BioPower is a young
initiative but technologies with enormous impact
potential are already emerging from the
pipeline.
Sweet sorghum bioethanol technology
Nearly 700 small farmers were engaged in sweet
sorghum cultivation during the 2006 rainy season
and about 900 small farmers in the post rainy
season in Andhra Pradesh, India through
collaboration with Rusni Distilleries Ltd. This
will be scaled up to 2,000 small farmers in the
2007 rainy season. The distillery has a capacity
of producing 30 to 40 kiloliters per day (KLPD)
of ethanol for at least 105 days in each of two
seasons per annum.
Small-scale farmers within a radius of 40 km
from the industry can grow sweet sorghum.
We project that farmers will generate about US$
79 in additional income per year per hectare (over the
two rainy and postrainy seasons) from sweet
sorghum compared to grain sorghum.
As part of the public-private consortium, Kaveri
Seeds is providing high-quality sweet sorghum
seeds while ICRISAT provides sweet sorghum
breeding research and technical advice on crop
management, identification of agro-ecological
areas for sweet sorghum cultivation, seed
production, partnership-building and
capacity-building.
We expect that this pioneering model will be
replicated rapidly as awareness spreads, leading
to large scale impact. Rainy-season sorghum is
currently cultivated in five states in India on
about 3.2 million hectares, and we estimate that
60% of this area is suitable for sweet sorghum
without irrigation. Where supplemental
irrigation is possible, additional areas can be
cropped.
Beyond India, five proocessing facilities in The
Philippines have recently committed to
implementing the model there, and preliminary
discussions are underway with firms in Nigeria
and Uganda.
Biodiesel technologies
Powerguda, a remote, impoverished tribal hamlet
in the Adilabad district of Andhra Pradesh,
became an environmental pioneer when it sold the
equivalent of 147 tons of carbon dioxide in
verified emission reductions as carbon
replacements to the World Bank in October 2003.
The World Bank paid US $645 to Powerguda women’s
self-help groups to neutralize the emissions
from air travel and local transport by
international participants attending an
international conference.
This was the first time the Bank made a direct
payment to an Indian village for exporting
environmental services. The emission reduction
was calculated on the basis of 51 tons of
Pongamia oil substituting for petroleum diesel
over 10 years from the planting of 4,500
Pongamia trees in 2002.
The carbon income was ploughed back by these
landless women into expanding their Pogamia
nursery and tree-planting operations. They now
raise 20,000 seedlings of Pongamia and Jatropha
annually for sale. Most of seedlings are sold to
the forest department, but some are also planted
on field boundaries, farm bunds and community
owned lands. The women are also members of the
forest protection committee formed to protect
the nearby forest under the government’s
Community Forest Management project. The
establishment of an oil mill to crush Pongamia
seeds into oil has also helped the women
increase their incomes, through sale of oil and
oilcake.
With support from GTZ (Germany),
Southern Online Biotechnologies (SBT) in
Nalgonda district of Andhra Pradesh is providing
technical support to farmers to undertake
biodiesel plantations and to collect biodiesel
seeds from existing plantations to provide
feedstock for processing by SBT (40 kiloliter
per day capacity). SBT assures the price for the
seeds and provides the seed cake back to the
farmers for improving their soils, and will help
them establish their own oil extraction units.
The seeds will begin arriving in the current
(2007) harvesting season.
Nandan Biomatrix is following a similar model
through an agreement with the State Government
of Andhra Pradesh to develop 200,000 ha of
pro-poor biodiesel plantation, in addition to
projects in two other states that should lead to
a total of a million hectares by 2010.
Please see the documents below for more details
on these impacts.
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