A34-Lancaatar Farming, Saturday, September 18,1993 Soy Diesel (ConlinuMl from Pago At the start of the trip, the Pen nsylvania Energy Office marked the occasion by granting its Alter native Fuels Pioneer Award to Soy Diesel, the first vegetable oil based fuel to receive the award. While a first for Pennsylvania, this event joins dozens of testing and large-scale demonstration pro jects now underway in the U.S. Soy Diesel is a biodegradable, non toxic, soybean-based alternative fuel. Ken Peters of the National Soy Diesel Development Board in Missouri was on the trip and pro vided much of the background of the new fuel for reporters. Peters said that in 1900, Dr. Rudolph Diesel showed his diesel engine at the Paris World’s Fair. At the time it ran on 100 percent veg etable oil. Actually, the engine came before diesel fuel as we know it today. The Soybean Board, funded by farmer’s check-off moneys, cur rently is working with the U.S. Bureau of Mines where air is a real problem, and any spills or leakages become a real problem. Transit systems are finding that 20 to 30 percent blends are optimum. A demonstration boat uses 100 percent Soy- Diesel. Officials believe about five percent of the market will eventually go to Soy Diesel. Beam said the motor in the tractor that was running on Soy Diesel had not been changed to accommodate the new fuel. “I drained out the diesel fuel and pouted in the Soy Diesel, Beam said. “I bailed hay yesterday, and the tractor worked well.” “I want to grow soybeans because it breaks the cycle of weeds and insects in the com. I can often save the expense of using insecti cides for rootworm and other insects. This protects the environment, and it saves me money. Unfortunately, the soybean price is not always what it should be, so I am very interested in finding new markets to turn the bottom line and make a profit” Sara Nichols, staff attorney for the Dele ware Valley Clean Air Council, said the new fuel was “just fantastic.” “When you consider the issues that this fuel is going to positively impact, I am standing here thinking this is almost a miracle.” “It’s easy to focus on pollution problems that are most obvious, but the most harmful from almost every point of view is air pollu tion,” Nichols said. “Yet air pollution is the one you can’t see. But it is creating long term harm to us, the animals, the earth, the water, crops and everything. So anything we can do is fabulous. “It amazes me that very few people really understand the dramatic effect die air has on public health, the economy and on agricul ture. Most people don’t know that motor vehi cles generate pollution that causes $5 million in crop loss to America’s farmers and adds $94 billion to health care costs. The number one cause of water pollution comes from the air. sulfur dioxide is one of the major causes of acid rain, and Pennsylvania is the most acid affected state in the country.” Representative Art Hershey (R-13) said as a farmer, legislator and a citizen with concern for the environment that he was pleased to be involved in the demonstration of the effec tiveness and efficiency of Soy Diesel. Hershey said the cleaner burning fuel made it easier to comply with the increasing environmental protection.laws and standards. Credit is given to Soy Diesel for reducing exhaust smoke by 70 percent and reducing engine wear. “The economic impact from new markets will increase the demand for crops and be good news for farmers and the communities in which they live,” Hershey said. “The issue of farmland preservation and open space dovetail into this exciting development” Spurred by EPA Clean Air standards, Soy- Diesel has recently become a competitive player in the alternative fuels arena. The fuel is virtually free of sulfur emissions (a major cause of acid rain), produces fewer particu lates, comes from a renewable domestic sour ce and can be used in existing diesel engines Proclaimed Good with no modifications. (Mercedes- Benz. for example, warranties their heavy duty engines on bio diesel.) Biodiesel is therefore an attractive option for many cities coping with tougher clean air stan dards, because it delivers emis sions reductions while maintain ing a city’s current bus fleet, refueling stations, spare parts inventories and skilled diesel mechanics. A 1) Independent research shows that biodiesel in a 1:5 blend with petroleum diesel, along with use of a catalytic converter, reduces par ticulate matter by 31%, carbon monoxide by 21% and total hydro carbons by 47%. Yet biodiesel per forms the same as petroleum diesel in terms of torque, horsepower and miles-per-gallon. Soy Diesel is also an efficient fuel to produce: while soybean oil requires about 5,200 BTUs per pound to produce* crush and refine, the same amount of oil contains 17,000 BTUs. Soy Diesel is currently in use in large-scale demonstrations in sev- oral U.S. cities. The greater St Louis transit authority has now logged over 200,000 miles on Soy- Diesel, with tests showing perfor mance, mileage and drivability die same as with conventional diesel, but with a 30% opacity reduction and significantly improved exhaust odor. The fuel is made from soybean oil through a simple refining pro cess called “transcsterification.” This involves mixing methanol and sodium hydroxide with soy oil and letting the glycerine settle out The resulting products are methyl soyate (Soy Diesel) and glycerine both considered safe by EPA with no restrictions to their use or disposal. The glycerine has over 1,600 existing commercial appli cations, from toothpaste and cough syrup to environmentally friendly antifreeze. Research is also under way to substitute ethanol for methanol in the process, but it cur rently costs up to three times as much as has a lower conversion rate (80% compared to 98%). While currently most popular in Europe due to tax exemptions and even some mandated used, Soy- Diesel is also immediately avail- DATE: Octobers 1993 PLACE: Hawk Valley Golf Club, Denver, PA TIME: 11:00 am. -12:00 p.m. Registration 12:30 p.m. - Shotgun Start 6:00 p.m. - Dlnner/Auction ENTRY FEE: $75.00 (Includes lunch, dinner, cart & greens fee) DINNER ONLY: $50.00 Call now to make your reservations by VISA or Mastercard at (215) 648-0674 SP 0 " More Thai Locatk In Pennsyl Waiting to You 4 Benefiting the Pennsylvania FFA Foundation, Inc. Steak and Sea House • able in the U.S. and already *° y . >te ™n «l»ut $2.50 per gallon, exceeds early demand projections w,t ** projections of $1.50 to $2.00 by nearly 10 times. Manufactured , production increases. Cost is by Proctor and Gamble, the fuel is furthw reduced by using bipdiesel marketed in Interchem Environ- “ a , 1:5 with conventional mental in Kansas and can be pur- while still achieving all chased in quantities from five- ma j° r emissions reductions, gallon drums to semi and rail tank- e Pennsylvania Soy Diesel er loads. It is registered and ® us ®*de was landed in part certified with EPA as an altcma- throu g h a national soybean check tive fuel. It also meets all relevant fund, a special fanner effort ASTM (American Society for since 1991 to support research and Testing and Materials) criteria for development of new and improved diesel fuel. soybean products and to help deve- Current costs for pure methyl Highland Cattle Sale At KILE HILTON, N.Y. The North East Highland Cattle Association is sponsoring its first ever High land cattle auction, “Showcase 93." The sale will be held in con junction with the Keystone Inter national Livestock Exposition in Harrisburg on Oct 2. Highland activities begin at 12:30 p.m. with the NEHCA annual show follow ed by the “Showcase 93” sale starting at 8 p.m. “Showcase 93” is to feature 22 lots of the finest Highland females FIRST ANNUAL FORE FFA GOLF TOURNAMENT lop and expand maikets for Ameri can agricultural commodities. in North America. Consignors horn across the Eastern United States and Canada are bringing top females to showcase their herds in this sale. Convention activities include business and educational meet ings. a farm tour, a banquet .and plenty of time to socialize and en joy the show. For further information on the “Showcase 93” sale or the High land breed contact Roger Jestel (716) 392-9062.