Site icon

H-Bio, Brazil’s Weapon to Win World’s Renewable Energy War

Brazil has developed a new diesel fuel mixed with vegetable oils that will sharply reduce its need for imported diesel, the state-run oil company Petrobras, Petróleo Brasileiro SA, said.

President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said the new fuel represented a "revolution of tremendous magnitude for the 21st century," when state-run Petrobras presented the fuel in Curitiba, 670 km southwest of Rio.

"The world has had many wars because of petroleum," Lula said. Brazil "will be the most important country for renewable energy. Nobody will compete with us."

Silva said farm workers who plant soy and other oil seeds "now will sow petroleum."

He cited Brazil’s widespread use of ethanol – sugarcane alcohol used straight or mixed with gasoline – and biodiesel, a diesel fuel made solely from vegetable oils.

Petrobras said the new fuel, called H-Bio, was developed over 18 months by mixing refinery petroleum with oil from soy, sunflower seeds, cotton and castor beans.

The new H-Bio fuel is different from bio-diesel, which is also produced with vegetable oils but is blended into regular diesel by fuel distributors, not at the refinery level.

Petrobras predicted that three refineries would produce the new fuel by 2007. The company declined to reveal its investment or expected production but said diesel fuel imports would decline "initially by 250 million liters a year."

In 2007, Petrobras plans to use 256 million liters of vegetable oils in the production of H-Bio fuel, Petrobras Downstream Director Paulo Roberto Costa said. That will replace 15 percent of Petrobras’ current diesel imports, estimated at 1.7 billion liters in 2006.

Mercopress – www.mercopress.com

Next: Rising Foreign Investment Lifts Brazilian Stocks
Exit mobile version