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As Oil Wells Dry Up
Indonesia May Quit OPEC
Biomass Plants on Rise in Europe

As Oil Wells Dry Up
Indonesia May Quit OPEC
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said on May 6 that Indonesia was considering quitting the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries because it was no longer a net oil exporter.
“Our wells are drying,“ he said in the nationally televised speech, adding that the country needed to concentrate on increasing domestic production, which has dropped to less than a million barrels a day even as consumption rises, AP said.
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Indonesia produced around 860,000 barrels a day of crude oil last month and recorded a deficit of $794 million in its oil trade accounts.
The government opened talks Monday on whether it “should continue to stay with OPEC or withdraw our membership ... until we reach a point where we deserve to rejoin that organization,“ Yudhoyono told governors and heads of regencies from all over Indonesia.
The country of 235 million people is Southeast Asia’s only OPEC member. But it has to import oil because of decades of declining investment in exploration and extraction due to corruption and a weak legal system that makes oil companies wary of doing business here.
Indonesia’s oil output has declined steadily from oil production of 1.5 million to 1.6 million barrels a day in the mid-1990s. It produced around 860,000 barrels a day of crude oil last month and recorded a deficit of $794 million in its oil trade accounts.
Raising output could take “one to three years,“ Yudhoyono said.
It is not the first time the country has re-evaluated its OPEC membership, but in past years teams commissioned by the government have recommended staying in the grouping to maintain good relations with other oil producers, especially the heavyweights in the Middle East.
OPEC is an intergovernmental organization made up of 13 oil-producing countries. It was first formed in 1960 by founding members Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela.
Indonesia, which joined OPEC in 1962, would not pull out until next year if the move was approved, because it has already paid dues thru 2008, according to Minister of Energy and Mineral Resources Purnomo Yusgiantoro.

Budget Blowout
The government, meanwhile, is also mulling whether to raise domestic fuel prices by up to 30 percent to avoid a budget blowout amid the soaring cost of oil on the global market.
Crude oil futures have doubled since early last year and the front-month contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange was holding near $120 a barrel in Asia after topping that level for the first time Monday in the US.
Indonesian subsidies have kept gasoline, diesel fuel and kerosene affordable for years to the country’s millions of poor, but most analysts agree that current domestic prices are unsustainable. Still, a large hike could trigger nationwide riots and would come at an especially sensitive time, with political parties jockeying ahead of next year’s presidential elections.
A big fuel price increase in 1998 triggered rioting that helped topple former dictator Suharto. Rallies also forced former President Megawati Sukarnoputri to scale back a fuel price increase in 2002. Demonstrations were small and scattered, however, when the present government slashed subsidies in 2005.
But in the first sign of unrest, protesters and police hurled rocks at each other on Sulawesi island during a demonstration against the looming price hikes Tuesday, injuring at least four people.
Witnesses said clash occurred when officers tried to prevent protesters from burning tires and seizing a fuel tanker in the town of Makassar.
Yudhoyono said this week fuel prices could be raised anywhere between 20 percent and 30 percent.

Biomass Plants on Rise in Europe
The head of the International Energy Association, Nobuo Tanaka, visited Europe’s largest biomass plant that uses only wood as fuel in February, hailing the 66 megawatt (MW) biomass plant in Austria, as a “model project“ for the up-and-coming forest-based bioenergy industry.
According to RenewableEnergyWorld, the biomass plant in Simmering, Vienna, provides sufficient electricity to meet the needs of 48,000 households and as well as the heating requirements of 12,000 more.
Stephan Grausam from the Austrian Biomass Association said that fuel from forests is a growing and sustainable branch of the biomass industry, with potential for considerable expansion. Growth in wood fuel for energy generation is also being pushed by European Union renewable energy legislation enacted to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, Grausam said.
“Only two thirds of the timber that regrows in Austria’s forests every year is currently used. That leaves one third of the timber as a resource that could be used for fuel. On top of that, there is lots of agricultural, municipal and household waste that could be used,“ Grausam said.
Over 47 percent of the land area of Austria is covered with trees, representing a huge potential source of fuel for the growing bioenergy market.
There are 3.97 million hectares of forestry in Austria, storing 800 million tons of carbon, or 40 times more than the country’s total annual carbon emissions from burning fossil fuels.
More than a 1000 large-scale biomass plants are already operating in Austria with an installed capacity of 1.132 MW in 2005, and their number is steadily growing.
The Simmering biomass plant uses about 190,000 tons of wood harvested in a sustainable way from forests every year. Overall the plant is estimated to contribute to the removal of an additional 144,000 tons of carbon dioxide each year.
The wood is delivered to the site mainly by lorry from forests within a 100-kilometer radius, including from the famous Vienna Woods, but some of the wood comes from further afield. Types of fuel used include round timber, chips, barks as well as garden waste.
In spite of its happy greenhouse gas balance, critics say that the plant is underutilized because of its location. The Simmering plant currently supplies only 2 percent of Vienna’s district heat but could have delivered 8 percent if it operated on combined heat and electricity generation mode for longer periods, according to a study by one government agency.
The study said that the plant generates both heat and electricity for only 2,500 hours a year out of a total of 8,000 operating hours.
In winter when the demand for heat is high, the plant achieves a total efficiency of almost 80 percent with an electrical gross efficiency of 23 percent. But in summer, spring and autumn, the plant generates electricity only, and attains an electrical gross efficiency of 37 percent.

Coal Capacity
Semirara Mining Corp , the Philippines’ largest coal producer, said it plans to expand annual capacity by 500,000 tons starting this year to meet rising overseas demand.

EnergyCol3
Cheaper, More Efficient Fuel Cells
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Methanol fuel cells are an efficient and sustainable alternative to fossil fuels, but they are still not economically viable.
Nevertheless, for his PhD, University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU) research chemist, Jose E. Barranco, has developed new materials that enable the manufacture of cheaper and more efficient methanol fuel cells, ScienceDaily reported.
Over the past decades climate change and its consequences for life on our planet have given rise to a growing scientific interest in the development of alternative energies.
The fossil fuels that currently dominate our energy map are not only becoming scarce, but are moreover generating large quantities of contaminating gases.
Within the field of renewable energies the scientific community is today devoting great efforts to investigating and developing fuel cells, capable of creating electrical energy from a chemical reaction between a fuel and oxygen.
For fuel cells to be a competitive option amongst alternative energies, advances in a number of fields are required, amongst these being the development of new catalysts, i.e. substances that are responsible for accelerating the chemical reaction required for electricity to be produced.
It is in here that Josˇ E. Barranco’s focused when he presented his PhD thesis, Development of new metallic materials of an amorphous nature for use in direct methanol fuel cells, at the UPV/EHU.
Jose Enrique Barranco Riveros is a graduate in Chemical Sciences and is currently working as a researcher employed by the Polytechnic University School in the Basque city of Donostia-San Sebastian. His PhD was awarded excellent cum laude unanimously and was led by Dr. Angel Rodriguez Pierna of the Department of Chemical Engineering and the Environment at the University School.

Methanol as Alternative
Most current research is focused on hydrogen cells the biggest advantage of which is that they do not generate contaminant gases, except water vapor as the only waste product. However, hydrogen is very expensive, both in producing it and in distributing it using traditional overland transport methods. Moreover, its energy density is less than that of methanol, meaning that, in order to obtain the same energy from a similar amount of fuel, the hydrogen has to be kept and stored under conditions of very high pressure (more than 800 bars).
This is why hydrogen is dangerous, and even more so when stored in vehicles traveling at high speed--a small crack in the storage container could have fatal consequences. These and other reasons mean that methanol (a type of alcohol derived from methane gas) is a good option for charging fuel cells.
In order for the fuel cell to generate electricity, a chemical reaction called electro-oxidation has to take place and this, in turn, requires a catalyst to accelerate the process. This catalyst is inserted in the fuel cell membrane and, in the case of methanol, the basic accelerator is platinum, a scarce and expensive metal. This is why the aim of Dr. Barranco’s thesis was to devise a catalyst composed of a metal alloy in which the amount of platinum is significantly reduced.

Fundamental Problem
His research focused on a fundamental problem: the electro-oxidation of methanol produces carbon monoxide, a molecule that adheres to the metal and inhibits the latter’s catalyzing capacity, i.e. it impedes the accelerator from doing its work and energy production is halted.
After investigating the composition of numerous metals, Dr. Barranco made alloys that enabled the reduction of the proportion of platinum to 1 percent. These alloys, composed of elements such as nickel, niobium, antimony or ruthenium, amongst others, have the unique property of converting molecules of carbon monoxide (CO) into carbon dioxide (CO2) efficiently. The CO2, being gaseous, does not adhere to the catalyst which in the long term favors the catalytic process.
This means that the methanol fuel cell will emit a small quantity of CO2 which, according to Dr. Barranco, is easily tolerable by nature given that this can be incorporated into the photosynthesis cycle of plants. According to a study by the American Methanol Institute, it is forecast that, by the year 2020, there will be 40 million cars powered by methanol fuel cells, meaning that CO2 emissions will be cut by 104 million tons with respect to emissions from petrol.
Once the suitable catalyst was found, Dr. Barranco set out to increase its efficiency. The conclusions of his PhD thesis point to the fact that, if the platinum alloy is structured amorphously, its electrical conduction properties are enhanced and it undergoes less corrosion (advantages for the medium in which it has to operate).
Moreover, it has an operational capacity in the order of 80-100 times greater than platinum in a crystalline structure. Amorphous materials are those with a disordered molecular structure and which, in this case, are obtained by the sudden cooling of metal alloys.
Also, for the catalyst made on this basis of amorphous metal alloys to be incorporated into the fuel cell membrane, Dr. Barranco decided to change its form. The result is a very fine powder that is placed in a container to “spray paint“ the membrane. Not only this: as it is a substance made of minute particles, the operating capacity of the catalyst is enhanced by 9 to 13 times.