Reuters 29 Jun 09;
HAMBURG (Reuters) - The first biofuels produced using new generations of biomass raw materials could be available in commercial volumes from 2010 at the earliest, German junior Environment Michael Mueller said on Monday.
But the exact time scale was still unclear, Mueller said at the European Biomass conference in Hamburg.
Germany is among the first European countries building test plants to produce commercial volumes of second generation biofuels from a wide range of biomass materials ranging from wood chips and other forest products to straw, hay, vegetable waste and low grade crops.
The first generation biofuels made from food crops such as grain, rapeseed oil and palm oil are used to produce biofuels to reduce use of fossil fuels and combat global warming. Commercial production dates for second generation fuels have been repeatedly postponed in Germany as new technology is developed. A production start as early as 2007 was hoped in the past.
"We do not believe this will take place before 2010," Mueller told a news conference at the start of the congress. "This was one reason why we cut our blending levels."
On June 18, Germany's parliament approved government proposals to cut the compulsory level of biofuels to be blended into fossil fuels this year to 5.25 percent from the 6.25 percent originally intended.
Germany's once-booming biodiesel industry, Europe's largest is working at about 60 percent of its 4.8 million ton annual capacity and has lobbied for the blending cut to be stopped.
Germany would focus future rises in its biofuel blending levels on progress in the production of second generation biofuels from biomass, Mueller said.
COMPLEX PROCESS
Production of new generations of biofuels based on biomass are not likely to be expanded rapidly as the first generation was introduced in past years, said Giovanni Federigo De Santi, director of the energy institute at the European Union Commission's Joint Research Center.
"We want to develop second generation biofuels which move away from competition from food and (animal) feed," he said. "But because of the complexity of the production processes we are not so optimistic we will get second generation biofuels ready in a very short while."
Cost and availability meant first generation biofuels were likely to retain the main role for some years to come in meeting pollution reduction goals and combating global warming, he said.
With so much technology still to be developed, Santi said he did not believe new generation biofuels will be fully deployed for another 10 years.
But low grade biomass could play a large part in heat production to help the European Union reach its goal of achieving a 20 percent share of renewables in its final energy consumption by 2020, said Fabrizio Barbaso, the EU Commission's deputy director general for energy and transport.
Between 10 to 20 percent of the 2020 renewables goal could be met by using biomass for heat production, Barbaso said.
Second generation biofuels were likely to be used for blending with fossil fuels rather than for sale individually to special biofuel vehicles, said Jos Delbeke, the EU Commission's deputy director general for the environment.
(Reporting by Michael Hogan; Editing by James Jukwey)