June 27, 2005 |
A new $157 million dollar ethanol production facility called Northeast
Biofuels (NEB) will be one of the largest ethanol producers in the nation and
part of a growing shift in the biofuels industry beyond the traditional Midwest.
Ethanol has little trouble gaining support in the Midwest states where the corn
to manufacture it is plentiful. This sentiment, however, has a tendency to
dissipate as you look further to either coast where the economic and political
benefits of the production cycle can be lost.
Developers and the project's supporters alike believe the new facility, located
at the Riverview Business Park, will be a major part of ethanol's expansion
beyond the Midwest corn-states. NEB estimates to use 41 million bushels of corn,
much of it to be purchased from New York farmers, to produce 100 million gallons
of ethanol a year. The ethanol will be marketed for use primarily in New York
State and the Northeast as a clean burning, oil saving gasoline additive.
The principals of NEB and Riverview are Central New York natives and long time
businessmen Eric Will and Thomas Denney. Will and Denney purchased the 420 acre,
1.2 million square foot former Miller complex four years ago. They didn't buy
the facility planning on building an ethanol production facility. Instead, they
bought the expansive property as an investment but soon realized its potential.
"After taking an audit of the park's assets, particularly the old Miller
brewing infrastructure, we zeroed in on ethanol and biofuels production as
possible use," Will said.
Much of the brewery's beer brewing equipment and structures could easily be
retooled for ethanol production. The developers were also able to retain all the
facility's permits from its days as an active brewery. This greatly accelerates
their construction cycle.
At a press event last week, Governor George E. Pataki and Senator Jim Wright
announced that New York state would provide $4 million toward the $153 million
project.
"A brewery which for 11 years has essentially sat empty will again be
operational, brewing ethanol instead of beer," Governor Pataki said.
"This project will reinforce New York State's position as a national leader
in advancing both the renewable resources and biofuels industries and at the
same time."
The Governor also announced that two of NEB's major partner-suppliers, Perdue
Farms and BOC Gases, will be making investments. Perdue Farms will facilitate
the acquisition of corn for NEB, by locating a grain division at Riverview. In
addition to corn origination, Perdue will also market distiller's dried grains (DDG's),
one of the co-products of the ethanol production process, as a nutritional
supplement for dairy and other livestock.
"Our intent is to buy a significant amount of the grain for this venture
from New York farmers, which will grow the market for local agriculture,"
Chairman and CEO of Perdue Farms Jim Perdue. "Our involvement in renewable
fuels is part of our company's commitment to environmental stewardship."
Perdue Farms was the first major poultry companies to develop a large-scale
alternative use for poultry litter through our organic fertilizer business
BOC Gases, will build a liquefaction plant at Riverview to process carbon
dioxide, another corn-to-ethanol co-product. When NEB hits full capacity of 100
million gallons of ethanol per year, the plant will produce one of the largest
streams of carbon dioxide in the east.
NEB, Perdue and BOC will employ an estimated 100 workers, while over 1,000
in-direct jobs are projected to be created in the agriculture and transportation
sectors alone. More than 300 will be employed during the 15 month construction
and renovation cycle.
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