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LIFE-VOICE 
LIFE06 ENV/IT/000257-VOICE 
Layman's report 
1
2
1 Premise 
Francesco Martelli, David Chiaramonti 
The increasing energy demand and the related environmental problems re- 
quire the introduction of measures able to prevent or decrease the negative ef- 
fects. In Europe, about one-third of primary energy consumption is associated 
to transports, together with an enormous emissions quantity of pollutant gas and 
greenhouse gas emissions. For this reason and for the nearly absolute European 
reliance on oil fuel and imports (equal to 98% according to Commission White 
Paper European transport policy for 2010), the European Commission issued 
the Biofuel directive (2003/30/EC, 8th May 2003) that aims to reach 5,75% of 
biofuels on 2010; this objective has been subsequently increased on March 2007 
by the European Council to the 10% on 2020. During the last years, liquid bio- 
fuels have been also used as feedstock for stationary generation of energy with 
high power ecient (other sector responsible for about a third of the greenhouse 
emissions in EU). Based on that, an extensive debate on liquid biofuels sustain- 
ability has emerged. On December 2008 the European Parliament adopted with 
plenary vote the bill of Directive on the promotion of renewable energy as part 
of a package of energy and climate change approved at Strasbourg. Among all, 
this Directive con
rms the main targets in the Biomass
eld, in particular for 
biofuels (in their dierent forms), but these determinations come with a spe- 
cial attention to the environmental traceability and sustainability of the entire 
chain, represent a fundamental condition to comply with forms of incentives for 
renewable energy. 
The LIFE-VOICE project tried to aord a contribute in this direction: the 
commitment of researchers, of local governments, of associations and companies 
partner of this project is orientated to develop an organic and matched approach, 
it was oriented to analyze the supplied opportunities from the pure vegetable oil 
chain, and to better set up the projects, aiming to the environmental, economic 
and social sustainability. 
2 Introduction 
David Chiaramonti, Aldo Iacomelli 
The direct use of pure vegetable oil as fuel is a niche application, however it 
can represent a possible alternative (or better, an integration) to the traditional 
fossil fuel, which is sustainable from the economic and environmental point of 
view. For this reason the DirectorateGeneral of the European Commission has 
chosen the VOICE project (Vegetable Oil Initiative for a Cleaner Environment) 
for the support through the LIFEEnvironment program. 
The main purpose of the project has been to develop models based on short 
chain but also on industrial chain, for vegetable oil production destined to energy 
and transports in rural communities. The pure vegetable oil represents a real 
opportunity to decrease the fossil fuel consumption: it can be produced in an 
economically and environmentally sustainable way by a large variety of seeds 
on many grounds (as sun
ower, oilseed rape, soy, Jatropha Curcas, linseed and 
so on), which restrains the use of fertilizers. 
Encouraging the diusion of the agro-energetic chains, especially local, the 
VOICE has contributed to achieve the purposes set by the biofuels directive, 
3
the European Council and the Directive on Renewable Energy Sources. One 
of the projects main aim has been to create a connection between the energy 
world and the agriculture world, apparently distant. In a complicated current 
scenery, also for the news introduced by the revision of PAC, this project in- 
tended to verify the possibility to develop the bio-energetic chains, transferring 
to the South Europe countries, as Italy, Portugal and the Mediterranean coun- 
tries, the experiences already obtained in Germany on the oilseed rape and 
others crops like the sun
ower. The most innovative activities in the project 
regarded the de
nition of the best methods of cropping and the most interest- 
ing species/varieties, on extractions technologies (presses and
lters, industrial 
extractions), the adaptation of energetic conversion systems for electric power 
production and heat (engine, micro-turbine, burner for greenhouse) and the use 
of pure vegetable oil in tractors (modi
ed tractors). The project supported 
the development of policies aimed at the promotion of this biofuel and at the 
socio-environmental associated advantages in the rural areas. 
3 The Project 
David Chiaramonti, Matteo Prussi 
3.1 Oil crops: the pure vegetable oil chain 
Several types of crops species are grown in Europe for no-food oil production. 
Based on that, the main goal of the LIFE-VOICE project was to partially 
replace not-renewable energy source, i.e. fossil fuel, for energy production and 
transports, especially in rural communities, through innovative technologies and 
agronomic practices. The utilization of straight vegetable oil for energy genera- 
tion in converted diesel engines is rather diused in many European Countries, 
while the use of this feedstock for transportation, above all for agricultural ma- 
chineries, is not well known and not very widely implemented unless in few 
Countries (such as Germany, Denmark and France). 
The oil price rising and 
uctuations are suggesting farmers to be involved 
more and more in an home-made low-cost sustainable energetic production 
chain, but it is essential to provide them with the right and reliable information 
about this opportunity, especially considering middle and long-term scenarios. 
The reform of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) aims moreover to improve 
the economic and social integration of all rural areas. In the arable crops sec- 
tor, these notably include the abolition of extraordinary set-aside and individual 
base areas and the establishment of compensatory payments for oilseed cultiva- 
tion. The new regulation provides a better use of rural development instruments 
designed to promote not only agricultural activities, but also economic diversi
- 
cation in rural areas, as the energy crop production. These instruments include 
also agro-environmental measures, which have been strengthened. Further the 
decoupling, the carbon credit for energy crops creates an activity that will re- 
ceive a payment of 45 euro/ha plus the market return. Energy crops are clearly 
a new market and there is considerable uncertainty about the returns from these 
crops. 
The oil crops are widely distributed in Europe and classi
ed into Temper- 
ate (i.e. oilseed rape, linseed,
eld mustard and hemp) and Mediterranean (i.e. 
4
sun
ower, saower, castor oil, olive and groundnut) ones. Several oilseed crops 
have been tested with good results for energetic purposes. Dierent species 
are interesting due to their acid composition which can satisfy dierent end 
user requirements. At present time, only sun
ower, rapeseed and soybean have 
reached production levels that can justify cultivation for energy use in Europe. 
Regarding these well known crops, it can be assumed to reach sucient en- 
ergy production; the cultivation itself does not present any special technical 
problem, since they have been cultivated for a long time for food oil (and soy- 
bean for protein seedcake) and the growing techniques are well known. All 
the production phases are totally mechanized and usually all the machineries 
are available at farm scale because it is used on other crops during the year 
rotations, mainly wheat and maize. Handling and storage also do not present 
particular problems, with the exception of particular wet environments. Con- 
sideration of annual variation on humidity, tests on water content at harvesting, 
and
nally ventilated storage silos are requested when the vegetable oil sup- 
ply chain is designed. Rape and sun
ower can be grown on set-aside land all 
over the EU following established procedures and are the two most promising 
species for further development in Europe. Rape can be grown over a wide area 
of north-central Europe and in some southern area where, planted in the fall, 
it can be a good alternative to wheat in wheat mono-cropping. Rapeseed is 
mainly grown in southern and central Europe as an alternative crop to hard 
wheat and, like sun
ower, its energy balance is positive. 
3.2 The oil extraction and cleaning 
The oil can be obtained by two principal pathways: industrial plants, with 
mechanic extraction followed by chemical extraction through solvents, or in 
small scale plants (decentralized) with only one mechanical extraction (cold 
milling). The small scale allows to adopt a consortium model, where both the 
main and the co-product can be useful for the agricultural activities: vegetable 
oil and protein cake for animal feeding (the usual residual of the cold pressing). 
Figure 1: Conceptual scheme of the extraction plant. 
In the LIFE-VOICE project a speci
c plant has been designed, based on the 
study of analogous plants realized in Austria and Germany, hat operates mainly 
with oilseed rape. The realized plant, originally installed at the Mondeggi farm, 
5
allowed to process the seeds using a German press combined with an Italian
ltration system. The screw press (mechanical extraction process) is able to 
squeeze 120 kg/h sun
ower (previously dried at 8/9% of humidity and washed), 
suppling about 40 kg/h of oil and 80 kg/h of expeller cake. The construction of 
the screw press and the extraction modalities guarantee a maximum overheating 
of seed less than 75C in the hottest section. This condition is required to produce 
an oil with a small amount of phosphorus, suitable for the use in engines and 
converted system. The
lter system has been designed and realized in Italy, 
this is able to guarantee the respect of qualitative parameters required for oil. 
Dierent kinds of

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Laymans_Report

  • 2. 2
  • 3. 1 Premise Francesco Martelli, David Chiaramonti The increasing energy demand and the related environmental problems re- quire the introduction of measures able to prevent or decrease the negative ef- fects. In Europe, about one-third of primary energy consumption is associated to transports, together with an enormous emissions quantity of pollutant gas and greenhouse gas emissions. For this reason and for the nearly absolute European reliance on oil fuel and imports (equal to 98% according to Commission White Paper European transport policy for 2010), the European Commission issued the Biofuel directive (2003/30/EC, 8th May 2003) that aims to reach 5,75% of biofuels on 2010; this objective has been subsequently increased on March 2007 by the European Council to the 10% on 2020. During the last years, liquid bio- fuels have been also used as feedstock for stationary generation of energy with high power ecient (other sector responsible for about a third of the greenhouse emissions in EU). Based on that, an extensive debate on liquid biofuels sustain- ability has emerged. On December 2008 the European Parliament adopted with plenary vote the bill of Directive on the promotion of renewable energy as part of a package of energy and climate change approved at Strasbourg. Among all, this Directive con
  • 4. rms the main targets in the Biomass
  • 5. eld, in particular for biofuels (in their dierent forms), but these determinations come with a spe- cial attention to the environmental traceability and sustainability of the entire chain, represent a fundamental condition to comply with forms of incentives for renewable energy. The LIFE-VOICE project tried to aord a contribute in this direction: the commitment of researchers, of local governments, of associations and companies partner of this project is orientated to develop an organic and matched approach, it was oriented to analyze the supplied opportunities from the pure vegetable oil chain, and to better set up the projects, aiming to the environmental, economic and social sustainability. 2 Introduction David Chiaramonti, Aldo Iacomelli The direct use of pure vegetable oil as fuel is a niche application, however it can represent a possible alternative (or better, an integration) to the traditional fossil fuel, which is sustainable from the economic and environmental point of view. For this reason the DirectorateGeneral of the European Commission has chosen the VOICE project (Vegetable Oil Initiative for a Cleaner Environment) for the support through the LIFEEnvironment program. The main purpose of the project has been to develop models based on short chain but also on industrial chain, for vegetable oil production destined to energy and transports in rural communities. The pure vegetable oil represents a real opportunity to decrease the fossil fuel consumption: it can be produced in an economically and environmentally sustainable way by a large variety of seeds on many grounds (as sun ower, oilseed rape, soy, Jatropha Curcas, linseed and so on), which restrains the use of fertilizers. Encouraging the diusion of the agro-energetic chains, especially local, the VOICE has contributed to achieve the purposes set by the biofuels directive, 3
  • 6. the European Council and the Directive on Renewable Energy Sources. One of the projects main aim has been to create a connection between the energy world and the agriculture world, apparently distant. In a complicated current scenery, also for the news introduced by the revision of PAC, this project in- tended to verify the possibility to develop the bio-energetic chains, transferring to the South Europe countries, as Italy, Portugal and the Mediterranean coun- tries, the experiences already obtained in Germany on the oilseed rape and others crops like the sun ower. The most innovative activities in the project regarded the de
  • 7. nition of the best methods of cropping and the most interest- ing species/varieties, on extractions technologies (presses and
  • 8. lters, industrial extractions), the adaptation of energetic conversion systems for electric power production and heat (engine, micro-turbine, burner for greenhouse) and the use of pure vegetable oil in tractors (modi
  • 9. ed tractors). The project supported the development of policies aimed at the promotion of this biofuel and at the socio-environmental associated advantages in the rural areas. 3 The Project David Chiaramonti, Matteo Prussi 3.1 Oil crops: the pure vegetable oil chain Several types of crops species are grown in Europe for no-food oil production. Based on that, the main goal of the LIFE-VOICE project was to partially replace not-renewable energy source, i.e. fossil fuel, for energy production and transports, especially in rural communities, through innovative technologies and agronomic practices. The utilization of straight vegetable oil for energy genera- tion in converted diesel engines is rather diused in many European Countries, while the use of this feedstock for transportation, above all for agricultural ma- chineries, is not well known and not very widely implemented unless in few Countries (such as Germany, Denmark and France). The oil price rising and uctuations are suggesting farmers to be involved more and more in an home-made low-cost sustainable energetic production chain, but it is essential to provide them with the right and reliable information about this opportunity, especially considering middle and long-term scenarios. The reform of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) aims moreover to improve the economic and social integration of all rural areas. In the arable crops sec- tor, these notably include the abolition of extraordinary set-aside and individual base areas and the establishment of compensatory payments for oilseed cultiva- tion. The new regulation provides a better use of rural development instruments designed to promote not only agricultural activities, but also economic diversi
  • 10. - cation in rural areas, as the energy crop production. These instruments include also agro-environmental measures, which have been strengthened. Further the decoupling, the carbon credit for energy crops creates an activity that will re- ceive a payment of 45 euro/ha plus the market return. Energy crops are clearly a new market and there is considerable uncertainty about the returns from these crops. The oil crops are widely distributed in Europe and classi
  • 11. ed into Temper- ate (i.e. oilseed rape, linseed,
  • 12. eld mustard and hemp) and Mediterranean (i.e. 4
  • 13. sun ower, saower, castor oil, olive and groundnut) ones. Several oilseed crops have been tested with good results for energetic purposes. Dierent species are interesting due to their acid composition which can satisfy dierent end user requirements. At present time, only sun ower, rapeseed and soybean have reached production levels that can justify cultivation for energy use in Europe. Regarding these well known crops, it can be assumed to reach sucient en- ergy production; the cultivation itself does not present any special technical problem, since they have been cultivated for a long time for food oil (and soy- bean for protein seedcake) and the growing techniques are well known. All the production phases are totally mechanized and usually all the machineries are available at farm scale because it is used on other crops during the year rotations, mainly wheat and maize. Handling and storage also do not present particular problems, with the exception of particular wet environments. Con- sideration of annual variation on humidity, tests on water content at harvesting, and
  • 14. nally ventilated storage silos are requested when the vegetable oil sup- ply chain is designed. Rape and sun ower can be grown on set-aside land all over the EU following established procedures and are the two most promising species for further development in Europe. Rape can be grown over a wide area of north-central Europe and in some southern area where, planted in the fall, it can be a good alternative to wheat in wheat mono-cropping. Rapeseed is mainly grown in southern and central Europe as an alternative crop to hard wheat and, like sun ower, its energy balance is positive. 3.2 The oil extraction and cleaning The oil can be obtained by two principal pathways: industrial plants, with mechanic extraction followed by chemical extraction through solvents, or in small scale plants (decentralized) with only one mechanical extraction (cold milling). The small scale allows to adopt a consortium model, where both the main and the co-product can be useful for the agricultural activities: vegetable oil and protein cake for animal feeding (the usual residual of the cold pressing). Figure 1: Conceptual scheme of the extraction plant. In the LIFE-VOICE project a speci
  • 15. c plant has been designed, based on the study of analogous plants realized in Austria and Germany, hat operates mainly with oilseed rape. The realized plant, originally installed at the Mondeggi farm, 5
  • 16. allowed to process the seeds using a German press combined with an Italian
  • 17. ltration system. The screw press (mechanical extraction process) is able to squeeze 120 kg/h sun ower (previously dried at 8/9% of humidity and washed), suppling about 40 kg/h of oil and 80 kg/h of expeller cake. The construction of the screw press and the extraction modalities guarantee a maximum overheating of seed less than 75C in the hottest section. This condition is required to produce an oil with a small amount of phosphorus, suitable for the use in engines and converted system. The
  • 18. lter system has been designed and realized in Italy, this is able to guarantee the respect of qualitative parameters required for oil. Dierent kinds of
  • 20. lters) have also been taken in consideration, however the cost-performance ratio has not appeared to be right for small size plants. The farm-scale extraction, for the time being located in Mondeggi, moved in the third year of the project to Il Trebbiolo. This option has been considered thanks to great interest shown by the Il Trebbiolo owners for the project and the achieved results during the
  • 21. rst two years. The productive process is rather simple. During the extraction stage, the seeds taken from the storage by an automated screw are sent to a riddle for a
  • 22. rst cleaning. A magnetic sheet removes eventual metal material that could damage the press. After that, the seeds gets into the press where the vegetable oil is extracted. Figure 2: The extraction plant of the LIFE-VOICE Project. The measures carried out on the plant have let to verify that the oil tem- perature on the screw is on the average between 50 and 70 C (
  • 23. gure 3). The extraction cake is transferred through a conveyor belt to the temporary storage and then sent to animal feeding. The expeller cake exit from the press in pel- lets, to be easily storage and delivered. The oil is aected by a
  • 24. rst decanter, therefore it is pumped to the press
  • 26. nally this is sent to a temporary storage tank and then distributed to the users. During the
  • 28. ltered oil were produced, with a net productivity of around 32% in weight compared to the seeds processed. 6
  • 29. Figure 3: Temperature recorded on the dierent part of the press. The energy consumption for mechanical extraction plant, evaluated during the extraction stage, shows an indicative value equal to about 4,6 kWh ton . In the LIFE-VOICE project it has also been extracted and analyzed oil com- ing form the industrial extraction (partner ITALCOL). The industrial process is characterized by two stages, the
  • 30. rst one is a mechanical extraction followed by a second chemical extraction (hexane). It has been decided to draw the oil only from the
  • 31. rst mechanical stage, this is because the chemical extraction surely implies the need of proceeding with the next re
  • 32. ning, before using the pure vegetable oil as fuel. 3.3 The vegetable oil characteristic Regarding the products quality, it was possible to obtain oil with high chemical- physical characteristics. The quality of the oil obtained has resulted to be com- patible with the German pre-standard DIN V 51605, which has been considered as reference for the project, although this was developed for oilseed rape rather than sun ower. The oil obtained by small plants has been analyzed by ASG laboratory in Munich. The analysis results are shown in
  • 33. gure 4 and 5. The comparison with the DIN-standard showed that the obtained vegetable oil meets the main limits de
  • 34. ned by the standard. Some important parameters, such as the iodine number (85 vs. maxDIN 125) and the oxidation stability (24 h vs. minDIN: 6h) were particularly good. As regards the oil produced by the industrial extraction plant, the analysis showed that it does not
  • 35. t the fuel quality standard, for instance the measured of the Phosphorus content after the decanter was equal to 160 mg/kg (
  • 36. gure 6). It has therefore been sent to VWP in order to test the performances of a new small scale cleaning/re
  • 37. ning process, currently under development in Germany. The oil sent was
  • 38. rst washed. The oil has then been analysed again by the ASG laboratory in Munich. The phosphorus content has been almost completely reduced (well below the DIN limit), as well as other important parameters, thus con
  • 39. rming the eectiveness of the cleaning process (
  • 40. gure 7). The oil produced has then been used in dierent plants for the energy gen- eration (power and/or heat) and transports (tractors). 7
  • 41. Figure 4: Chemical analysis of the oil extracted by the decentralized plant. 3.4 The utilization oil and panel In LIFE-VOICE project, two Senertec DACHS co-generators of 5 kWel and about 10 kWth, have been converted by VWP. One of the two has been installed at Tommasi Farm (Coltano, Pisa) while the other one, after a pilot experience at Il Trebbiolo (that is now installing a 450 kW co-generator) is used to supply heat in the CREAR facility. Moreover 50 kWel generator has been installed at Il Palagio, Figline Valdarno (FI). The conversion of 30 kWel IBT-CAPSTONE micro-turbine, to pure veg- etable oil, probably represents the most innovative part of this project. Re- spect to the reciprocating engines, this kind of techology requires a minimal maintenance and it has lower levels of pollutant emissions. The micro-turbine conversion was successfully performed. The heat production has been also considered for greenhouses and school heating. In particular, the Cammelli Farm is using the modi
  • 42. ed 140 kWth Riellos burner in their own greenhouses. The Alberti school in Scandicci (FI) has been selected for installation of the second burner. In both cases, there has been a collaboration with Riello. A John Deere 6230 Premium tractor has been
  • 43. nally bought by the Province of Florence and converted inside VOICE by VWP partner. For all the technology the performance and the emission have been monitored by CREAR. The protein expeller cake has been characterized, therefore tested for animal feeding, with good results. The protein content of the high oleic sun owers cake has resulted equal to 21% in weight, the total fat equal to 15%, the humidity content equal to 7,5% and the ash equal to 4,6%; it has not been found the presence of toxins. 8
  • 44. Figure 5: Acidic composition of the oil extracted by the decentralized plant. Figure 6: Chemical analysis of the oil extracted by the centralized plant. 3.5 Economic and environmental sustainability Sandro Sacchelli, Claudio Fagarazzi On the side of economic sustainability, it has been carried an analysis based on the data collected. The most relevant aspects are represented by the market of the seed and by the farm dimension and organization (or productive sys- tem). In particular, in the latest years, the considerable price uctuation of agricultural raw materials, which has never recorded such intensity before, has introduced strong uncertainty in this market. In the VOICE project, the seed is produced by the farmer who is interested in energy production. This approach can release the farmer from agricultural market uctuations, linking it to the renewable energy market. The opportunity to create a stable entrepreneurial activity provides a further added value for the agricultural sector. In the eco- nomic analysis, the size of the agricultural system involved in the production phases is as much as important. With the increasing of the farm size and the or- 9
  • 45. Figure 7: Chemical analysis of the oil extracted by the centralized plant, after VWP cleaning. ganization, production costs decrease, at same speci
  • 46. c agricultural productivity level (t/ha of seed). In Italy, especially in Tuscany, it is dicult to hypothesize farms that can use 100-150 ha for oil production, therefore the only possible option to limit production costs appears to be the consortium model, where services (and perhaps the plants themselves) are committed to the Consortium, which is supplied by an elevated number of small-middle farmers. As appeared in the preliminary analysis of the project, tax-breaks, the re- gional, national and European incentives and the policies that support the re- duction of climate-change emissions and the development of alternative sources of energy, permit a margin of warranty extended in time for everyone who de- cides to invest on agro-energetic chain based on vegetable oil use. From the coordinated action among other stakeholders, like AIEL, it has been suggested, in agreement with Conto Energia of the photovoltaic sector, the so-called Conto Bio-Energia: this proposal has been essentially understood by the 2008 Finan- cial Law (24 December 2007 Low, n. 244, published on the Ocial Journal n. 300, 28 December 2007), even though the thorny path of the Implemented De- gree and the modi
  • 47. cations hereby discussed have not yet clari
  • 48. ed on regard of this essential debate. The Financial Law 2008 aimed to supply a stable support through an all-comprehensive value equal to 0,28 euro kWel for plants below 1 MWel size. In any case, waiting for a complete de
  • 49. nition of the motivating aspects, one of the main strengths of the agro-energetic sector, is correlated with the farmer possibility to dierentiate the market exits (food and energetic
  • 50. eld) and to have a primary role in the energetic chain, not only as bio-fuel producers but also as
  • 51. nal users. The economic analysis, developed during the project (based on 2008 Finan- cial Law) highlighted how the bio-fuel purchasing price of farmers, for internal business employment, can roughly be between 0,6 and 0,7 euro lt , therefore ex- tremely competitive with fossil fuels, also considering the constant increase in the oil price. The estimated payback period of the investment for the extrac- tion plant is equal to 5-6 years, also considering the valorisation of the proteins contained in the cake. 10
  • 52. Figure 8: 50 kW modi
  • 53. ed generator. 3.6 Economic and environmental sustainability Sven Gartner, Lucia Recchia From the environmental impact point of view, associated to the agro-energetic chain proposed on LIFE-VOICE project, it has been developed an analysis of the life-cycle (LCA) and an analysis of the impact (EIA) on short chain (decen- tralized) and industrial chain (centralized). In both analysis, the most delicate phases have been the data-gathering and the de
  • 54. nition of case-studies. Further- more, the Tuscany land use has been taken in consideration, parallel to these studies, highlighting the changes happened in the past years and identifying the most suitable areas for sun ower production. The schematic life cycle of the basic scenario of vegetable oil production and usage is exempli
  • 55. ed in
  • 56. gure 10: the sun ower is cultivated; the seeds are harvested, cleaned, stored and mechanically pressed in a local plant; the oil is
  • 57. ltered and used as a biofuel in a tractor; the seed cake is used as feed replacing soy meal from North America. For this chain, the VOICE system helps saving GHGs and fossil energy carriers, whilst it increases acidi
  • 58. cation, nutrient input and nitrous oxide emissions (see
  • 59. gure 11). Alternative scenarios have been investigated and the obtained results have highlighted that more fossil energy and GHGs can be saved. In the EIA, regarding potential site-speci
  • 60. c negative eects on the environ- ment, sun ower shows advantages with respect to other annual energy crops due to relatively low need for fertilizers and pesticides as well as due to its low water consumption. Rather low risks of additional negative impacts on the environment are expected if the cultivation of sun ower replaces annual crops 11
  • 61. Figure 9: Heat generator in the greenhouse and emission measurement. such as wheat. In contrast, risks are higher if fallow area is converted, especially if long-term set-aside land is used for cultivation. Based on the mentioned results of LCA and EIA, the VOICE system can help saving energy and GHGs, especially if the following optimization potentials are fully tapped: cultivation accounts for the biggest part of expenditures in all environ- mental impact categories of the LCA and causes various additional nega- tive impacts according to the EIA. A reduction of mineral fertiliser input should be strived for by developing crop variants with low nutrient de- mand and/or high nitrogen eciency. Irrigation should be avoided by adapting crop choices to local climatic conditions and/or by breeding drought-resistant crop variants. If irrigation becomes necessary, ecient technologies such as drip irrigation should be applied; 12
  • 62. Figure 10: Schematic life cycle comparison of vegetable oil versus diesel fuel; red arrows: options for dierent production and use options, alternative use options concerning the co-product cake, etc. concerning yield, if the saving of energy and GHGs is given priority, high yielding crops such as rapeseed and sun ower should be preferred; for the decision of whether to produce the oil locally or in a centralised plant, results regarding energy and GHGs savings clearly favour a cen- tralised production. However, regarding acidi
  • 63. cation and nutrient input as well as from EIA point of view, the local production should be given priority. In addition, to LCA and EIA, there might be socioeconomic reasons for favouring local production such as rural development and job creation; if the VOICE system is to be established in order to save fossil energy resources and GHGs, the cake should be used for energy production rather than as feed or fertiliser and the second best option would be its use as animal feed; according to the LCA, the oil clearly should be used for a combined heat and power production, whereas the EIA recommends the use in existing plants or vehicles as a transport fuel or for heat production. 3.7 Conclusion The LIFE-VOICE project has been a highly innovative experience of techno- logical transfer and testing. Regarding to the bio-mass production, scienti
  • 64. c analysis has allowed for selection of the most interesting sun ower variety for 13
  • 65. Figure 11: Results of the life cycle comparison (basic scenario) between sun- ower oil or rapeseed oil versus conventional diesel fuel; the balances show the resulting advantages and disadvantages for the vegetable oils; PE: primary en- ergy. energetic production, as well as testing others interesting corps: linseed, came- line and oilseed rape. The study of cultivation modalities let also increase the environmental bene
  • 66. ts coming from this chain further, still raising the ground quantity to be assigned to these productions. The oil pressing through the use of plants speci
  • 67. cally designed, permits to reach high returns also on small plants or at a consortium scale. The use of vegetable oil, produced and essentially conformed to DIN V 51605 standard, has been tested in converted technologies for this kind of biofuel: generators and co-generators based on Diesel-cycle, as well as innovative technologies like a micro-turbine or more traditional systems, such as burners. The study of motivation eects has
  • 69. nition of suggestions of support policies for this sector. 14
  • 70. 4 Partner contributions 4.1 Technology conversion to pure vegetable oil: some ex- periences Georg Gruber,VWP - Vereinigte Werksttten fr P anzenltechnologie, Allersberg, Germany A future series fuel must be regenerative, not
  • 71. nite. It must be manufactured in a neutral manner, as far as soil, water air (CO2 and climate) are concerned. It must be aordable for the world population. And its production must not compete with food production. As far as technology is concerned, it must be possible to integrate this new fuel in established series engine concepts without high additional cost. Plant oil is the one which may be produced in the most cost-eective way. It has the highest energy density, and because of its high ame point, it is explosion proof and not in ammable. There are, however, various critical issues, including the threat of monocultures, the genetic modi-
  • 72. cation of seeds, direct competition with rain forests and food production. It was of paramount importance to
  • 73. nd out whether plant oil might become an excellent substitute for fossil fuels in the future ecological and economic con- ditions on earth. Solutions concerning the adaptation of engine technology, compliance with emission standards, functionality of fuel injection, combustion processes and exhaust treatment, in state-of-the-art technology depend solely on how much labour and capital is made available for the tasks in hand. Pure plant oil was closest to the Diesel engine at the time of its invention. It is well known that Rudolf Diesel himself early on experimented with plant oil fuel. Plant oil in cars It took nearly a century, before in 1994, the worlds
  • 74. rst eet test was carried out with 60 series engines suitable for plant oil testing. This
  • 75. eld trial had also been preceded, in 1990, by the so-called Porsche Test which was in- tended to prove the functionality of plant oil in Diesel engines. Test programme, by the Bavarian Economic Ministry, on 120 vehicles and TDI technology may be seen as the start of the successful model of decentralised oil mills and series Diesel engines adapted for use with plant oil fuel. After 15 years of develop- ing plant oil technology in series Diesel engines, VWP has available at least
  • 76. ve dierent whirl-chamber and TDI engine concepts complying with EURO III emission standards. These one tank systems show no dierence in service life, functionality, performance and emissions between plant oil and Diesel fuel. Plant oil in trucks Since 2001, VWP have run two test eets with about 50 Scania trucks with DI engines and pump-nozzle engines between 360 and 580 PS (6 cylinder V8 cylinder) in a long-term trial. All trucks are fuelled by pure plant oil, after some internal engine modi
  • 77. cations. They have an average of 750,000 kilometres between repairs, and the intervals for oil change was halved. Plant oil in tractors The immediate use of pure plant oil in agriculture is one of the most obvious applications, since economic and ecological eciency would be maximised with simultaneous cultivation, production and use of plant oil. A 100 tractors programme initiated by the same Federal Government, in the course of 3 years tested the functional suitability of plant oil tractors. With a total number of 56 tractors, VWP had the highest number of vehicles in this test programme and the lowest fault incidence. Development and test benching of the John Deere 6.8 litre common rail engine with 4 valves, emission tier 2, are now
  • 78. nalised. The fuel consumption, with the materials energy 15
  • 79. density factored in, is identical for plant oil and Diesel. Referred to volume, plant oil has an energy density of about 5% less than Diesel oil. With equal consumption, the tractor engine power is therefore a little less with plant oil than with Diesel fuel. The comparison of emission values shows that for NOx, plant oil showed higher values than Diesel fuel. For all other emission elements (CO, HC and particles), plant oil shows advantages over Diesel fuel. 4.2 Pure Vegetable Oil Chains: activities in Portugal Joao Morais, Rui Barbosa, Nuno Lapa - Farultade de Cincias e Tec- nologia, Universitade Nova de Lisboa, Portogallo The Environmental Researching Unit (UBiA) of Faculty of Sciences and Technology (FCT) of the New University of Lisbon (UNL), as partner of the VOICE project, contributerd to the developemnt of the
  • 80. eld activities. In par- ticular, FCT-UNL performed in Portugal several interesting trials on camelina sativa. The plants were sown in turf and trapianteted to pots with a soil mixture prepared at the university lab. After a positive lab test the plantation has been developed in
  • 83. eld was located in a farm located in Montemor-o-Novo (Alentejo region) in which a cultivation of C.Sativa was performed. Due to circumstances out of our control, the crop was lost: wild animal eaten the plants. Due to the low amount of seeds available, it was then decided to make a small experimental
  • 84. eld at FCT-UNL campus, under more controlled conditions. The experimental work will follow the following plan: eight experimental
  • 85. elds have been prepared with the same area. In each one, nitrogen application will be controlled. Generally, the plants that were irrigated. In what concerns the irrigation levels, it can be concluded that the growth of C.Sativa was highly in uenced by the amount of water supplied. Nevertheless, there were visual dierences between the plants that were cultivated with the addition of nitrogen and the plants to which no nitrogen was supplied. As the plants developed, it came to notice that fertilization was responsible for more visual dierences than the irrigation. Furthermore, the FCT/UNL team tested the pure vegetable oil extracted from sun ower seeds, which was received from the Italian coordinator and the pure vegetal oil that has been extracted from the seeds of Camelina sativa.The samples of pure vegetable oil have been subject of chemical-physical analyses, and used as fuel in a bench diesel engine of the UBiA/FCT/UNL, characterizing the gaseous emissions produced from the combustion of the pure vegetable oil and from diesel in the diesel engine. 4.3 The no-food chain like an opportunity for farm Gennaro Giliberti - Province of Florence, Italy Local authorities represent a fundamental partner in projects like LIFE- VOICE. Florence province has been longer committed in the promotion and development of alternative energy and energy saving: it participated to the bio- fuel project, which has implied the purchase of a tractor, able to work with pure vegetable oil, and, in collaboration with ENEL Research and University of Pisa in Diamond Project (born on January 2008), which entailed the installation of a photovoltaic integrated system for the direct production of electric current and 16
  • 86. hydrogen, this is placed in the hysterical context of Parco di Pratolino- Villa Demido in Vaglia council, near to Florence. Within VOICE project, local authorities has been involved in the experimen- tation of a short chain that starts from oil crop production, such as sun ower, oilseed rape and linseed, to produce the vegetable oil through a mechanic ex- traction system. The vegetable oil obtained is in part utilised in the agriculture sector for the heating of some greenhouses and as fuel to feed a modi
  • 87. ed tractor a gas turbine. In addition, a burner for the heating was installed in the gym nearby Scandicci high school. From the outcome data, we can conclude that, if correctly implemented on the territory, no-food crops represent an interesting extra income for the farm, combining traditional activities with new cultiva- tion forms and product transformations, while at the same time it strongly contributes to greenhouse gass reduction. 4.4 The role of the ragional authority for the study and diusion of no-food chains Paolo Bottazzi ARSIA Florence, Italy The Regional Authority for development and innovation of agricultural- forest sector (ARSIA) is the technical organism of Tuscany Region that works as intermediary between the agricultural productive system, the research sector, and who owns particular technologies, developing actions of researchs promo- tion, test and innovations transfer and also carrying out activities of a specialized technical assistance, in a logic of sustainable develop and preservation of terri- tory and Tuscan agro-food resource. Within the activity performed in the latest years, some of these are in general referred to no agro food sector, also through the realization of guide initiatives and through the participation in projects of resource and popularisation. In particular, the Authority has started resources concerning the possibility to produce natural
  • 88. bers for textile and technical use, it has also promoted initiatives with agronomic nature for the cultivation of species utilized for the production of natural coloring, it has developed study based on the use of bio-lube in important sector, and it has
  • 89. nally
  • 90. nanced projects concerning essential oil production. A particularly deepen issue is the renewable energy sector, with the activation of important initiatives on the use of agroforest bio-mass for the supply of small-mid size plants. Others ongoing guide initiatives regard the bio-diesel use obtained by local cultivations for the supply of public transports and for the use of vegetable oil for generation of power and heat energy. In LIFE-VOICE project, ARSIA (connected with the partners in partic- ular ISES ITALY) deal with the aspects related to the results dissemination towards of the agricultural world, through the organization of workshop and the realization of dissemination materials (movies and publications concerning the results of the project), with a view to extend the entire chain to the others Mediterranean countries. 4.5 The organization of farmers partner of the project: Florence Coldiretti and CIA Tuscany Marco Failoni, Barbara Trambusti CIA-Toscana, Florence, Italy Coldiretti, Florence, Italy 17
  • 91. Coldiretti and CIA are professional organizations that represent and support the interests of farmers, agriculture and the sustainable development of the rural areas, and provide assistance to the members in the social,
  • 93. eld. By this way, during the latest years they have performed a constant action of promotion of the agro-energies. Coldiretti Tuscany and CIA Tuscany have been the promoters of the LIFE- VOICE project. Within the European partnership they have carried out the point of view and the needs of farms, represented by themselves and they have oered the technical skills and the experiences developed in the latest years. Since years, the farms are involved in the development of the local agro-energetic chains, which represent not only the contribution of agriculture to the mitiga- tion of climatic changes but also an economic opportunity and an income. The used criteria are the environmental, social and economic sustainability, the re- spect of the primary vocation of agriculture for food production, the priority to the chains that use the agricultural and forest wastes, the local
  • 94. nding of raw materials, the production and the use of energy in the territory starting from energetic self-suciency of farms. In this contest and within these limits, it needs to be connected the opportunities to develop bio-fuels of agricultural origin. In the LIFE-VOICE framework these two organizations have promoted the experimentation of possible technologies use of pure vegetable oil, of the boilers for heating of the engines for micro-generation of power energy and for tractors, in their associated farms. It is important to underline that the VOICE supply chain produces a protein seedcake, for the two-third of its input. This seedcake, used as animal feeding, can be considered as a part of the human nutrition supply chain. The vegetable oil, in this case, is a co-product of the seedcake. Furthermore they have been directly involved in activities of infor- mation and training aimed to farm entrepreneurs, through the publication of materials connected to the project and to its results, through the organization of formative meetings and the realization of courses and guided tours. 18