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La actividad agropecuaria es la actividad productiva más antigua de la humanidad; este simple hecho implica que es el sector que ha experimentado el mayor número de políticas públicas.

martes, julio 21, 2009

BP Gives up on Jatropha for Biofuel

BP Gives up on Jatropha for Biofuel

 
  • BP has indeed given up on jatropha, the shrub once touted as the great hope for biofuels, and walked away from its jatropha joint venture for less than $1 million.

    jatropha_art_257_20090717125144.jpg

    Goodbye to all that

    Speculation abounded this summer that BP was ready to jettison its participation in the project with British partner partner D1 Oils. The original plan called for the investment of $160 million to turn the jatropha tree into feedstock to make transportation fuel. Now, BP will turn its alternative-fuel efforts toward ethanol in Brazil and the U.S., as well as biobutanol.

    The not-with-a-bang-but-a-whimper end to BP's jatropha adventure underscores a couple of key points. First, the inedible but hardy plant that just a few years ago seemed like it could revolutionize biofuels has turned into a bust. The initial attraction was that it grows on marginal land, so it wouldn't compete with food crops. But marginal land means marginal yields. And jatropha turned out to be a water hog as well, further darkening its environmental credentials.

    Second, for all the ink spilt over jatropha—and Big Oil's interest in biofuels in general—the value of some of those investments really is miniscule. D1 Oils will buy out BP's half of the venture for 500,000 pounds—less than the price of a nice apartment in London—even though the joint venture is apparently worth more than 7 million pounds.

    And this wasn't a piddling venture, as far as jatropha experiments go: Reuters notes that BP and D1 Oils planted more than 200,000 hectares of the stuff—25% of the worldwide jatropha planting.

    So BP's biofuel attentions will focus on three different areas. In Brazil, it will turn its attention back to sugarcane. In the U.S., it is working with Verenium to turn switchgrass into second-generation ethanol, though the economics are still murky. And there's always biobutanol.

    In a week when Exxon placed a relatively big bet on algae as a source of biofuel, it's not that Big Oil has given up on alternative fuels—it's just becoming more selective about where it places its chips.

    Photo credit.


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    Rodrigo González Fernández
    Diplomado en "Responsabilidad Social Empresarial" de la ONU
    Diplomado en "Gestión del Conocimiento" de la ONU
     
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