Contributed by: Nathan Schock, via Sustainable Industries.

Energy and water. Water and energy. Both are critical to human development, and both are strongly interrelated.

With few exceptions, water is necessary to generate and distribute energy. In turn, water can’t be collected, purified and transported without energy. A term has even been coined to describe the relationship: the Energy-Water Nexus.

For a company like ours, operating a network of 27 biorefineries with the capacity to annually produce 1.6 billion gallons of ethanol, strategic thinking about water is a necessity. We spend a lot of time thinking about how we use water and where it comes from. More specifically, we focus on conserving water by using less and drawing it from alternative sources.

An ethanol biorefinery needs water primarily for three things: to create the aqueous environment necessary for fermentation, to generate steam in the boilers and to subsequently cool the process systems by removing heat. The perception exists that it takes a lot of water to make ethanol, and at one time that was true. In 1988, our first year of operation, our biorefinery required 18 gallons of water for every gallon of ethanol produced.

But at that time, the industry was in its infancy, technology was unreliable and virtually no ethanol plants were operating profitably. Significant gains had been made by 2009; so that same gallon of ethanol produced in one of our facilities required just over three gallons of water.

How did we do it? How were we able to decrease our water use by more than 80 percent? It was through a sustained focus on both the efficiency of the entire ethanol production process and the specific issues related to water use.

Efficiency improvements in the overall process have contributed significantly to the decrease in water use. In many cases, sustainability can involve trade-offs. But in the case of the Energy-Water Nexus, a decrease in energy use often leads to a corresponding decrease in water use and vice versa.

In our case, the development of a “no-cook” fermentation process decreased our energy use by 10-15 percent and meant that less water was needed to cool the biorefinery. But that’s just one of many examples. When you add them all up, we’ve cut the energy it takes to produce a gallon of ethanol approximately in half since 1988, which has led to cuts in the amount of water needed for cooling by a roughly equivalent percentage.

Gains have also come from focusing specifically on water. Water use is benchmarked across our biorefineries and receives as much attention as production rates. All of the water used in the fermentation process is recycled and we have been able to significantly reduce water use through process optimizations and technology improvements.

In addition to decreasing the volume of water used, our biorefineries also seek out alternative sources of water. For example, nearly all of the water to operate one biorefinery comes from the retention ponds of a nearby power plant. Another draws all of its water from an adjacent quarry that discharges it as part of its normal dewatering process. Yet another gets a third of its water from a local wastewater treatment facility. Last year, one of our biorefineries was able to save almost 16 million gallons when it started using water collected onsite in stormwater retention ponds.

Our belief in the importance of water conservation led us to make further reductions in water use through the first goal of our sustainability initiative, Ingreenuity, which we launched in 2009. That goal is to decrease overall water use by a further 23 percent from 2009 levels by 2014 so that our facilities would average less than 2.5 gallons of water per gallon of ethanol produced.

The goal was ambitious, but our engineers have us on the right track. They came up with a patent-pending process called “Total Water Recovery” that recycles water streams that were previously discharged. That process has now been installed in 18 of our biorefineries and plans are in place to deploy it in all but two of the remaining nine.

Thanks to Total Water Recovery, we used approximately 2.76 gallons of water per gallon of ethanol produced last year and in 2012 we project that it will decrease to 2.61. That would represent a water savings of 805 million gallons from where we were in 2009. If we achieve our full goal, that would save about one billion gallons of water each and every year.

The Energy-Water Nexus is a real phenomenon and being aware of it can help make sure that, as we transition to renewable sources of energy, we’re not solving one problem while creating another.

 

 

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Contributed by: Tim Olsen

The 3rd annual Harvest Festival will take place on Saturday September 24, 2011 from 11am-3pm at the Lowell Elementary MST playground in downtown Sioux Falls.    Urban Agriculture Initiatives Inc. will host the event with inflatable toys and free food and beverages donated by Cross Pointe Baptist Church in Sioux Falls with music entertainment provided by Dakota Productions from Lennox, SD.  Local organizations including the Boy Scouts, SDSU Extension, Sanford Health, Sioux Falls Fire and Rescue, Sioux Falls police department, Health Connect, and Augustana College will also be present.  Student –led tours of A Growing Place teaching garden will be featured with children from Lowell Elementary on hand to answer questions about what they are learning and how the garden affects their life.  If there are additional non-profit groups or service organizations that would like to be involved please call Cindy A Heidelberger Larson at 201-5549 or email cindyalarson@gmail.com for more information.

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Produced by award-winning filmmakers Josh Tickell and Rebecca Tickell, “FREEDOM” started out as a documentary about the recent Gulf Coast oil spill disaster.

It became something very different.

“[The film] ‘FREEDOM’ makes a completely compelling case that by converting our dependence on oil to a literally homegrown source of energy, we achieve several goals. First, we improve our economy by spending energy dollars here; second, we create more jobs; third, we base our energy needs on a renewable resource (corn and biomass); and fourth,
we reduce our impact on the environment,” says reviewer
Patrick Robinson of the West Seattle Herald.

To promote the film, the husband-and-wife team, who also produced the Sundance Film Festival’s Award-winning documentary, “Fuel,” are now on a three-month, 30-city “North American Clean Energy Tour” in their fully customized Freedom Bus, a “green” constructed, highly energy efficient vehicle that showcases the latest biofuel-efficient advanced fuels along with wind, solar and water technology.

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Contributed by: Whitney Parks, Koch Hazard Architects and Steven Matzner

Augie Green, Augustana’s student-led environmental club, and POET, the world’s largest ethanol producer, present the FREEDOM Film Tour, featuring an investigative documentary on alternative fuels and a full size, ethanol-burning bus covered in solar panels and wired with high-tech learning tools, which will roll through campus on Monday, Sept. 19.

The FREEDOM Bus will be located outside the Morrison Commons from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The film, “FREEDOM,” will be shown at 7 p.m. in Kresge Recital Hall.

The bus and the film are free and open to the public.

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Register Now for Plain Green 2011

September 1, 2011

Contributed by: Natalie Eisenberg Plain Green 2011 Speaker line-up and schedule have been released for this year’s conference on October 14!  Check out details at http://plaingreen.org/

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“Can you move that wall?”

September 1, 2011

Contributed by: Steve Schwartz and Lenae Liddiard Have you ever renovated or built a new space only to complete the project and ask yourself, “why did I put the wall there?” or “what would it take to move that wall?” The interiors industry has made products available that allow you to create “high performance interiors” [...]

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