Better Biodiesel: Producing Biodiesel from Animal Fat Cheapest Source Available!
BBDS.OB BetterBiodiesel Stock GuruProfile
Better Biodiesel uses animal fat to make biodiesel with their unique patent pending process.
Look at the facts — Animal Fat Based Biodiesel Makes Good Financial Sense.
The most important factor in the cost of biodiesel is raw material used for making biodiesel. This comes from either animal fat OR herbage oil crops, woody oil plants, waste oil and hydrophilic oil plants. Most biodiesel plants use crops as the basis of their biodiesel.
Animal fat is by far the least expensive resource AND crop materials are becoming more expensive. The rising cost of soybean and other oils, which account for the bulk of biodiesel fuel stock, has led to the push to use cheap and plentiful animal fats. That shift to animal fat could be key to making the budding biodiesel industry a reliable fuel source for U.S. trucking fleets, among other uses, experts say.
The cost of animal fat creates a less expensive resource for biodiesel — the going rate for a pound of beef tallow is about 34 cents, according to the Agriculture Department. When you combine that cost with the fact that The Energy Bill extends the $1-per-gallon tax credit for renewable diesel through 2010 you have a financial picture that makes sense.
Animal Fat Biodiesel Makes GOOD FINANCIAL SENSE
Better Diesel Biofuel is better because it is cheaper to produce? Why? Because it uses animal fat! Any mixture of animal fat! And because it uses a patent pending system that is efficient and compact!
By 2015, an additional 898 million bushels of corn, above baseline, would be required to meet ethanol requirements. That demand would boost corn prices by 20 cents a bushel, or a 6.6 percent increase. Soybean prices also would increase, as soybean acreage and production drops. That price increase would make soy biodiesel less competitive and production could fall slightly, notes the FAPRI report which is available online at http://www.fapri.missouri.edu .
The federal mandate to use more biofuels, as passed in the Senate version of the Energy Bill, would shift more crop acres into corn, boost corn prices, reduce soybean acreage, cut livestock production and have repercussions across all of agriculture. (When was the last time you saw Fritos on sale?)
The mandate for biofuels will encourage farmers to plant an additional 2.3 million acres of corn by 2015 when the mandate is in full effect. That acreage increase comes mostly at the expense of soybean production.
Increased Fuel Grain and Oilseed Prices Worldwide
A SURGE in production of biofuels around the world is expected to fuel grain and oilseed prices this year.
The area that was planted to corn in the US this year — 36 million hectacres — was expected to be 15 per cent higher than last year’s crop. That makes it the largest area planted to corn since 1944 and 4.9 million ha more than the 2006-07 crop.
Assuming average seasonal conditions in 2007-08, US corn production is forecast to increase 18 per cent to a record 317 million tonnes.
Despite this huge crop the low world corn stocks are likely to decline further, placing upward pressure on prices. US corn production is being driven by the booming ethanol industry. Ethanol refining may soon overtake livestock production as the major consumer of coarse grains. The US Government’s Biofuels Security Act includes a directive to produce 228 billion litres of ethanol and biodiesel by 2020.
Better Biodiesel is first out the gate with a new patent pending process that is based on animal fat and not crop production as the basis for its biodiesel.
Stay tuned for more on their waterless system. This means BBDS has the low cost process AND the low cost ingredients.
Source: Better Biodiesel
Better Biodiesel, Inc. 355 South 1550 West Spanish Fork, UT 84660 Phone: (801) 798-7576 Email: info@betterbiodiesel.com Website: www.betterbiodiesel.com
Investor Relations: Capital Group Communications, Inc. Anthony Evans / Mark Bernhard betterbiodiesel@capitalgc.com (415) 332-7200
About Better Biodiesel: Better Biodiesel has developed proprietary waterless technology that significantly reduces the costs of biodiesel production and environmental impact. A key environmental distinction in Better Biodiesel’s production method is the absence of any caustic chemicals in the catalytic reaction process, which eliminates the washing and evaporation steps necessary under customary biodiesel production processes. This proprietary technology speeds up the production timeline, increases the volume of fuel that can be made within a given time period, and reduces the amount of land needed for the production plant. Better Biodiesel’s initial pilot plant is producing approximately three million gallons per year and has a total footprint of less than 160 square feet. By contrast, several acres are required for a conventional biodiesel facility of the same production capacity. Initial Company estimates indicate that Better Biodiesel can expect to achieve a 20 percent reduction in the cost of producing biodiesel fuel, and a 40 percent reduction in the cost of building its biodiesel plants as compared with conventional production methods and facilities. Better Biodiesel’s objective is to become one of the world’s largest producers of biodiesel. (www.betterbiodiesel.com)
Forward-Looking Statements: This release includes forward-looking statements that are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. While these statements are made to convey to the public the Company’s progress, business opportunities and growth prospects, readers are cautioned that such forward-looking statements represent management’s opinion. Whereas management believes such representations to be true and accurate based on information and data available to the company at this time, actual results may differ materially from those described. Additional factors that could materially affect these forward-looking statements and/or predictions include, among other things: (1) BBDS’ ability to manage the future acquisitions and the expansion of operations; (2) BBDS’ ability to obtain contracts with suppliers of raw materials (for our production of biodiesel fuel) and with distributors of our biodiesel fuel product; (3) the risks inherent in the mutual performance such supplier and distributor contracts (including our production performance); and (4) BBDS’ ability to raise necessary financing to execute the Company’s business plans.
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