| JUNE 2008
Santa Cruz shares biodiesel initiative pilot results
Projections of 190,000 gallons next year
In 2005, the United States Environmental Protection
Agency awarded a $75,000 grant to Ecology Action to pilot the first community-based
biodiesel production initiative in the United States.
The nonprofit, along with local restaurants, Salinas Tallow, BioEAS,
Inc., a biodiesel plant, distributors and local Public Works Departments,
collects about 5,500 gallons of high-quality waste cooking oil from restaurants,
which was then blended to make 22,000 gallons of B20 — a 20 percent biodiesel
fuel — and sold to local fleets.
“Over the coming year, this community effort will result in almost 47,000
gallons of waste cooking oil being used to make 190,000 gallons of the
B20 biodiesel blend - enough fuel to fill the tanks of over 4,000 city
of Santa Cruz recycling trucks, or enough to fuel a fleet of school buses
for an entire school district for a year,” said Tom Huetteman, the EPA’s
Waste Management associate director the Pacific Southwest region. “This
project is a model for other cities and counties across the country.”
Ecology Action expects more restaurants will participate as the program
expands, resulting in higher quantities of biodiesel made from local
waste feedstock.
Biodiesel fuel generated from waste feedstock is more sustainable and
far less polluting than petroleum diesel. Biodiesel significantly reduces
greenhouse gases, particulate matter, or soot, carbon monoxide, and sulfur
dioxide in air emissions. Produced from renewable resources, such as
waste cooking oil or soybean oil, biodiesel reduces dependence on limited
energy resources and foreign oil.
The pilot is a partnership program spanning the whole process from post-consumer
feedstock to the fuel consumer:
Restaurants, which usually pay to haul away their waste oil, now give
waste to grease haulers free of charge. Grease haulers are paid by the
biodiesel manufacturers.
The pilot program’s biodiesel fuel consumer market has expanded to the
city and county of Santa Cruz Department of Public Works and the county’s
waste franchise Green Waste, Inc., and the local oil waste hauler, Salinas
Tallow, all of whose vehicle fleet will be running on the alternative
fuel.
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