Tag Archives: green

Pellet Consumption In Denmark Projected To Grow

By Erin Voegele | November 11, 2013 The Dutch government has filed a report on its domestic market for wood pellets with the USDA Foreign Agricultural Service’s Global Agricultural Information Network. According to the report, Denmark is the largest importer of wood pellets in the world, with imports expected to increase from 2 million metric tons in 2012 to 3 million metric tons in 2020. The GAIN report specifies that wood pellets are used in Denmark to fuel small residential boilers, medium-sized district heating plants, and large combined-heat-and-power (CHP) plants, with CHP plants representing the primary driver of growth since 2010. While some pellets are produced domestically in Denmark, most are imported. The report estimates that Danish production of wood pellets has averaged between 130,000 metric tons and 200,000 metric tons annually since 2000, primarily from residue feedstock sourced from the furniture and wood processing industries. Rapidly growing use by CHP plants coupled with a limited domestic feedstock supply has caused significant growth in pellet imports in recent years. In 2012, the country imported 2 million metric tons of wood pellets, valued at $350 million. During the first seven months of 2013, the Dutch government has reported a 10 percent increase in pellet imports. Denmark currently imports most of its pellets from the Baltic Region, with 960,000 metric tons imported from the Baltics in 2012. The country also imported 348,000 metric tons from Russia last year. The GAIN report notes that imports from the U.S. are currently marginal, equating to only 38,000 metric tons in 2012. Moving forward, the report said that sustainability will be a key factor in determining which exporting countries benefit from growing demand. The Danish government is currently analyzing the sustainability of biomass supplies. The results of that study are expected to be ready at the end of the year. The analysis is expected to form the basis for future policy and funding initiatives. Bu 2020. Denmark is expected to consume 3.17 million metric tons of pellets, with 600,000 tons of that volume consumed by residential customers and 2.57 million metric tons by the private sector. Domestic production is expected to hold steady at 150,000 metric tons, with imports reaching 3.1 million metric tons. Approximately 80,000 metric tons of wood pellets will be exported. Continue reading

Posted on by tsiadmin | Posted in Investment, investments, News, Property, Taylor Scott International, TSI, Uk | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Pellet Consumption In Denmark Projected To Grow

Neste Oil To Promote The Deployment Of Sustainable Aviation Biofuel In The Netherlands

(Thomson Reuters ONE via COMTEX) — Neste Oil Corporation Press release 13 November 2013 at 10.45 a.m (EET) Neste Oil to promote the deployment of sustainable aviation biofuel in the Netherlands Neste Oil committed itself on 12 November, to a Dutch initiative aimed at the deployment of sustainable biofuel in the aviation sector. The signatories of the initiative include KLM, SkyNRG, Schiphol Airport, the Port of Rotterdam, the State Secretary of Infrastructure and the Environment, and the Minister of Economic Affairs. Neste Oil’s role in the initiative is to explore the production opportunities for aviation biofuel and scaling up production. Its renewable fuel refinery in Rotterdam would potentially be the first site for producing renewable aviation fuel in the Netherlands. “Neste Oil is a global pioneer in aviation biofuels and has already carried out trials on the use of NExBTL renewable aviation fuel in commercial service,” says Kaisa Hietala, Neste Oil’s Vice President, Renewable Fuels. “We expect this new initiative to stimulate market demand for sustainable aviation biofuel and promote a shift from individual projects to the continuous production and supply of sustainable aviation biofuel. The Netherlands is uniquely positioned to enable this break-through because of the commitment of the public and private sector in the aviation and biofuel industry.” Neste Oil’s renewable aviation fuel is based on its NExBTL technology, which can make very flexible use of a wide range of vegetable oil and waste-based raw materials. Neste Oil ensures the sustainability of all the renewable raw materials it uses and its supply chain complies with a number of sustainability certification schemes. NExBTL renewable aviation fuel meets the very stringent quality standards demanded of aircraft fuel and can significantly reduce an aircraft’s greenhouse gas emissions compared to fossil fuel. Neste Oil Corporation Kaisa Lipponen Director, Corporate Communications Further information: Kaisa Hietala, Vice President, Renewable Fuels, Neste Oil, tel. +358 10 458 4128 Neste Oil in brief Neste Oil Corporation is a refining and marketing company concentrating on low-emission, high-quality traffic fuels. The company produces a comprehensive range of major petroleum products and is the world’s leading supplier of renewable diesel. Neste Oil had net sales of EUR 17.9 billion in 2012 and employs around 5,000 people, and is listed on NASDAQ OMX Helsinki. Neste Oil is included in the Dow Jones Sustainability World Index and the Ethibel Pioneer Investment Register, and has featured in The Global 100 list of the world’s most sustainable corporations for many years. Forest Footprint Disclosure (FFD) has ranked Neste Oil as one of the best performers in the oil & gas sector. Further information: www.nesteoil.com This announcement is distributed by Thomson Reuters on behalf of Thomson Reuters clients. The owner of this announcement warrants that: (i) the releases contained herein are protected by copyright and other applicable laws; and (ii) they are solely responsible for the content, accuracy and originality of the information contained therein. Source: Neste Oil Oyj via Thomson Reuters ONE Continue reading

Posted on by tsiadmin | Posted in Investment, investments, News, Property, Taylor Scott International, TSI, Uk | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Neste Oil To Promote The Deployment Of Sustainable Aviation Biofuel In The Netherlands

U.S. Farmland Buyers More Selective But Still Pay For Prime

By Christine Stebbins CARLINVILLE, Illinois  Tue Nov 12, 2013 Nov 12 (Reuters) – Buyers of U.S. farmland appear undaunted by falling grain prices, paying top dollar for prime parcels coming up at autumn auctions although showing a more cautious tone than in recent years, farmland auction participants said at a sale last week. “It’s more dependent on where a farm is located than the general land market. The person the farm is near matters more than the type of farm,” said Bruce Huber, an Illinois real estate broker who handled a sale in central Illinois last week. “Last year, it was just up, up, up.” If the sale of the 535-acre (217-hectare) grain farm in Carlinville, Illinois, for $14.5 million is any indication, farmland values in the most productive areas of the grain belt will stay steady during harvest, the traditional season for farm land auctions. The farm in question, which included grain storage facilities for more than 4 million bushels, was sold in seven tracts with the top parcel of 200 acres bringing in $13,600 an acre. “We decided $13,000 was our top dollar. We exceeded our expectations. But I’m glad we did it,” said David Fullington, a local CPA who organized a partnership of farmers to make the successful bid for that parcel, which will be farmed by one of the buyers’ sons in the coming year. The sale price was as strong as a year ago when corn was at $8 a bushel versus the $4 being paid today. Corn prices have been the catalyst for sky-high U.S. farmland values in recent years. Why the strength? The usual reason: the neighbors wanted the farm. “We wouldn’t have bought this if we didn’t own other land,” said Fullington, who said top grade land four years ago had been selling for $4,000 an acre. “It would have been a poor investment for somebody to go out and buy land for the first time.” Huber said he had seen a common theme at this autumn’s grain land auctions in Illinois, typically the nation’s number 2 corn and soybean grower behind Iowa. If the farm is in the right spot, and the land is good quality, farmers are paying top prices and quickly – the 200-acre parcel, a $2.72 million sale, was done in 15 minutes, Huber said. But if those factors are not present, sales go slow and often disappoint sellers. “There is more variability this year,” he said. “If you want $13,000 or $14,000, you’re going to sit on it for a while. A year ago, that wasn’t the case.” HARD LESSONS There is a wide audience for farm land prices this season. Federal Reserve policy makers, farm bankers who use land as loan collateral, seed and fertilizer dealers and equipment makers like John Deere are closely watching land sales as an indicator of future farmer spending at a time grains prices – if not revenues, given higher yields – have fallen back. Jason Henderson, a Purdue University agricultural economist, said the Illinois auction was in line with what many have expected. “Farmland values are holding pretty flat from where they have been. Usually the big moves in land values come in the fourth quarter, so we’re right in the middle of it,” he said in an interview. “My scenario as to how I think it’s going to play out: we’ll get a little softness. Then those farmers will sit there and decide, ‘Is this the top of the market or not?’ Those who were on the fence thinking about selling, if they think this is the top, then they’ll put it on the market.” Prime grain land in Illinois, Iowa and other Midwest states rose 20 to 30 percent in 2012 alone. Soaring demand for corn from ethanol makers, strong demand from China and other importers, and rock-bottom U.S. interest rates have all combined to feed the farm land boom. But skyrocketing land values have stirred nightmare memories of the ruinous land bubble of the 1980s, when overleveraged farmers lost their farms as interest rates jumped. Farmers who lived through those times remember them well. Many were among the more than one hundred onlookers who sat in the old Macoupin County courthouse in Carlinville last week to watch the auction. For some, the sale was a sober reminder of the bad old days and bitter lessons repeated. The property had been owned by Rick Rosentreter, an ambitious young farmer who grew his grain operation from a few thousand acres to 30,000 acres in just a few years. But it was fueled by debt and the bankers who had lent to him foreclosed. “The tone of the sale was great,” said Huber. “The reason for the sale was not. There was stress.” Rosentreter was not present for the sale. Seth Baker, a broker with real estate company Schroeder Huber, said the young farmer’s meteoric rise and fall drew some interest in the event. But he said that when the bidding opened, it was the productive value of the land, not seller distress, that made the day. “There have been some sales that went well, others not so well over the past few months. We were on the high end of what we expected,” Baker said. “Outside of tracts 5-6, which sold relatively low due to access issues, all of the other tillable ground brought exceptional market value for class B, B+ soil types.” Other big buyers were also neighbors of Rosentreter, including the Behme family, which bought a 40-acre tract for $11,500 an acre. But the biggest buyer was a neighbor from 90 miles (145 miles) to the north in Decatur – Archer Daniels Midland, the biggest grain processor in the country. ADM bought a 30-acre parcel that included 20 grain storage bins for $9.1 million. Continue reading

Posted on by tsiadmin | Posted in Investment, investments, News, Property, Real Estate, Taylor Scott International, TSI, Uk | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on U.S. Farmland Buyers More Selective But Still Pay For Prime