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Ethiopia Sets its Sights on Biodiesel

By Denis Gathanju, Contributor
December 3, 2010   |   9 Comments
Could this poverty-stricken country become the world's largest biodiesel producer?

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9 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 9
December 3, 2010
It is not my business but I see GreenGas.cc as another way these people can become self sufficient. If they have wind or solar they can use GreenGas machines to make fuel. If anyone knows a govt person or group from Ethiopia, they should contact GreenGas.cc because I know they are looking for partners and sites to place machines.
Comment
2 of 9
December 3, 2010
sir
Ethiopia can be a world Leader in both Jatropha and caster seeds production.
we are thinking to invest in Ethipia
with best regards
alagarsamy
www.mgrbiodiesel.com
India
Comment
3 of 9
December 5, 2010
It is good to see people coming up with ways to revitalize local populations with sustainable agriculture and products for export that can bring jobs for locals. The price for petroleum products in poor communities is too high for their economic state. The heavy use of petroleum is degrading to soils and waterways that are needed for long term sustainability.
Comment
4 of 9
December 5, 2010
Well Ethiopia maybe a big producer but it lacks the extention of countries like Brazil,Australia China ,India,Congo ,Indonesia,Argentina,Colombia and Mexico where there are huge dry or wet marginal non agricultural lands to set huge plantations of Oil Palm ,Jatropha,Pongamia Pinnata and Sweet sorghum ,all big yielding feedstocks for biofuels!
Ethiopia ,Kenya ,Somalia,Chad ,Mali and Sudan are also candidates to become huge producers ,specially close situated to the European consumer market
Comment
5 of 9
December 6, 2010
There is something off with the numbers in this article. The last paragraph states that 25 million hectares would yield 20 million litres of crude per year. That's 0.8 litre/hectare, or about 1/3000th of what Jatropha should yield (see for example http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/duke_energy/Jatropha_curcas.html )
Comment
6 of 9
December 8, 2010
And still hemp is ignored...It grows on all lands, marginal and non-marginal. It has value added products such as the fiber, animal feed applications, etc and it is restorative to the soil. Its history of use and development has been longer than most of the major new biofuel seed crops but this has been stifled by US and neo-Europe based influences due to perception and a hesitance to see developing nations, north and south, prosper. The Eastern Europeans, especially in the Slovokian countries have major experience with hemp. Hemp can act as a key solution to Africa's energy, sustainable agriculture and food security challenges.
Comment
7 of 9
December 8, 2010
Biodiesel is a great way to cut the percentage down of relying on others for energy. But it damn near an illegal act here in California. If you use the word Diesel you are censored and if you use the word Biodiesel you are looked down upon with disdain like an Old Palo Alto lady dressed in Dungarees and white tennis shoes looks at a someone smoking a Cigar and if you have seen that look you know its not going to happen. Just look at the Bay Area Air Quality Management Districts goals and justifications for Particulate Matter in relationship to Air Pollution and Diesel..
I just had my Diesel light Duty Truck go through a Smog Certification Test. The test consisted of 3 elements. Visual Mechanical inspection, OBD2 computer check of system, and an emissions test ( exhaust gasses ). I passed test one and two, Three was labeled N/A, but BAAQMD and CARB took my $60 Now Go Figure!!! Not that I want them to test that feature, because they would find a way to scrap or label it a Gross Polluter. But its a classic example of the Draconian measures the Greenies use hear in California.
No image available
Comment
8 of 9
Anonymous
December 8, 2010
Jatropha is not a good idea - a single use plant which is toxic. Better use Moringa, which produces nutrition and water cleaning agents in addition to producing biofuels (or cooking oils). Jatropha is also very sticky and difficult to press.
Comment
9 of 9
December 12, 2010
"This has led the Ethiopian government to shift its focus to biodiesel crops that flourish under the harsh climatic conditions of Ethiopia."

Um, everything I have read about Jatropha curcus is that, while it can survive in harsh conditions, it doesn't exactly flourish in them. Jatropha biodiesel farms the world over have struggled. Got any figures on estimated per-litre production costs?
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Denis Gathanju

View Denis  Gathanju's Profile
About: Denis Gathanju is a freelance business journalist and editor based in Nakuru City in Kenya. He reports on renewable energy issues from Kenya, Africa and the Mid... more »

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