Cool. It might hurt local homebrewers, but this is the kind of example that could lead other municipalities to get behind making their own biodiesel.
Gadsden latest Alabama city turning to grease for biodiesel fuel
| 1/8/2008, 11:48 a.m. CST
The Associated Press | |
|
GADSDEN, Ala. (AP) — Gadsden is set to become the latest Alabama city to
participate in a biofuel program that turns used grease and
oil into biodiesel.
The city's Fleet Management Department's
"Waste to Fuel" campaign starts next month and
officials are asking restaurants and residents to turn in
used cooking oil that will be converted to fuel for some of
the departments diesel vehicles.
Costs for producing the fuel are considerably cheaper than
the diesel fuel now used by the vehicles. City officials
also hope the program will cure some of the Gadsden Water
Works and Sewer Board's problems with clogged pipes by
encouraging people to recycle grease instead of pouring it
down drains.
"So far everything I'm hearing is positive,"
Jack Rutledge, manager of the water and sewer board, said
Tuesday. "I think people want to do the right thing
environmentally and this is kind of a guide for them."
Rutledge said he has talked to officials with the city of
Daphne, which has a similar program. Daphne officials said
it has had an impact on sewer blockages there.
"It takes something that has given us a headache and
turns it into something that will solve a headache — the
cost of what diesel fuel is starting to get," he said.
Auburn University is sponsoring the program and gave Gadsden
the $14,000 worth of necessary equipment, which will produce
about 55 gallons of fuel in eight hours.
Greg Noah, fleet management superintendent, told The Gadsden
Times that gallon jugs to collect the oil will be ordered
this week and should be delivered by the end of the month.
The city will spend about 70 cents a gallon to produce its
own diesel fuel — fleet manager Jim Barker said they're
currently paying $2.75 a gallon for diesel fuel.
"They have a little scent to them," Noah said of
the oil fuel. "They have a little french fry scent. It
will smell like somebody cooking in the house."
But he quickly added, "It smells better than diesel fumes."
Hoover's biodiesel recycling program, which began with
restaurants in March, was expanded to residents in November
and has been well received, said David Lindon, fleet manager
director for Hoover.
The city collected about 350 gallons of cooking oil from
residents in November and got about 200 gallons in December.
Officials expect that amount to increase in January as
residents turn in oil used to fry turkeys during the holidays.
Lindon said it costs the city 70 cents to $1 per gallon to
produce the fuel, depending on the cost of methanol. He said
after buying the equipment used to make the diesel fuel, the
program is in the black and also is helping the city's
sewer system and keeping oil out of the landfill.
The city will average getting about 500 gallons of oil a
month from restaurants, he said.
Lindon said homeowners either will pour used oil in their
backyards, which causes problems by attracting animals; pour
it in the garbage, which benefits no one; or pour it down a
drain, which causes clogs and costs the city money in the
form of equipment and manpower to unclog drains or pipes.
Rutledge, with Gadsden's sewer board, said people with
small amounts of oil that won't be donated should seal
it in jars and put it with their solid garbage or mix it
with kitty litter or other absorbent materials.
"Never put it in your pipes," he said.
"It's going to cause us problems and you problems."