The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Plant gets $80M to make jet fuel from wood chips

Georgia grant is biggest among several from feds.

- By Drew Kann This coverage is supported by a partnershi­p with 1Earth Fund, the Kendeda Fund and Journalism Funding Partners. You can learn more and support our climate reporting by donating at ajc.com/ donate/climate/

A Georgia plant turning wood residue into jet fuel is receiving a big chunk of new federal funding to boost production, in the hopes that its products can eventually lower the climate change impact of the airline industry and other sectors.

The Department of Energy announced that it is awarding an $80 million grant to AVAPCO LLC, a biofuel, bio- chemical and biomateria­ls company that operates a refinery in Thomaston, about 60 miles west of Macon. The agency released $118 million to fund 17 projects around the country on Thursday, with AVAPCO’S grant by far the largest.

All of the projects receiving funding are working to advance U.s.-based production of biofuels — liq- uid fuels that can be made from plants, animal waste, used cooking oil and more. In a news release announcing the grants, U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm cited the potential to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from a host of industries and build domestic energy inde- pendence in the process.

“Biofu e ls are a versa- tile tool because they have the immediate potential to power our ships, trains, airlines and heavy-duty vehicles — a huge contributo­r to total carbon emissions — with a significan­tly reduced carbon footprint,” Granholm said.

AVAPCO, in business since 2009, is a subsidiary of Gran- Bio, a Brazilian biotechnol- ogy firm.

In 2016, the company received a $4.7 million DOE grant for a phase 1 pilot demonstrat­ing its method for converting woody resi- due from sawmills, paper and pulp plants into sustainabl­e

aviation fuel. The company’s process also produces nano- cellulose, a fibrous material that can be used by rubber manufactur­ers to strengthen tires and other products.

Phase 1 of the company’s project was successful, the DOE said. Now, the new federal money will be used to fund constructi­on of a larger plant capable of produc- ing 1.2 million gallons of jet fuel annually, plus sustainabl­e material for the rubber industry.

The new plant, likely to be in Thomaston, is expected to be operationa­l by 2026, said AVAPCO’S chief tech- nology officer Kim Nelson.

Biofuels such as ethanol have been used for years as additives in gasoline, but interest in producing higher quality fuel for airplanes has grown in recent years. In 2018, a Virgin Atlantic air- craft flew from London to Orlando using a low-carbon jet fuel made at a different biofuels plant in rural southeast Georgia.

The fuels’ appeal stems both from their potential to reduce emissions and that they can be used with much of the economy’s existing fossil fuel infrastruc­ture.

Biofuels produce green- house gas emissions when they are burned, but they can — in theory — be carbon neutral, because the plants they are derived from

grow back and pull heat-trapping carbon dioxide from the atmosphere in the process. However, exactly how much lower their emissions are depends on how they’re produced, how the fuel is distribute­d and other factors.

Nelson said she thinks biofuels hold great potential for widespread use in hard-to-decarboniz­e sectors like aviation.

“It’s going to be many decades before there are electric planes, but in the near term, significan­t reduction in the carbon footprint of aviation is possible with sustainabl­e aviation fuels,” Nelson said.

Since the mid-2000s, several Georgia companies have entered the biofuels space, but most have fizzled.

Nelson said she wouldn’t speculate why past efforts failed, but said she was confident AVAPCO could buck that trend because it has scaled up gradually.

“We have invested the time and the money to do it very conservati­vely, step by step,” Nelson said. “That’s really the significan­t difference.”

 ?? AP FILE ?? Biofuels could make a significan­t contributi­on in diminishin­g aviation’s carbon footprint, advocates say. A new plant, probably in Thomaston, aims to make that happen, and could be operating by 2026.
AP FILE Biofuels could make a significan­t contributi­on in diminishin­g aviation’s carbon footprint, advocates say. A new plant, probably in Thomaston, aims to make that happen, and could be operating by 2026.

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