so carefully controlled and refined that the water wash is not needed. There are, of course, quite a few technical variations on this entire process for large-scale industrial operations, but the general transesterification procedure is similar.31

As the amount of biodiesel being produced grows exponentially, the quantities of glycerin by-product grows apace. Glycerin has always been a niche market that is highly sensitive to oversupply, and the recent exponential growth of this commodity as a result of biodiesel production has caused the world glycerin market to collapse. As a result, traditional glycerin manufacturing plants around the world have been closing, while new ones that use glycerin as feedstocks for epoxy resins, propylene glycol, and other products have been opening. Recently, glycerin has even been used by one California company, InnovaTek Inc., as a source for the production of hydrogen.32 Trying to develop new uses for glycerin has been keeping a lot of people awake at night.


Notes

  1. "Vietnam firm to make biofuel from catfish fat," Reuters, July 4, 2006, http://www.planetark.com/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/37105/story.htm.
  2. This description of biodiesel basics and some of the other biodiesel-related material that follows is adapted from my Biodiesel: Growing a New Energy Economy.
  3. InnovaTek, "InnovaTek Inc. and Seattle BioFuels, Inc. announce the first successful production of hydrogen from 100% biodiesel in a microchannel steam reformer," March 14, 2006, http://www.tekkie.com/news/press_release_3-14-06.htm.
The following is a guest post by Chelsea Green's Makenna Goodman: I remember a time when defenseless kids with hippie moms got made fun of for using wax sandwich bags (ehem). I remember a time when ...
The following is a guest post by Chelsea Green's Makenna Goodman: I remember a time when defenseless kids with hippie moms got made fun of for using wax sandwich bags (ehem). I remember a time when ...
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- Jeffatoms I'm a Fan of Jeffatoms 3 fans permalink

I'm not sure how much credibility to put in this "Fact sheet" when the primary word in the title, "Biodiesel" is misspelled as "Biodisel" and it appears that the car in the photo is not a biodiesel car, but rather an ethanol car. Or is it just me to be so pricky as to expect lead stories to use spellchecker and other appropriate supporting references?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:30 PM on 07/06/2009
- RJII I'm a Fan of RJII 78 fans permalink
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try focusing more on the contend... i mean content.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:30 PM on 07/10/2009
- Jolimont I'm a Fan of Jolimont 2 fans permalink

Doesn't sound like something one could do at home, that's too bad.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:16 AM on 07/06/2009
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Beg pardon, but I've made small quantities of biodiesel with a two liter Pepsi bottle, a pinch of Red Devil Lye and a couple capfuls of HEET gas treatment in the presence of onlookers inside of twenty minutes, and while the suburban yokels stood slack-jawed I've poured it into the empty tank of my partner's pickup truck and driven away after collecting the wagers that I couldn't do it.
If you'd like I will arrange a demonstration - just be sure to bring some of that "foldin money".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:23 AM on 07/07/2009
- RJII I'm a Fan of RJII 78 fans permalink
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actually i was thinking the opposite. just wondering how much is needed to drive around town

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:31 PM on 07/10/2009
- mazzetta I'm a Fan of mazzetta 10 fans permalink
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by the way, unless you burn oil there's no "zero emission" or any reduction in carbon emissions

more, in Europe many people uses various oils to run their diesel cars, but not -all- the diesel engines survived the attempts, resulting in some bloodbath, especially in new vehicles without any firm coverage for improper fuel use

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:43 PM on 07/05/2009
- o4tuna I'm a Fan of o4tuna 13 fans permalink

There are a lot of issues, some technical, some economic, some political, with bio fuels. The issues are too many to list here. I was all hellbent on bio fuels when i first heard about them. But, the more I read about them, the more these issues came out. These issues will have to be resolved before bio fuels become a serious replacement for crude oil based products. Not saying they can't. Just saying that there are problems that have to be resolved.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:23 AM on 07/04/2009
- iblogleft I'm a Fan of iblogleft 88 fans permalink
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By the way, the diesel engine was originally designed to run on hemp oil.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:32 PM on 07/03/2009
- iblogleft I'm a Fan of iblogleft 88 fans permalink
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This is the main reason Hemp needs to be a legal crop in the U.S.

Imagine for a minute, all of our heavy trucks and diesel trains running bio diesel from a non food crop. Talk about carbon reduction. Conversion would be cheap, crops started immediately, and in 5 years we would reduce carbon emissions by 25%, and oil imports by 30%.

Must make too much sense, or take away someones golden goose.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:32 PM on 07/03/2009
- DMSmith I'm a Fan of DMSmith 17 fans permalink

I bought a used Mercedes diesel specifically to run on bio-diesel. Best car I've ever owned, and the cheapest to run. I pay more for the bio than I would for petro diesel, but I wanted not to use petroleum.
My car runs better - much better - on bio-diesel than on petro. It's faster off the line, top speed is higher, and it runs much more smoothly. It's the best fuel I've ever used. I can mix petro with it if I need to. In addition, it's safe and legal to store at home, so I keep about 5 5-gallon bottles at home to refill my tank easily. It's wonderful!!!
And, I generally use no petroleum / gas at all for my car.
Why aren't we all doing this??

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:31 AM on 07/02/2009
- American04 I'm a Fan of American04 3 fans permalink

Here are the videos of Vehicles Running On Green Fuels”, from algae synthetic diesel) and other biomass…

http://algae.tcoalternativefuels.com/category/video

Sometime in October 2008 they few an air ship using the algae synthetic diesel, there is video on-line. There was a republican senator that showed up for the demonstration, not a single news report was done on this historic event (amazing - shocking).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:01 PM on 06/29/2009
- Y3rMawm I'm a Fan of Y3rMawm 13 fans permalink

Growing food to burn it, to get yet more food (with or without salmonella or e. coli) 1500 miles to our tables. That makes sense.

BioD seems to make more sense than Ethanol, which requires far more energy input to refine than the final product produces, but neither are a panacea. In the end we must solve these problems with local solutions. That is the only answer.

That Lola is in fact diesel powered.
http://wheels.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/05/21/veggie-racecar-hits-130-mph/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:08 PM on 06/29/2009
- katooom I'm a Fan of katooom 22 fans permalink
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Thx for the link, I stand corrected. Glad to see the Lola is a diesel. Diesel makes much much more sense than eth.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:32 PM on 06/29/2009
- RJII I'm a Fan of RJII 78 fans permalink
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jatropha isn't a food.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:34 PM on 07/10/2009
- katooom I'm a Fan of katooom 22 fans permalink
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Uh, that Lola in the picture runs on ethanol, not biodiesel.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:01 AM on 06/29/2009
- atexasdem I'm a Fan of atexasdem 17 fans permalink

We as a nation are going through an energy revolution. We finally have realized that 'buisness as usual" won't work, We send billions daily to countries that don't like us for fuel. Part of a revolution is trying new things. Some will work, some will not. Bio diesel might work, ethanol, might work but each has other issues. I think we can all safely say that the republican mantra of "drill baby drill" won't work. There are only so many dead dynasours and their getting harder and harder to find. In the long term our "energy revolution" is a good thing. We are going to have to look at energy in a whole new light with no one magic answer.As with any revolution it's going to hurt for a while. This is as much a revolution as the industrial revolution when horse power changed to steam power. Those who fought that revolution obviously lost. Those who fight this revolution will lose too. Lets work with wind, water, solar, bio diesel, ethanol, natural gas, methane.
We need to embrace it, experiment, try differant things. Some will work out, some won't. That's the nature of a revolution.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:34 PM on 06/17/2009
- dieselis I'm a Fan of dieselis 12 fans permalink

so the price of food going up because of e85 production was just another price gouging hoax. greed is taking us down.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:25 AM on 06/17/2009

You don't need to add all those dangerous chemicals if you just filter the waste vegetable oil then use an internal heater to get it to the consistency of regular diesel fuel. This only works in older diesel models.

My buddy drove a 98 jetta with French fry grease in the dead of Cleveland winter. He used tube socks for the filter!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:17 AM on 06/12/2009
- SARGE1 I'm a Fan of SARGE1 31 fans permalink
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Food vs Fuel

American's could do alot less Food My Friends so stop falling victim to this Myth especially when Last Year OPEC entered the Food Commodities Market, I wonder why to push this Food vs Food Myth by driving up Food prices !

"America Is Most Obese Country"

34 percent of Americans are obese, meaning they have a BMI, or Body Mass Index, over 25
http://lifestyle.in.msn.com/health/article.aspx?cp-documentid=1501507

Food is Becoming The New Oil, OPEC Shows The Way as Grain Prices Reach New Heights
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/raymond-j-learsy/food-is-becoming-the-new-_b_88666.html?show_comment_id=11695254

But doesn't’t devoting farmland to fuel mean there is less land available for food production? Not to any significant extent because we live in a country where there is so much arable land that for years the government has been paying farmers not to farm all of it
What’s more, in other parts of the world – Latin America and Africa, for example -- there are vast expanses of land that can be sown (excluding rain forests and critical habitat) -- if farmers have the tools.


Don't Be Fooled Away From Bio-Fuels Can't You See It Is A Trick The Oil Power Brokers Are Playing? They Want To Place This Food vs Fuel and Environment Impact False Flag Up. To Paint Bio-Fuels As Bad.

-Sarge

Put The Fat In Your Fuel Tank Not Your Fat Butt!

-Sarge

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:51 PM on 06/11/2009
- research I'm a Fan of research 282 fans permalink

Sarge see my response below. BioFuels are great, but isn't it better to use the crop land for food clothing and wood.....Then BioChar it into energy fuel and carbon negative Bio Charcoal?

Then ALL crop land, forests and grazing land output eventually ends up as energy, fuel and BioChar.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:45 PM on 06/11/2009
- robbrian I'm a Fan of robbrian 8 fans permalink
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Sarge,

Check out the N. Dakota farmers issue with the DEA over the DEA's resistance to issue permits for the cultivation of industrial hemp. If the Obama "Change That Matters" machine (lol) is worth anything it will get the DEA to cease and desist. Canada is producing exports made from hemp to the US cutting out a great source of income for our farmers.

One acre of industrial hemp produces at least 300 gallons of fuel. The US could cultivate half of the aerable land in the USDA acerage-set-aside program and produce enough fuel to power significant portions of Americ's transportation needs, reducing the cost of imports, and contributiung to clean air goals.

But first, the troglodytes at the DEA and the new Drug Czar have to be reigned in by Mr. "Change That Matters."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:47 AM on 06/27/2009
- SARGE1 I'm a Fan of SARGE1 31 fans permalink
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There is no Shortage of Food in America Period !

America is the Most Obese Country in the World, No one is fighting for Food in America at all, There is enough Fat in Americans Bodies that a Average American Family could power their Car for 3 Days off of it !

-Sarge

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:14 PM on 06/11/2009
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