Guess the folks in the Pacific Northwest are doing something right if they're using that much WVO to make biodiesel.
(Link)
Biodiesel craze turns fryer grease to gold
| 11/18/2007, 12:00 p.m. PST By LIBBY TUCKER
The Associated Press | |
|
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — They're calling it the grease wars.
Competition for used cooking oil among grease haulers has
intensified as biodiesel demand grows, and some Portland
restaurants that once paid to have their fatty leftovers
carted away are now charging collectors for the valuable oil.
Recycled cooking oil has traditionally been sold for use in
cattle feed and cosmetics. But the segment going to biofuels
has grown in recent years to account for about 20 percent of
the used oil market, said Tyson Keever, co-founder of
Sequential Pacific Biofuels, the state's largest
manufacturer of biodiesel.
Portland's oil peddlers are now fighting over grease
worth as much as $1.20 a gallon.
"You have processors now in the metro area who are
looking at using that grease for biodiesel primarily,"
said Mike McCallum, president and CEO of the Oregon
Restaurant Association. "There are restaurants who are
being solicited for the use of the grease and are getting
some money for it."
The result in the long run may be more expensive biodiesel at
the pump.
"It's going to drive the cost of biodiesel
sky-high," said Loren Fennell, founder of the
Alternative Energy Coalition, who collected used oil for
years for Portland biodiesel cooperatives before quitting
due to the increased competition.
"I don't know how people can (collect) it by
buckets or barrels any more," he said.
Used cooking oil is the cheapest and most sustainable way to
make biodiesel because no new resources are used in growing
feedstock, according to a new biofuels report by the Oregon
Environmental Council.
But the region's supply of fryer grease is limited. Each
Oregonian contributes about a gallon of used cooking oil a
year to the grease market, according to Sequential Pacific.
If all the used grease went to biodiesel production, the
state's producers would have only half of what they
need to meet demand for the fuel.
Restaurants, the biggest source of used cooking oil, get rid
of about 40 gallons of grease per month, according to
Sequential Pacific. And large restaurant chains represent
the choicest source of used oil for grease peddlers because
the cost of collection is lower per gallon.
"You've had a big move of people collecting waste
grease offering to pay," said Mark Fitz, operations
manager of StarOil Co. "It's not a friendly environment."
Beaverton-based Shari's, a chain of 99 restaurants in
three states, has several collectors competing for the used
oil from its fryers, said David Archer, a Shari's
spokesman. After a switch to trans-fat-free oils due to
recent health concerns, Shari's "seized the
opportunity" to sell its used oil to be turned into
biodiesel, he said.
"Adding trans-fat-free oil has a higher cost, so if you
can make some of that cost back ... it's a nice
incentive there," Archer said.
Smaller restaurants, however, still mostly rely on backyard
biodiesel producers to pick up their used oil and
haven't found the need to charge for the low price
they'd get.
"I have so much oil," said David MacKay, owner of a
Northeast Portland fish house, Halibut's. "If they
don't take it, I'll dump it on the grass."
That restaurants can charge for grease collection signals the
higher commodity price of yellow grease, the purified
version of used cooking oil, said Tom Cook, president of the
National Renderers Association. The rising demand for
biofuel feedstock, such as corn and canola, has led to a
tighter national vegetable oil market, he said, and trickles
down to the waste oil demand as well.
And Portland restaurants can expect to get paid for their
waste grease in the future as the market tightens.
"That's actually fairly common for there to be a
fee," said Jenna Higgins, a spokeswoman for the
National Biodiesel Board in Missouri. "There's
always been a use for recycled cooking oil, and biodiesel is
another use. More places charge to pick it up than not"
across the country.
On the Net:
Sequential Pacific Biofuels: http://www.sqbiofuels.com/
Oregon Restaurant Association: http://www.ora.org/
lternative Energy Coalition: http://www.oregonbiodieselworkshop.com/
National Renderers Association: http://www.renderers.org/
National Biodiesel Board: http://www.biodiesel.org/
Oregon Environmental Council: http://www.oeconline.org/