Friday, 04 April 2014 11:53

$21m tallow to bio-diesel plant

Written by 

Z ENERGY PLANS a $21 million bio-diesel plant in South Auckland, using inedible tallow produced as a by-product of the meat industry.

It will produce up to 20 million litres of low-carbon bio-diesel annually for blending with traditionally refined product.

Chief executive of the NZX-listed transport fuels supplier, Mike Bennetts says the "economics around bio-fuels remain very challenging and we have worked this project non-stop for four years to get to this point", allowing the bio-fuel product to be offered at "a similar price to mineral diesel."

Z will also offer a 20% blend for commercial customers, with half current production volume already contracted to a small number of commercial users, and a 5% blend will be for sale to motorists off Z petrol station forecourts in the upper North Island.

The bio-fuel's properties will meet European and US standards, and have no impact on engine performance.

If demand is sufficient, the plant at the Wiri tank farm site south of Auckland could be doubled in size for $2.5 million additional capital expenditure. At this stage, the 20 million litres of production is a tiny proportion of Z's total annual diesel sales of up to 1.4 billion litres, although a 5% blend would stretch through some 400,000 litres of product.

The tallow-based feedstock is described as a "first generation" bio-fuel operation and would be the first in New Zealand to operate without requiring a government subsidy. Z is also investigating a second generation project involving wood waste with Norske Skog under the government's Primary Growth Partnership research scheme.

More like this

Featured

Big return on a small investment

Managing director of Woolover Ltd, David Brown, has put a lot of effort into verifying what seems intuitive, that keeping newborn stock's core temperature stable pays dividends by helping them realise their full genetic potential.

Editorial: Sensible move

OPINION: The Government's decision to rule out changes to Fringe Benefit Tax (FBT) that would cost every farmer thousands of dollars annually, is sensible.

National

Machinery & Products

» Latest Print Issues Online

The Hound

Overbearing?

OPINION: Dust ups between rural media and PR types aren't unheard of but also aren't common, given part of the…

Foot-in-mouth

OPINION: The Hound hears from his canine pals in Southland that an individual's derogatory remarks on social media have left…

» Connect with Rural News

» eNewsletter

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter