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  • Jatropha curcushas: the energy plant

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    Poison plant could help to cure the planet

    The jatropha bush seems an unlikely prize in the hunt for alternative energy, being an ugly, fast-growing and poisonous weed. Hitherto, its use to humanity has principally been as a remedy for constipation. Very soon, however, it may be powering your car.

    Almost overnight, the unloved Jatropha curcushas become an agricultural and economic celebrity, with the discovery that it may be the ideal biofuel crop, an alternative to fossil fuels for a world dangerously dependent on oil supplies and deeply alarmed by the effects of global warming.

    The hardy jatropha, resilient to pests and resistant to drought, produces seeds with up to 40 per cent oil content. When the seeds are crushed, the resulting jatropha oil can be burnt in a standard diesel car, while the residue can also be processed into biomass to power electricity plants.

    As the search for alternative energy sources gathers pace and urgency, the jatropha has provoked something like a gold rush. Last week BP announced that it was investing almost £32 million in a jatropha joint venture with the British biofuels company D1 Oils.

    Even Bob Geldof has stamped his cachet on jatropha, by becoming a special adviser to Helius Energy, a British company developing the use of jatropha as an alternative to fossil fuels. Lex Worrall, its chief executive, says: “Every hectare can produce 2.7 tonnes of oil and about 4 tonnes of biomass. Every 8,000 hectares of the plant can run a 1.5 megawatt station, enough to power 2,500 homes.”


    Jatropha grows in tropical and subtropical climates. Whereas other feed-stocks for biofuel, such as palm oil, rape seed oil or corn for ethanol, require reasonable soils on which other crops might be grown, jatropha is a tough survivor prepared to put down roots almost anywhere.

    Scientists say that it can grow in the poorest wasteland, generating topsoil and helping to stall erosion, but also absorbing carbon dioxide as it grows, thus making it carbon-neutral even when burnt. A jatropha bush can live for up to 50 years, producing oil in its second year of growth, and survive up to three years of consecutive drought.

    In India about 11 million hectares have been identified as potential land on which to grow jatropha. The first jatropha-fuelled power station is expected to begin supplying electricity in Swaziland in three years. Meanwhile, companies from Europe and India have begun buying up land in Africa as potential jatropha plantations.

    Jatropha plantations have been laid out on either side of the railway between Bombay and Delhi, and the train is said to run on more than 15 per cent biofuel. Backers say that the plant can produce four times more fuel per hectare than soya, and ten times more than corn. “Those who are working with jatropha,” Sanju Khan, a site manager for D1 Oils, told the BBC, “are working with the new generation crop, developing a crop from a wild plant — which is hugely exciting.”

    Jatropha, a native of Central America, was brought to Europe by Portuguese explorers in the 16th century and has since spread worldwide, even though, until recently, it had few uses: malaria treatment, a windbreak for animals, live fencing and candle-mak-ing. An ingredient in folk remedies around the world, it earned the nickname “physic nut”, but its sap is a skin irritant, and ingesting three untreated seeds can kill a person.

    Jatropha has also found a strong supporter in Sir Nicholas Stern, the government economist who emphasised the dangers of global warming in a report this year. He recently advised South Africa to “look for biofuel technologies that can be grown on marginal land, perhaps jatropha”.

    However, some fear that in areas dependent on subsistence farming it could force out food crops, increasing the risk of famine.

    Some countries are also cautious for other reasons: last year Western Australia banned the plant as invasive and highly toxic to people and animals.

    Yet a combination of economic, climatic and political factors have made the search for a more effective biofuel a priority among energy companies. New regulations in Britain require that biofuels comprise 5 per cent of the transport fuel mix by 2010, and the EU has mandated that by 2020 all cars must run on 20 per cent biodiesel. Biodiesel reduces carbon dioxide emissions by nearly 80 per cent compared with petroleum diesel, according to the US Energy Department.

    Under the deal between BP and D1, £80 million will be invested in jatropha over the next five years, with plantations in India, southern Africa and SouthEast Asia. There are no exact figures for the amount of land already under jatropha cultivation, but the area is expanding fast. China is planning an 80,000-acre plantation in Sichuan, and the BPD1 team hopes to have a million hectares under cultivation over the next four years.

    Jatropha has long been prized for its medicinal qualities. Now it might just help to cure the planet.

    - D1 Oils, the UK company leading the jatropha revolution, is growing 430,000 acres of the plant to feed its biodiesel operation on Teesside — 44,000 acres more than three months ago, after a huge planting programme in India. It has also planted two 1,235-acre trial sites this year in West Java, Indonesia. If successful, these will become a 25,000-acre plantation. Elloitt Mannis, the chief executive, says that the aim is to develop energy “from the earth to the engine”.

    Jatropha: costs and benefits

    - Jatropha needs at least 600mm (23in) of rain a year to thrive. However, it can survive three consecutive years of drought by dropping its leaves

    - It is excellent at preventing soil erosion, and the leaves that it drops act as soil-enriching mulch

    - The plant prefers alkaline soils

    - The cost of 1,000 jatropha saplings (enough for one acre) in Pakistan is about £50, or 5p each

    - The cost of 1kg of jatropha seeds in India is the equivalent of about 7p. Each jatropha seedling should be given an area two metres square.

    - 20 per cent of seedlings planted will not survive

    - Jatropha seedlings yield seeds in the first year after plantation
    Last edited by Dr Mordrid; 28 July 2007, 16:21.
    Dr. Mordrid
    ----------------------------
    An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

    I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

  • #2
    Cool.
    “Inside every sane person there’s a madman struggling to get out”
    –The Light Fantastic, Terry Pratchett

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    • #3
      Shiny!

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      • #4
        Great...if!

        What worries me about biofuels is the fact that they are often (not always) very costly environmentally and economically. The carbon emissions from the fuel used to harvest them, transport them to a processing factory and the actual processing itself is often more than the carbon emissions saved by using the processed fuel, not counting the transport of the finished fuel. The cost of such fuels is often higher than fossil fuels. Crude palm oil, for example, sells for about $750/tonne CIF US port and requires processing at ~$400/t into biodiesel. That works out at ~$4.40/US gal cost price. Other oils may be somewhat cheaper, but, without subsidies, I don't see it being a reality on more than a niche scale.
        Brian (the devil incarnate)

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        • #5
          If it means we need less petrol, I'm all for it. Both envoronmentally as well (if not more) politically.
          "For every action, there is an equal and opposite criticism."

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          • #6
            You didn't get what I was saying. If you need more petrol to harvest, transport and process it than it saves, what's the point? This is often the case with biofuels.
            Brian (the devil incarnate)

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            • #7
              No Mr BE the Harvester also runs on BIo Fuels.
              Chief Lemon Buyer no more Linux sucks but not as much
              Weather nut and sad git.

              My Weather Page

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              • #8
                PIT is correct; harvesters are diesels so they could run off the oil they're harvesting. The only extra would be a few ounces/tank of additives (commercially available today) that are necessary in all diesels.

                This would be akin to those people that run their diesels on existing vegetable oils. In fact in a Mythbusters episode 2 years ago they installed fuel flow meters etc. and determined that veggie oil got several MPG more than conventional diesel fuel in an unmodified pickup.
                Last edited by Dr Mordrid; 29 July 2007, 10:54.
                Dr. Mordrid
                ----------------------------
                An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

                I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by The PIT View Post
                  No Mr BE the Harvester also runs on BIo Fuels.
                  By the time the stuff is harvested in India, transported, processed, transported to the US, the tanks would be all but dry, if they had to use the harvested biofuel for all those jobs. Believe me, this is a real problem, a very real problem. A gasification plant running on coppice wood in the UK ended up with a negative energy balance sheet. I think the same happened with a gasification plant using turkey/chicken feathers and heads in Norfolk: this was opened with a great fanfare about 4 years ago, but is now keeping a very low profile.

                  Similarly, LNG tankers have traditionally run on the boil-off from their tanks. The latest large vessels cannot: they use heavy fuel oil. Probably the boil-off is used for generating the electricity the ship needs.
                  Brian (the devil incarnate)

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                  • #10
                    Who says we won't grow much of our own in portions of the south and southwest??
                    Dr. Mordrid
                    ----------------------------
                    An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

                    I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Or turn those Central American deserts into oil fields with some good irrigation.
                      “Inside every sane person there’s a madman struggling to get out”
                      –The Light Fantastic, Terry Pratchett

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                      • #12
                        Even irrigation sucks up energy, assuming the water is available. As it is, you would have to sacrifice other water uses to do it. The following lists the OECD per capita annual consumption of water in m3. When highly developed countries like Denmark, Luxembourg, UK, Switzerland etc. can manage with only a tiny fraction of what the USA uses, it would seem to indicate that the US's water resources, which are very lacking in the S/SW, are probably not being put to their best use.

                        Australia 1 300
                        Austria 440
                        Belgium 730
                        Canada 1 420
                        Czech Republic 190
                        Denmark 130
                        Finland 450
                        France 530
                        Germany 460
                        Greece 830
                        Hungary 550
                        Iceland 540
                        Ireland 330
                        Italy 980
                        Japan 680
                        Korea 560
                        Luxembourg 140
                        Mexico 730
                        Netherlands 560
                        New Zealand 560
                        Norway 550
                        Poland 300
                        Portugal 1 090
                        Slovak Republic 200
                        Spain 960
                        Sweden 300
                        Switzerland 350
                        Turkey 580
                        United Kingdom 230
                        United States 1 730
                        OECD total 920

                        As a point of comparison, the WHO guideline on minimum water use is 100 l/day = 36.5 m3/year and over 50% of the world's population don't have this.
                        Brian (the devil incarnate)

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                        • #13
                          Did a rough calculation..

                          Global oil consumption is 80 million barrels a day.

                          Jatropha should produce 2000 barrels a year per sq mile.

                          The amount of land area is 14.6 million square miles to meet oil consumption requirements.

                          Surface area of land on earth is 45 million sq miles.

                          Phew think we are gonna be alright
                          ______________________________
                          Nothing is impossible, some things are just unlikely.

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                          • #14
                            Yup! Provided we don't eat!
                            Brian (the devil incarnate)

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