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Zimbabwe
pioneers commercial biodiesel processing
Tigere Chagutah, Southern African News Features, No.
48, 2007
November 2007
http://www.sardc.net/editorial/NewsFeature/07481107.htm
Zimbabwe has launched
the first commercial biodiesel processing plant in southern Africa,
underlining the region's resolve to move to cleaner and renewable
sources of energy.
This comes amid concerns
about the impact of fossil fuels (coal, petroleum and natural gas)
on global warming as well as depletion of the world's petroleum
reserves.
The biodiesel processing
plant, which can produce biodiesel from any vegetable oil-bearing
seed, has a capacity to produce between 90 - 100 million litres
of diesel annually making it the largest of its kind in sub-Saharan
Africa.
At full capacity the
plant will meet 10 percent of Zimbabwe's annual diesel requirements,
which translates to foreign currency savings of US$80 million annually.
Zimbabwe, like most countries
in southern Africa, is largely dependent on imported petroleum fuels
to power its industrial production and transport systems.
The recurrence of petroleum
supply bottlenecks in some of the world's leading producers
and the need to address global warming has strengthened the resolve
in the region to look for alternative fuel sources.
Meanwhile, world fuel
prices have risen steadily since 2001 prompting plant-based biofuel
initiatives in Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa,
Swaziland, and the United Republic of Tanzania as well as Zimbabwe.
Commissioning the biodiesel
processing plant located on the outskirts of the capitical Harare,
President Robert Mugabe lauded efforts to respond to the global
call for mitigation of global warming through the transition to
cleaner fuels.
"The world economy
is facing growing exposure to the vagaries of global warming and
the general retardation of petroleum fuels.
"In order to safeguard
the socio-economic interests of present and future generations,
more attentive focus must increasingly be placed on the development
of environmentally-friendly technologies," said President Mugabe.
Several countries in
the region are growing the oil rich Jatropha curcas plant for the
production of cheaper and cleaner biodiesel.
Soya beans, cotton and
maize have also been identified as viable alternatives.
However, unlike these
other plants, jatropha is a perennial plant, yielding oil seed for
decades after planting.
The jatropha plant is
more efficient in terms of land use than other seed oil crops, grows
well in arid soils and does not compete with edible crops for land
use.
At more than 35 percent
oil content, the plant yields more oil than cotton and soya which
both have oil content of 18 percent, while it also has a higher
average yield per hectare (eight tonnes), compared to cotton (two
tonnes) and soya (three tonnes).
Moreover, as jatropha
grows, it stores moisture, stabilises soils and slows down desertification.
Southern Africa has vast
expanses of semi-arid to arid regions where jatropha could grow
well and halt the advance of deserts as the dry-out effects of global
warming intensify in the region.
Speaking at the commissioning
of the biodiesel plant, Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Governor Gideon
Gono said the country's central bank has set aside funds to
support a jatropha feed stock growing programme.
"Under the programme
beneficiaries of Zimbabwe's land reform programme will receive
support to grow jatropha on marginal land as the country works towards
its target of achieving fuel self-sufficiency by 2010," said
Gono.
With support from the
central bank, the Zimbabwe government proposes to set up one biodiesel
plant for each of its ten provinces by 2010.
However, experts note
the need to guard against diverting productive land and food crops
to the production of biofuels at the expense of meeting regional
food security requirements.
Although biofuel production
will increase farmers' incomes, there is a need to resist
the monetary lure of wholesale change over to production of jatropha,
as this could have serious negative impacts on grain cultivation
and food security.
President Mugabe also
noted the huge potential and strong synergies the biodiesel plant
has for other downstream industries, especially for producers of
pharmaceuticals and other chemicals.
Processing of oil seeds
leads to the production of seed cake for stock feed which is vital
for livestock producers.
Another spin-off from
the biodiesel plant is the production of several high-value chemical
by-products which are essential in the production of industrial
lubricants.
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