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Magic beans

Discussions of conventional and alternative energy production technologies.

Magic beans

Unread postby Ludi » Sat 04 Nov 2006, 13:49:38

'Closed-Loop Ethanol Plant to Start Production
Mead, Nebraska [RenewableEnergyAccess.com]
The first closed-loop system for distilling commercial quantities of ethanol using methane gas recaptured from cow manure is set to begin production next month in Mead, Nebraska. The plant's technology will virtually eliminate the need for fossil fuels in the production of ethanol.

"It may surprise you to learn that the most promising solution to our nation's energy crisis begins in the bowels of a waste trough, under the slotted concrete floor of a giant pen that holds 28,000 ... beef cattle."

-- Vinod Khosla, Sun Microsystems, co-founder
The closed-loop system -- derived from an exclusive patent co-owned by an affiliate of E3 BioFuels -- combines a 25-million-gallon ethanol refinery, beef cattle feedlot and anaerobic digesters to maximize energy efficiencies unavailable to each component on a stand-alone basis.

This system eliminates the potential for manure to pollute watersheds, and it enables the wet distiller's grain from ethanol production to be fed on-site to cattle without energy-intensive drying and transportation costs.

In the October edition of Wired Magazine, venture capitalist Vinod Khosla wrote, "It may surprise you to learn that the most promising solution to our nation's energy crisis begins in the bowels of a waste trough, under the slotted concrete floor of a giant pen that holds 28,000 ... beef cattle." '

http://www.renewableenergyaccess.com/re ... y?id=46414
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Re: Magic beans

Unread postby AgentR » Sat 04 Nov 2006, 14:41:16

Whats the water consumption of this particular operation?
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Re: Magic beans

Unread postby Jack » Sat 04 Nov 2006, 14:56:17

So our future energy source is a bunch of manure? :lol:


Somehow, that makes perfect sense.
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Re: Magic beans

Unread postby Tanada » Sat 04 Nov 2006, 15:24:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Shannymara', 'P')oor cows. :(

Not to mention all the other problems with this.


What exactly do you imagine the life of a commercial livestock creature to be anyhow? They are raised strictly for slaughter, they are not pets nor are they zoo animals, they are meat on the hoof!
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Re: Magic beans

Unread postby AgentR » Sat 04 Nov 2006, 15:28:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tanada', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Shannymara', 'P')oor cows.

What exactly do you imagine the life of a commercial livestock creature to be anyhow? They are raised strictly for slaughter, they are not pets nor are they zoo animals, they are meat on the hoof!


In Texas it is still possible to raise beef cattle on pasture.

Not as profitable as a feedlot operation of course, but it does indicate that there is a more natural way.
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Re: Magic beans

Unread postby coyote » Sat 04 Nov 2006, 15:41:57

Haven't they seen Beyond Thunderdome? Supposed to be using pigs...
Lord, here comes the flood
We'll say goodbye to flesh and blood
If again the seas are silent in any still alive
It'll be those who gave their island to survive...
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Re: Magic beans

Unread postby Loki » Sat 04 Nov 2006, 16:01:39

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tanada', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Shannymara', 'P')oor cows. :(

Not to mention all the other problems with this.


What exactly do you imagine the life of a commercial livestock creature to be anyhow? They are raised strictly for slaughter, they are not pets nor are they zoo animals, they are meat on the hoof!


There's a world of difference between pasture-raised cattle and the industrial operations described in the article above. Factory farming of animals is almost without exception intolerably cruel, not to mention environmentally destructive.

As for Khosla's claim that bovine biogas is the "most promising solution to our nation's energy crisis," PFFFTTT :lol:. What planet is this guy on?
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Re: Magic beans

Unread postby Heineken » Sat 04 Nov 2006, 22:54:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tanada', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Shannymara', 'P')oor cows. :(

Not to mention all the other problems with this.


What exactly do you imagine the life of a commercial livestock creature to be anyhow? They are raised strictly for slaughter, they are not pets nor are they zoo animals, they are meat on the hoof!


This crass, callous attitude toward other mammals, which always takes the same superficial, stupid tack, makes me rather glad our "civilization" is headed for the chute.

When I was an editor at Science mag I had a running argument with another editor, someone with a Ph.D. in physiological psychology, who firmly believed that animals do not feel pain. Unfortunately, she was in a position to make her insane bias count (such as by accepting papers describing cruel studies in dogs).

Ever stepped accidentally on a dog's tail and heard the scream?

You'll know how these animals feel when you have your own helpless, hapless moment some day, Tanada.

I've moved gradually toward near-total vegetarianism, so horrified am I by our factory farms and the unspeakable conditions there.
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Re: Magic beans

Unread postby Tanada » Sun 05 Nov 2006, 08:40:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Loki', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tanada', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Shannymara', 'P')oor cows. :(

Not to mention all the other problems with this.


What exactly do you imagine the life of a commercial livestock creature to be anyhow? They are raised strictly for slaughter, they are not pets nor are they zoo animals, they are meat on the hoof!


There's a world of difference between pasture-raised cattle and the industrial operations described in the article above. Factory farming of animals is almost without exception intolerably cruel, not to mention environmentally destructive.

As for Khosla's claim that bovine biogas is the "most promising solution to our nation's energy crisis," PFFFTTT :lol:. What planet is this guy on?


Anyone who chooses to become a vegetarian can do so with my full up front blessing, not that it is worth much. I grew up 'on the farm' and yes animals do experience pain ect ect ect. Pretending that beef cattle are anything but a food supply is pure hypocracy for anyone who is not a pure vegetarian, put your money where your mouth is!

Sorry if you'all are offended but anyone buying beef in the USA is contributing in a very meaningful way to keeping the factory farm system in place, and if you look at the food threads you will see I have been advocating grass farming since I joined this board.

My first post on the topic is HERE so just jump on down from your high horse and get a life.

I don't care what kind of meat you buy at the supermarket 90%++ of the beef/pork/chicken/turkey/mutton you see in the store comes from factpry farming and moaning ang groaning about how 'inhumane' it is not only doesn't solve anything, it just makes you feel all self righteous.

You want to fix the problem? You have to be willing to do the work of finding range raised meat AND pay the premium to purchase it for your table. So long as it is cheaper to mass feed livestock with cracked grain that will keep happening. Ethanol plant might, ironically, solve this problem for you by making grain to expensive to 'waste' on livestock feed when they can eat grass instead.
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Re: Magic beans

Unread postby Heineken » Sun 05 Nov 2006, 10:17:49

Well, I don't eat ANY beef or pork and I raise my own eggs from extremely happy hens, so I'm doing my bit, Tanada. How about you?
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Re: Magic beans

Unread postby Loki » Sun 05 Nov 2006, 14:44:12

If you're such an expert Tanada why did you make a blanket statement about cattle just being "meat on the hoof," ignoring Shannymara's obvious disgust with the massive feedlot operation mentioned in the story?

And I do eat at least 99% vegetarian--I've had exactly one steak in the last ten years, and that was bought directly from a local farmer who pasture raises his cattle. Had three chickens in that time period, too, and again, directly from a local farm that pasture raises their chickens. My money is where my mouth is. How about yours?

"Moaning and groaning" about factory farming is like anything else. Most people ignore the issue, but a tiny minority will listen and change their buying habits. Frankly I don't care if you agree with that or not. You are unnecessarily insulting and seem to be intentionally combative, so I won't waste anymore time with you.
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Re: Magic beans

Unread postby codesuidae » Sun 05 Nov 2006, 21:55:31

Very encouraging to see a large factory integrating different parts of the system. The problem I see is that the feed production for the 28,000 cattle probably depends heavily on grain produced from fields that are fertillized and worked with fossil fuel products (natural gas and diesel).

I am curious as to what the net output would be if the fields used to grow the grain were worked with alcohol fuel and if the minerals required for fertilization were mined/extracted with that fuel. Would there be any fuel left for my car, or would the only end product be a heck of a lot of beef.

I'd much rather see the cattle taken out of the system; regardless of the cruelty of eating them (discussion of which belongs in some other thread), they just aren't an efficent use of grain. They are useful for converting grass into something we can eat, but feeding them useful grain is wasteful.
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Re: Magic beans

Unread postby Heineken » Sun 05 Nov 2006, 22:09:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('codesuidae', '
')I'd much rather see the cattle taken out of the system; regardless of the cruelty of eating them (discussion of which belongs in some other thread), they just aren't an efficent use of grain. They are useful for converting grass into something we can eat, but feeding them useful grain is wasteful.


No, the discussion about cruel conditions does not belong in some other thread, and I'm not going to let you sweep it there. Your comment shows you'd just as soon not deal with it. But as far as I and some others in this forum are concerned, cruelty is a central issue.
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Re: Magic beans

Unread postby Ludi » Sun 05 Nov 2006, 22:11:22

You won't get a "heck of a lot of beef" anyway, because even ruminants need some energy in their feed in order to put on weight. Though ruminants can turn cellulose into carbohydrates, if most of the energy is removed from the corn in the form of alchohol, there won't be much left to fill out a steak. What you see here is a kind of perpetual motion scheme (or scam). They aren't mentioning the fossil fuels used to grow and harvest the corn and to fertilize it. It's not a closed loop, obviously.
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Re: Magic beans

Unread postby codesuidae » Mon 06 Nov 2006, 15:53:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', 'Y')ou won't get a "heck of a lot of beef" anyway, because even ruminants need some energy in their feed in order to put on weight.


The article doesn't say if they are feeding the cattle only unsupplimented feed from the alcohol production. I'd guess that they provide however much nutrition it requires to make the cattle profitable as a primary business and then using the side-product, methane, to reduce the cost of fuel production.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')hat you see here is a kind of perpetual motion scheme (or scam).


Not really, its just a smart way to process a waste stream such that it does some useful work. I wonder if the manure used for methane production is useful in the fields after it has been processed?
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Re: Magic beans

Unread postby cube » Mon 06 Nov 2006, 16:17:09

take the red pill to see the truth! :-D

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Re: Magic beans

Unread postby threadbear » Mon 06 Nov 2006, 16:32:13

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('codesuidae', '
')I'd much rather see the cattle taken out of the system; regardless of the cruelty of eating them (discussion of which belongs in some other thread), they just aren't an efficent use of grain. They are useful for converting grass into something we can eat, but feeding them useful grain is wasteful.


No, the discussion about cruel conditions does not belong in some other thread, and I'm not going to let you sweep it there. Your comment shows you'd just as soon not deal with it. But as far as I and some others in this forum are concerned, cruelty is a central issue.


Now, that's a real man talking. In a few generations, we'll look back in horror at agribusiness and factory farms,as we look back in astonishment at black slavery and the Jewish holocaust. The more science learns about the emotional and mental realm of animals, the more they realize either how human they are, or how animal we are. There's precious little meaningful difference.

My husband worked in lab that practised vivisection for a short time when he was younger and as a result eats no red meat and is anti-vivisectionist. He feels if outlawing vivisection deprives science of needed knowledge, we're better off morally without the knowledge.

Heineken--That woman you worked with who denied animals felt pain is in for a deep karmic shock.
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Re: Magic beans

Unread postby codesuidae » Mon 06 Nov 2006, 18:38:48

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('codesuidae', '
')I'd much rather see the cattle taken out of the system; regardless of the cruelty of eating them (discussion of which belongs in some other thread), they just aren't an efficent use of grain.


No, the discussion about cruel conditions does not belong in some other thread, and I'm not going to let you sweep it there. Your comment shows you'd just as soon not deal with it. But as far as I and some others in this forum are concerned, cruelty is a central issue.


[smilie=icon_rolleyes.gif]

Ok, so I'm a newbie to this forum. I'll take it under advisement that each member's personal idea of 'central issues' are always topical in all threads to which they are tangentally related.

You assume wrongly about my attitude on how animals are used, I just don't think that discussing it in this particular thread is useful. As such I won't respond again here on the subject, feel free to have the last word.
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Re: Magic beans

Unread postby BlisteredWhippet » Mon 06 Nov 2006, 19:04:20

For a corollary, the discussion on grain prices point out that the increase in consumption of grains is pushed by the rise of incomes and skyrocketing increase in consumption of meat. Meat remains a major force in the acceleration of land and water use, habitat destruction, and overpopulation worldwide.

It is an industry entering a phase in which increased energy costs will drive the price through the roof far beyond other commodities. Meat will become something governments and populations fight over.
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Re: Magic beans

Unread postby Loki » Mon 06 Nov 2006, 22:20:14

Sorry that your thread got hijacked Ludi, though I do think the hijack topic was important. I think your argument about this being a perpetual motion scheme is pretty much right on. But to take a devil's advocate position, what a bovine biogas scheme like this can do is reduce waste, i.e., make use of a resource that is otherwise going to waste and/or polluting local water supplies. A large dairy co-op in my state (Tillamook) is experimenting with biogas. Doesn't look like they've been particularly successful, but it might slightly reduce the amount of manure entering fish-bearing streams and rivers. Here's an old USDA article describing it, a more recent PBS article, and the Port of Tillamook's page on the biogas generator. As dairy operations go, Tillamook isn't too bad. Mostly smaller family farmers that let their cows roam and they don't use BGH. The Tillamook Valley does stink to high heaven though. Maybe a biogas operation might improve the smell if nothing else. :)
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