Wednesday May 23, 5:12 PM
Japan's Oenon may produce rice-origin ethanol
TOKYO, May 23 (Reuters) - Alcoholic beverage maker Oenon
Holdings Inc. may produce ethanol from Japanese rice to
mix with gasoline, a challenging plan in a country where costly
farm produce has kept the usage of green fuels largely at bay.
Tokyo-based Oenon said on Wednesday a five-year project to
build and run an ethanol plant in Tomakomai city, located in the
southern coast of the northern island of Hokkaido, is awaiting
government approval.
The Ministry of Agriculture has set aside 8.5 billion yen
($69.8 million) from its annual budget to promote locally-made
green fuels to supplement gasoline for auto use given hefty
carbon emissions reduction targets to meet under the Kyoto
protocol.
"The fate of the project is yet to be known until the farm
ministry makes a decision," said Hisako Kawakita, a spokeswoman
at Oenon, which has its roots in 82-year old distiller of
traditional spirit from potatoes in Asahikawa city, central
Hokkaido.
Five other groups have submitted their ethanol plans,
waiting for the ministry's decision to be taken with advice from
an independent committee by the end of this month as to which
project or projects will receive the subsidies, a farm ministry
official said.
Japan, the world's second largest gasoline consumer of some
60 million kiloliters (kl) a year, is almost totally dependent
on imported fuels, and in 2006 produced only 30 kl of biomass
ethanol at government-backed pilot plants.
Japan also largely relies on food from abroad as cheaper
imports have driven many farmers out of business and into the
cities. Rice, the country's staple food, is one of the few farm
products fully sufficient in Japan.
Counting on 2.25 billion yen on subsidies, or a half of the
planned spending, the project plans to build an ethanol plant
with annual capacity of 15,000 kl, according to private research
Hokkaido Intellect Tank, a member of the project together with
the Hokkaido municipal government and other entities.
Oenon, named after Oeno, the goddess of wine in Greek
mythology, is expected to contribute its existing distillation
technology to the project.
The plant's commercial production is expected to start in
the year starting in April, 2009, and the product would be used
to make ethyl tertiary butyl ether (ETBE).
It was only late last month when gasoline blended with ETBE
-- a popular petrol additive for green-conscious drivers in
Europe -- started trial sale at 50 pump stations in Tokyo and
surrounding areas.
Hokkaido Intellect Tank said in a statement that the project
plans to use imported rice as feedstock initially to lower
costs, which is later to be replaced with Hokkaido-grown rice.
Large-sized farming is common in Hokkaido, where rice
production per acreage for the 2005 crop was about 8 percent
higher than the national average.
Oenon formed a holding company in 2003, with several
regional alcoholic beverage firms under its umbrella.
($1=121.72 Yen)
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