Emerson hosted bioenergy summit

Pigment & Resin Technology

ISSN: 0369-9420

Article publication date: 22 May 2009

47

Citation

(2009), "Emerson hosted bioenergy summit", Pigment & Resin Technology, Vol. 38 No. 3. https://doi.org/10.1108/prt.2009.12938cab.024

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2009, Emerald Group Publishing Limited


Emerson hosted bioenergy summit

Article Type: Environment and safety From: Pigment & Resin Technology, Volume 38, Issue 3

Emerson process management, a business of Emerson (NYSE: EMR), hosted the first in a series of regional bioenergy summits to discuss how to successfully tackle the challenge of translating alternative fuels technology into large-scale production, helping create a sustainable and commercially viable alternative fuels industry sector.

The first event, “BioRefinery/BioEnergy Summit: Reducing the Risks of Migrating Vision to Production” was held December 11 in Madison, Wisconsin. It examined the opportunities for alternative fuels to contribute to filling global energy supply-demand gaps and share best production practices and the latest plant automation technologies for alternative fuels commercialization.

According to the International Energy Association (IEA) World Energy Outlook 2008, the world oil shortage will reach 28.6 million barrels a day by 2030. Filling this gap will require viable, commercial alternatives to conventional crude production.

“Alternative fuels are becoming ‘imperative fuels’ in order to meet the global energy demands of the future,” says Alan Novak, Summit Leader and Director of alternative fuels for Emerson Process Management. “These regional summits are designed to take a close look at how to reduce project risk and costs and improve time-to-market schedules so that bioenergy facilities can successfully and quickly go from blueprint to production.”

With a focus on second-generation biofuels and bioenergy facilities, the summit invites alternative fuels thought-leaders and industry experts to examine the economic, technical and environmental realities of turning non-foodstuff feedstock into renewable and eco-friendly transportation fuels or energy for refineries, chemical plants, pulp mills, and other industries.

Summit presenters included:

  • T. Randall Fortenbery, Director of the RENK Agribusiness Institute at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, who will discuss feedstock sustainability and the impact for first- and second-generation processes.

  • Greg Keenan, Vice President of business development at Virent, a Madison-based hydrocarbon biofuels company, who will discuss commercialization challenges.

  • Timothy Donohue, Director of the Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center, one of several centers funded by the US Department of Energy, who will address removing bottlenecks in the biofuels pipeline.

  • Michael McAdams, Director of the Advanced Biofuels Coalition, who will address legislative impacts on second-generation biorefinery development.

  • Alan Novak, who will show how plant automation and intelligent process control systems can help biofuels facilities reduce risk for more efficient production and scalability.

The IEA World Energy Outlook 2008 report noted the key factors in achieving commercially viable bioenergy facilities are to: “prove the optimum technologies at a commercial scale, increase the scale of production, exploit the learning curve, and apply process optimization and integration techniques.”

The Madison summit is the first of a series of regional bioenergy events tailored to technologies under development around the country. The next Emerson BioEnergy Summit is February 19 in Denver.

For more information or to register for the summit, go to: www.EmersonProcess.com/BiorefinerySummit

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