http://www.omaha.com/index.php?u_pg=46&u_sid=2237996Published Thursday
September 7, 2006
Mead's ethanol plant praised
BY BILL HORD
WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER
MEAD, Neb. - An innovative "closed-loop" ethanol plant near Mead was lauded Thursday for its environmental benefits by the head of the Environmental Protection Agency.
EPA Administrator Stephen Johnson said it was no coincidence that he chose the E3 Biofuels plant as the location for an announcement about renewable fuels regulations.
"This is a great success story in the making," Johnson said under a bright sun near a 30,000-head cattle feedlot and a shiny new ethanol plant.
The E3 Biofuels plant is the first in the nation that uses cattle manure to make the gas to fuel the ethanol plant's boilers. In making ethanol, the plant turns out a grain byproduct that is fed back to the cattle.
The plant has begun to make methane gas from the manure and will begin making ethanol next month.
Johnson's trip to Nebraska was more to promote biofuels than to talk about details of regulations. He said Nebraska crop fields that have filled the nation's breadbasket will now also fill fuel tanks.
New regulations will require fuel importers and blenders to document their use of renewable fuels such as corn-based ethanol and soybean-based diesel. The EPA will report annually on how the nation is moving toward the federal requirement that the nation's gasoline supply include 7.5 billion gallons of renewable fuel by 2012.
Farm states, such as Nebraska and Iowa, are experiencing a proliferation of ethanol production. Total use of biofuels is expected to far exceed the 7.5 billion-gallon requirement well before 2012.