Brazil and India Join Senegal for Biofuel Production

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Topics: Climate and Environment
Countries: Brazil, India, Senegal
Previously filed under: South America, Environment
The biofuel program to be launched in Senegal leverages scientific and technological capabilities from Brazil, capital from Indian entrepreneurs and Senegalese land and labor.
Photo Credit: SciDev.Net
The oil in jatropha seeds is used to make biodiesel.
In a bid to decrease its dependence on oil and produce environmentally-friendly energy, Senegal will cooperate with Brazil and India to launch a biofuel production programme by 2007.

Through public-private partnerships, Brazil will provide scientific and technological know-how, Indian entrepreneurs will supply the capital, and Senegal will offer land and labour.

Biofuels, such as bioethanol, biodiesel and biogas, are renewable fuels generally produced from agricultural crops or organic matter.

The project is part of a plan by the Senegalese government to regenerate its rural economy through investment in biofuels to eventually replace the country's daily consumption of 33,000 oil barrels.

It was announced on 27 October by Farba Senghor, Senegal's minister of agriculture, rural hydraulics and food security in a meeting with a delegation of Brazilian biofuel experts in Dakar, Senegal.

Biofuels, such as bioethanol, biodiesel and biogas, are renewable fuels generally produced from agricultural crops or organic matter.
"The issues are enormous for our country, as biofuel will help us diversify our energy sources and reduce the increasing oil bill, while protecting the environment from pollution," Senghor said to AngolaPress.

"Senegal has considerable advantages to develop the biofuel sector, because the country presents good climatic and geological conditions necessary for the increase in plants used as raw materials for ethanol or diethyl ether production," José Neiva Santos, head of the Brazilian delegation, said.

In an initial pilot project to reduce Senegal's oil imports by 10 percent, jatropha plants will be grown on 4,000 hectares of land in Touba.

The extracted oil will be transformed into biodiesel in production units to be set up in Khelcom, some 100 km from Dakar.

The pilot project also aims to provide a knowledge hub from which other plantations could develop, according to Biopact, an organisation working for cooperation in biofuel and bioenergy between Europe and Africa.

Senghor indicated that Senegal will carry out an experiment of growing castor oil plants, sunflowers or jatropha over an area of 50,000 hectares in Kolda and Tambacounda, in southern and eastern Senegal.
The pilot project aims to provide a knowledge hub from which other plantations could develop.


This will help determine costs and the optimal conditions for biofuel production — examining the best way to extract the oil, as well as finding out what crop produces better biofuel at minimum cost.

News of the biofuel investment programme, which is part of a government plan called 'retour vers l'agriculture' ('back to agriculture'), comes ahead of the green power energy conference BiofuelsMarketsAfrica scheduled for 30 November in Cape Town, South Africa.




Contributed by Wagdy Sawahel, a molecular biotechnologist with a Ph.D. in molecular biotechnology from Leeds University, Britain. He worked as a research fellow at the United Nation International Center for Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology in New Delhi, India and was a visiting scientist at Vienna University, Austria. At present, he is a visiting professor at Ghent University in Belgium and an associate research professor at the National Research Center in Cairo, Egypt. Reprinted with permission from SciDev.Net.

To read another Global Envision article about biofuel, see The Bumpy Road to Clean, Green Fuel.



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