
Brazil
Henrique Oliveira
The project is expected to be concluded in two years, and will use 180,000 tons of carbon steel tubes, laid out over approximately 800 miles. 10,000 men will work on the project, which will also include compression and leakage measurement stations. The cost of the project, estimated at R$ 500 million (~US$ 235 million) will be picked up by Transpetro, a Petrobras subsidiary. The line will serve exclusively ethanol plants producing for international markets, transporting 4 billion liters of ethanol at full capacity.
On its web site, Transpetro speaks at great technical length about the project in a very complete document, which can be read by clicking here.
I have previously shown, by presenting data collated and analyzed by Prof. Jose Goldemberg, the former president of the University of Sao Paulo (USP), the largest in Latin America, that the long-run average cost of ethanol declined 75% in 25 years, from US$680/cubic meter in 1978 to about US$200/cubic meter today.
Follow what's happening in the Brazilian ethanol market on Ethablog, the only blog in English dedicated to Brazilian ethanol.
4 comments:
Very interesting to see how Transpetro debunks the critiques against the feasibility of ethanol pipelines heard in the US.
Let's not forget that this critique came from a very particular group of people with an interest in blocking the development of a viable ethanol industry. On the other hand, an official commission is studying the matter, and if they remain objective, the will find that technically it can be done.
DUDE , this is the blog im looking for a long time...great content about ethanol.
GOOD JOB !!!
Felipe Alves
BRASIL !!!!!
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