This is a good read. It seems that although New York lags behind in terms of biodiesel stations for vehicles, they're way advanced with their bioheat experimentation. Link here.
|
| In Brooklyn, Joseph Ayala pumps used vegetable oil from restaurants. He mixes it with diesel to drive his truck and heat his
home. |
| Mark Lennihan/AP |
|
New Yorkers turning to biodiesel for heat
If the Big Apple's initiative helps reduce emissions, other cities and states may follow suit.
By Ron Scherer
| Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
from the September 18, 2007 edition
New York - Manhattan's Lower East
Side is famous for its pastrami and pickles as well as its rich Jewish
heritage. Now, a small cooperative building in the area is one of the
first places in the city to use a blend of heating oil and biodiesel to
keep residents warm this winter.
In the basement of the former tenement, a boiler is sipping the fuel, which significantly reduces the building's emissions
of soot and carbon dioxide.
"I sleep better at night knowing that we're not polluting the earth as much," says Fred Seiden, a member of the co-op on East
7th Street and the driving force behind the fuel change.
Mr.
Seiden's building joins an increasing number of New York buildings –
perhaps numbering in the thousands by this winter – that are turning to
biodiesel for heating. Starting next year, the city itself has plans to
use a biodiesel blend to heat city-owned buildings. This marks a
potential new role for the cleaner-burning fuel, which is currently
used mainly as a blend with traditional diesel to cut emissions from trucks. If it helps New York clean up its air – third worst in the nation in terms of airborne particulate matter – other cities
such as Boston and Philadelphia may shift over as well, experts say.
"New York is doing it first, and many other states are already looking at it," says John Huber, president of the National
Oilheat Research Alliance in Alexandria, Va. "If it goes smoothly, it will encourage further action."
By
some estimates, New York consumes about 500 million gallons of fuel oil
per year for heating – about 5.3 percent of total US consumption. If
the city successfully moves to a 20 percent blend for biodiesel, that
would account for 100 million gallons. Such an amount is currently
equal to almost 30 percent of national biodiesel production, which has
been doubling and tripling every year.
Biodiesel is typically made from soybeans or waste cooking oil in restaurants. It can be produced domestically. When it is blended with regular oil, it improves the viscosity,
which helps burn the fuel more efficiently and with lower emissions.
A
shift to biodiesel could significantly cut emissions of sulfur oxide
and carbon dioxide, as well as particulate matter, experts of the fuel
say. Some tests show a small increase in nitrogen oxide emissions. "The
net effect is you are getting a break on three of four pollutants,"
says John Nettleton, a biodiesel expert at the Cornell Cooperative
Extension in New York City. "There will be a major benefit in terms of
public health."
New York's wider use of the fuel for heating will receive a major kick-start as the city implements Mayor Michael Bloomberg's environmental vision, called PlaNYC. The city will start to add a 5 percent biodiesel blend to the oil it buys for city-owned buildings next year.
By 2012, it plans to have all its buildings using a 20 percent blend, called B20.
The shift will also vary the city's supplies.
"Fuel diversity is important," says Ariella Rosenberg Maron, who works in Mayor Bloomberg's Office of Long-Term Planning and
Sustainability. "As we become more and more dependent on natural gas, we need to consider ways to mitigate the financial and other impacts of disruptions to our natural-gas supply, such as we experienced during the aftermath of hurricane Katrina."
The
use of biodiesel could also get a major boost from legislation before
the City Council, which would mandate that all fuel-oil users for
heating buy a blend of B20 by 2013. The city has 1 million households
that use heating oil. "This is an opportunity to go after some sizable
clean-air gains," says council member James Gennaro (D) of Queens, who
is sponsoring the bill.
Included in the legislation is a requirement
that the biofuel come from a "sustainable" source. "We don't want
people to clear-cut forests to grow soybeans," says Mr. Gennaro.
Potential suppliers of the fuel are already
gearing up. Metro, a major supplier of fuel oil, has plans to build a
110 million-gallon refinery in Brooklyn for biodiesel. Tri-State
Biodiesel is collecting the waste cooking oil from 700 restaurants,
shipping it out of state for processing and reselling it in the city.
The company has plans for a biodiesel refinery in the Red Hook section
of Brooklyn that will process 3 million gallons a year.
"We will be able to expand [the refinery] if the market bears it," says Brent Baker, president of Tri-State. "We will also
work with our national network to bring in barge loads of biodiesel for winter."
However,
the nascent refineries were planned before Gov. Eliot Spitzer (D)
vetoed legislation that would have extended a bioheat tax credit for
four years. He said the bill was passed by the Legislature outside the
budget process. Without the tax credit, biodiesel can be more expensive
than regular heating oil. "The tax credit did a great job of bridging
the cost gap. Hopefully it has just been taken away temporarily," says
Michael Woloz, a spokesman for the New York Oil Heating Association.
The loss of the tax credit was a surprise to
Seiden at the co-op. He quickly got on the phone to call the
politicians who sponsored the legislation. "I hope something can be
worked out after it's reintroduced later this year," he says. "It would
be heartbreaking to go back to the old polluting junk."