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Energy and Operating Efficiencies In Dry-Mill Ethanol Production Governors’ Ethanol Coalition February, 2007 Greg Krissek, Governmental Affairs Director
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Modern Era of Dry Mill Ethanol Production has Multiple Focuses ● Ethanol historically has been a value-added product Distilleries and food- grade markets 1980s Last time for extender market 1990s Oxygenate Octane enhancer Education needed at the pump
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2000s Era of Commodity Production and Fuel Extender
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Will Only Continue with Projected Ethanol Production Growth in the U.S. 2006 = 18% US Corn Crop Can replace ~4% gasoline Average growth = 75 million gal/yr Average growth = 720 million gal/yr End of 2007 expect 8.2 Billion gallons capacity = 30% US corn crop US Fuel Ethanol Capacity
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CO 2 Alpha-Amylase and Glucoamylase Fermenter “Liquefaction” Grain Kernels Grind Grain Distillation DDGS Only C6 Sugars Ethanol Grain Fermentation Today ● Well developed process ● Over 25 years of history ● High efficiency today, refined over time ● Fermentation natural and easy C6 sugars
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Historical Energy Usage Dry-Mill Thermal Energy Use per Gallon of Ethanol and Ethanol Yield per Bushel Source: Clean Fuels Development Coalition
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Dry-Mill Ethanol Plants ● Reuse of energy within plant Heat exchangers are now common Heat tolerant yeast Less energy loss to cooling tower; this energy makes it to beer column Improved fermentation by control of lactic/acetic acid, methanator cushion Fewer upsets – increased time efficiency Routing dryer particulate to thermal oxidizer led to energy gain Increased number of plants equates to increased learning opportunities
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ICM Process Guarantees ● Ethanol – 2.80 denatured gallons per bushel #2 yellow dent corn ● Natural Gas – 34,000 BTU per denatured gallon of ethanol (24,000 with DWGS) ● Electrical Usage – 0.75 kW per denatured gallon per hour ● Emissions compliance – Guaranteed United Wisconsin Grain Producers Friesland, WI
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Efficiencies Gained ● Overall design and piping in the plant ● Heat capture and recycling in equipment Air-to-air heat exchanger ● Water treatment and capture of methane as energy source ● Emissions containment and energy center integration ● Enzymes tolerate higher pH, reducing acid needs ● Molecular sieves replaced: Grit columns Azeotropic systems Eliminate benzene & isopropyl ether
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Holistic View of the Process and Ethanol Plant ● Marketplace has reacted favorably to overall plant reliability and financial viability ● Every incremental energy savings and efficiency gain within each part of the production process becomes very important in a commodity business East Kansas Agri Energy Garnett, KS
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Energy Prices Lead Plant Designers to Evaluate Alternative Energy Sources ● Natural Gas ● Coal ● Biomass Ag Residue Solid waste Wood chips ● Waste steam … but reliability, consistent availability, conversion technology and cost are crucial
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Energy Prices Lead Plant Owners and Operators to Optimize Use ● 30,000 BTU per gallon of ethanol achievable with good management
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New Technologies for Energy are Coming Forward ● Integrating technologies in the process but understanding impacts Steam tube dryers Co-product needs Turbines Supply up to one-third electricity needs if generating needs and cost analysis (capital and operating) make sense Gasifiers Corn fractionation Ultra-filtration of thin stillage/oil separation Reuse of local effluent water & RO/cooling tower blow down
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CO 2 Cellulose Enzymes Fermenter Saccharification Fibrous Crop Pretreatment Distillation water Lignin C5 & C6 Sugars Ethanol & other fermentation products Thermal/Sugar Biorefinery Gasifier Syngas Gas Cleaning Catalytic Reactor Biobased fuels Air CO 2 Lignin gasified to CO and H 2 Heat
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Financial Health of the Industry Attracts After-Market Services ● Banks today view little technology risk (vs. 1980s) ● Automation and optimization vendors ● Plant and company scale-up brings internal support and engineering resources ● Attractive to technology graduates ● Creates interest for applied research in academia
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Creating optimism for the future! Western Plains Energy Oakley, KS
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For More Information Contact Greg Krissek Director of Governmental Affairs Phone: 316-977-6549 E-mail: gkrissek@icminc.com icminc.com
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