China Daily (Hong Kong)

Used cooking oil fuels green initiative in Nanjing

- By KARL WILSON in Sydney

Startup company MotionEco launched an initiative in Nanjing, Jiangsu province, in June to collect waste cooking oil and gutter oil to be converted into sustainabl­e, low-carbon green fuel for use in diesel vehicles.

It is one of China’s first commercial efforts to collect and process used cooking oil and gutter oil by using a completely open and transparen­t tracking system to ensure that they are never processed back into food products for human use.

The problem of gutter oil has long plagued China.

Although illegal, some unscrupulo­us people still filter waste oil from restaurant fryers, sewer drains, grease traps and other sources, then sell it on to be reused.

The toxic oil has been blamed for making people sick and causing some forms of cancer. But people continue to use it because it is cheaper than buying real cooking oil.

China is the world’s biggest consumer of cooking oil. It also generates millions of metric tons of waste oil every year.

Founder Liu Shutong started MotionEco three years ago with the aim of solving the problem of gutter oil by turning the waste into cleanburni­ng biofuel suitable for road, marine and air transporta­tion use.

In conjunctio­n with oil company Shell’s “Make the future” campaign in China, MotionEco is working to create a distributi­on channel for the steady production and consumptio­n of gutter-oil-sourced biofuels nationwide. The distributi­on model is called the Sustainabl­e Oil Alliance.

Green fuel, entirely produced by waste products, not only eliminates waste cooking oil from the food chain, it provides a high-energy, high-quality transporta­tion fuel that, when burned, is responsibl­e for 90 percent fewer carbon dioxide emissions than the same amount of traditiona­l diesel fuel.

“We want to convert every city into a green oilfield, to collect and convert the local waste oil into green fuel, supply it to the local logistics fleet, to keep the food safe and at the same time contribute to the environmen­t,” Liu said.

MotionEco said it aims to provide 50,000 liters of green fuel to Nanjing this year.

Shell is collaborat­ing with MotionEco to help explore how to simultaneo­usly tackle the challenges of food safety, waste cooking oil and sustainabl­e transporta­tion in a Chinese city.

MotionEco hopes that by linking waste cooking oil collectors with biodiesel producers it will encourage transporta­tion companies to switch to the eco-friendly fuel.

“One of the aims of the company is to try to provide solutions … to try to solve the social and environmen­tal issues caused by the reuse of waste oil,” Liu said.

“What we are trying to do is create a market for renewable diesel made from used cooking oil that can be used in transporta­tion, public services and logistics — anywhere that convention­al diesel is used.

“In that way, we break the cycle of cooking oil reuse in kitchens to provide clean, sustainabl­e low-carbon fuels to power diesel engines.

“The project will be commercial­ly viable once we establish a chain of collecting used oil, converting the oil, and then to selling it to customers in the transporta­tion sector.”

He said that by starting in Nanjing, the company aims to “step up from here to achieve a cleaner and more sustainabl­e way of energy consumptio­n in China by converting gutter oil that might go to restaurant­s’ kitchens into biofuel that can be used in the transporta­tion sector”.

With headquarte­rs in Shanghai, MotionEco is China’s leading proponent and market knowledge center for waste restaurant oil and green fuels such as waste-based biodiesel and hydro-treated vegetable oil.

The company has said it is building “bridges between producers of green fuel and diesel users that wish to clean up their transporta­tion services and supply chains, helping to provide energy and climate security for China and the world”.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? MotionEco’s Liu Shutong (right) collects used oil.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY MotionEco’s Liu Shutong (right) collects used oil.

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