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Jet fuel project gets Ontario wood allocation
Press announcement
 
From the left are David Orazietti, MPP of Sault Ste. Marie; Mike Brown, MPP of Algoma Manitoulin; Chief Roy Michano of Pic River First Nations; Hunt Ramsbottom, president and CEO of Rentech; Michael Gravelle, Ontario Minister of Northern Development, Mines, and Forestry; Angelo Bazzoni, Mayor of White River; and Thurston Kwissiwa, councillor of Pic Mobert.
Photo: Canadian Press Images/Rentech Inc


 
May 9, 2011, Los Angeles, CA, and Sault Ste. Marie, ON – Rentech’s proposed Olympiad Renewable Energy Centre (Olympiad Project) in White River, Ontario, has been selected by the province of Ontario for a proposed supply of up to 1.1 million cubic metres/year of Crown timber. The wood supply, composed primarily of forest waste and unmerchantable species, would be used for the sustainable production of renewable RenJet, Rentech’s low-carbon jet fuel. This proposed wood allocation is the largest awarded in the Provincial Wood Supply Competitive Process administered by the Ontario Ministry of Northern Development, Mines, and Forestry. The selection is the first step in making the wood supply available to the project.

Rentech’s Olympiad Project is being designed to produce approximately 85 million litres/year of renewable and certified low-carbon RenJet fuel. The project will also produce 43 million litres/year of renewable naphtha, a chemical feedstock.

The Olympiad Project, scheduled to be in service in 2015, will be designed as a state-of-the-art renewable energy facility that will employ the company’s biomass gasification system to produce alternative jet fuel certified for use in commercial aviation. Rentech’s technologies will enable it to turn primarily unmerchantable and underused timber into renewable jet fuel.

Rentech is working closely with Sustainable Development Technology Canada (SDTC), whose $500 million NextGen Biofuels Fund (NGBF) offers a significant potential funding source for the Olympiad Project. After a year of discussions with SDTC, Rentech has submitted an application for funding to the NGBF, which funds up to 40% to a maximum of $200 million of eligible project development and construction costs, which would be repaid from a percentage of the project’s cash flows.

“Having our project selected in the Provincial Wood Supply Competitive Process for a proposed large, sustainable feedstock supply from the Ontario government is a significant achievement and step forward for our renewable energy project,” says D. Hunt Ramsbottom, president and CEO of Rentech. “We will be working closely with SDTC, First Nations, and other partners to secure project financing. SDTC’s funding opportunity played a key role in Rentech’s decision to pursue a large-scale renewable energy facility in Northern Ontario.”

Working with the province and White River, Rentech has forged a significant partnership with the Pic River First Nation for up to 18% equity interest in the project. The Pic River partnership is expected to create significant opportunities for the Aboriginal community through job creation and advanced skills training. Other Aboriginal communities are expected to benefit from regional opportunities as well.

“Communities such as Pic River and White River that have withstood the industry shift from traditional pulp, paper, and sawmills to new uses for Ontario’s forests now have a renewed sense of hope,” says Chief Roy Michano of Pic River First Nation. “We are pleased with our partnership with Rentech, a very forward thinking company that has embraced First Nations as an integral part of such an ambitious project. Finally, to the Minister of Northern Development, Mines and Forestry, we are truly thankful for Ontario’s continued support of our energy and forestry programs in Pic River. Much of our success has been built on this continued support.”

The project would leverage local sustainable forestry expertise, employ an estimated 83 full-time employees, and create over 300 indirect and induced positions.

Renewable RenJet and naphtha to be produced at the Olympiad Project are estimated to reduce approximately 600,000 tonnes/year of CO2-equivalent from the atmosphere compared to the same products produced from petroleum. This equates to removing more than 100,000 passenger cars from the road. RenJet is virtually free of sulphur and aromatics. When compared to traditional jet fuel, tailpipe emissions from RenJet generate lower amounts of particulate matter, nitrogen oxides (NOX), and sulphur oxides (SOX). Life-cycle emissions of carbon dioxide are significantly below those of petroleum-based jet fuel. The lower density of RenJet fuel could enable aircraft to have a lower take-off weight, which conserves fuel and lowers operating costs.

Rentech operates a demonstration facility in Commerce City, Colorado, deploying its synthetic fuels technology that has produced over 150,000 litres of certified synthetic fuels. In 2010, a commercial flight flew on a blend of Rentech’s synthetic jet fuel and conventional Jet-A with no difference in performance when compared to conventional jet fuel.