Corporate News
Switch to biofuels will delay by two years
Mumias Sugar Company factory. More investors are need to diversify into ethanol production to drive the biofuels programme. Photo/ANTHONY KAMAU
Posted Friday, February 26 2010 at 00:00
Kenya’s switch to green energy— thanks to blending of petrol with ethanol— is going to delay by up to two years, a government agency dealing with the project has said.
The guidelines on blending that was planned to take off on Monday are not ready and the distillers may lack the technical capacity to undertake the assignment, the National Biofuels Sub-Committee says.
Dr Benard Muok, convener of the sub-committee mandated with formulating a national biofuel policy, says it will take at least three months to have the standards published.
Pilot programme
“The standards that were in use in the 1970s are obsolete and new ones needed to have been formulated. But this is yet to happen,” said Dr Muok.
The Kenya Bureau of Standards (Kebs), the national standards custodian, recently published the draft guidelines and the public will be sending comments until March 4, three days after the date the government set for the blending to take effect.
“This automatically means that the country cannot start running on biofuels; otherwise, what standards would we be applying?” he posed.
“The Ministry of Energy needs to be realistic because the March 1 deadline is not possible. Such a change needs not a week but adequate time so that the industry adjusts.”
The earliest Kebs can finalise the standards, Dr Muok said, is after three months.
According to the convener, even if the guidelines were ready, the project would start on a piloting phase that will be undertaken in western Kenya where the two major distillers Spectre International and Agro-Chemical and Food Company Limited are situated.
A national switch to biofuels, Dr Muok explained, will be realised in 2012 — at the earliest.
With only three days before the deadline set by the government of March 1 expires, the sub-committee said the country was not in a position to begin using biofuels.
Apart from the delay in publishing the new standards for ethanol production, the distillers will have to deal with the logistics of switching to producing power alcohol — the chemical required for blending.
With the new government guidelines, the distillers too will have to effect changes and install equipment for the venture.
At the moment, the distillers have ethanol stocks estimated at 120 million litres, that the expert said would only run a pilot programme.




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