The federal government has turned to a 130-year-old
It will spend at least $10 million over the next five years
to fund research and development at
"
The Office of Naval Research is funding the five-year program at Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar, a company dating to the 1870s that now runs the last sugar plantation in the state.
HC&S' expansive 35,000 acre fields offer an opportunity to test how various crops perform.
The Navy aims to use biofuels for half of its fuel needs by 2020. To meet this goal, it's been pouring money into algae, sugar and other crops that could become alternatives to fossil fuels.
The federal government supports a variety of biofuel
programs, but for the military such efforts have a special importance because
of the tenuous relationship between the
"We buy our fuel in the
The Navy identified
The Navy's partner in the biofuels development, the U.S.
Department of Agriculture, already knew
Their needs coincided nicely with those of Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar which has been seeking a new business model because sugar prices have been stagnant for 20 to 30 years even as costs have risen.
"Commodity sugar may not be viable anymore, but we want
farming and agriculture in
Benjamin said the company is focused on new ways of converting sugars to oil. It will test which crops - sugarcane, sweet sorghum, jatropha or some other alternative - work best, and which technology is most efficient.
Benjamin said it would probably take the company at least five years before it produces biofuels on a commercial scale.
Jeff Mikulina, executive director of the Honolulu-based Blue Planet Foundation, a nonprofit group that promotes sustainable energy, said the Navy's effort would stimulate the market for biofuels.
That could help in a state that gets 90 percent of its energy from imported oil, and where energy costs are among the nation's highest. It complements Gov. Linda Lingle's plan to have the state use clean energy for 70 percent of its power needs by 2030.
A significant potential problem looms, however.
HC&S is facing two legal challenges to its
practice, dating back more than a century, of diverting water from east and
central
Alan Murakami, a lawyer for Native Hawaiians seeking to have water restored to streams in east Maui, said HC&S' research should be done on the premise that the company will return water to the disputed streams.
"If they simply assume that the water will be
available, for whatever fuels, however thirsty they may be - including
continuing the sugar plantation - that would be entirely inappropriate and
unacceptable planning for the future of
Benjamin said water would be a critical issue for the
company regardless of how the disputes are decided, in part because
The U.S. Department of Agriculture is pushing for biofuel production in other states as well.
Different parts of the country will produce different crops, depending on factors such as soil and water availability, said Jeff Steiner, the national program leader for biomass production systems at the department's Agricultural Research Service.
The department estimates the robust growing season in a region stretching from Texas to North Carolina means the area could supply nearly 50 percent of the nation's advanced biofuel needs by 2022.
A region stretching from
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