Dairy Foods
  Home
  Subscribe
  e-newsletter
  Subscription Customer Service
  Online
  Web Exclusives
  Dairy News
  Calendar of Events
  Dairy Field Reports
  DFR Behind the Scenes
  Ask The Experts
  DF Blog
  Videos
  Webinars
  Podcasts
  Source Book
  Supplier Product Guide
  FISA Distributer Guide
  Associations Index
  Current Issue
  Features
  Departments
  New Products + Marketing
  Ingredient Technology
  Plant Operations
  Resources
  Dairy Foods Archives
  Dairy Field Archives
  Digital Edition Archive
  E-Newsletter Archive
  Career Center
  Classified Ads
  Industry Links
  Market Research
  Digital Brochures & Supplements
  Case Studies
  White Papers
  DF Info
  Contact Ad Staff
  Media Kit
  Contact Editorial Staff
  Reprints
  DF Events
  Membrane Short Course
  Special Collections
  Dairy 100
  Supplier Spotlights
Search in: EditorialProductsCompanies
Whey to go

October 12, 2007

ARTICLE TOOLS
EmailEmailPrintPrintReprintsReprintsshareShare



We've all heard about how some dairy farms generate their own power by extracting methane from cow manure. Now, researchers are studying ways to generate energy from a bit farther down the dairy chain.

A researcher in Syracuse, N.Y., has won a $400,000 grant to find out if ethanol can be made out of whey, according to a report in the Times-Picayune out of New Orleans. The year-long experiment is a joint effort of Corning Inc., the Hilliard Corp. and various departments of New York's state university system. The financing is coming from the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority, and the whey will be provided by Kraft's Lowville, N.Y., cream cheese operation.

While this is a first in the United States, apparently ethanol is already being made from cheese Down Under. New Zealand's Gull Petroleum recently started selling a blend of 90 percent gasoline and 10 percent whey-based ethanol, according to the T-P report.

The potential for this technology is huge. Not only does it create yet another revenue stream for a former waste product that has become a widely lucrative global industry, but it puts dairy on the right side of the "green" wave that's sweeping the nation. Maybe cheese processors could even start fueling their truck fleets with whey-based ethanol they produce on site.

After being told that flatulent dairy cows are helping to destroy the environment, perhaps this is exactly the kind of "carbon offset" that our industry needs.

- J.D.


|PrintEmail
  Comments (0)Post a Comment
 
 


Did you enjoy this article? Click here to subscribe to the magazine.
BNP Media