Mississippi State, Mississippi
November 2, 2006
With demand for biodiesel on the
rise, researchers are looking for ways Mississippi agricultural
production can contribute more to this growing market.
Brian Baldwin, a Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry
Experiment Station researcher, is identifying alternative crops
that can grow in Mississippi and produce large quantities of
oil. The highest oil-producing crops are tropical, but there are
other plants that can be grown in Mississippi and yield more oil
per acre than those currently being grown.
“We’re looking for crops that can fit into rotation with some of
our regular row crops and that produce high quantities of oil
per acre,” Baldwin said. “We’re trying to find crops our
producers can grow to diversify their operations.”
Soybeans, cottonseed and corn are all oil seeds, but they have a
low per-acre oil yield. Poultry fat is another agricultural
source of oil that is produced in Mississippi, but the potential
of this oil source has not been developed.
“The three that we typically think of as oilseeds are among the
lowest in yield, so it’s pretty clear that we need to be looking
elsewhere,” Baldwin said.
In looking for alternative, oil-producing crops, Baldwin is
examining crops from northern regions that can grow in
Mississippi’s winter. These crops also would need to fit into
producers’ existing crop rotation.
So far he has identified eight winter and three summer
alternative crops. Castor has emerged as potentially the
best summer crop and canola as the best winter crop.
He described a potential row crop rotation with an oilseed crop.
“A producer could finish his corn crop and then plant canola,”
Baldwin said. “Canola won’t be done until the following June,
which is too late to plant cotton and probably too late to plant
soybeans. That producer could plant sunflower as a catch-up
crop, and this second oilseed crop would finish off with the
frost.”
In this scenario, the land would lie dormant over winter and be
ready for corn or another traditional row crop in the spring.
Castor is a summer crop with very high oil content. It is toxic
to mammals, although the plant is already found across the
state, often as an ornamental. Its postharvest processing would
have to be done with equipment dedicated to this crop to prevent
contamination of feed crops.
Offsetting these disadvantages is the fact that castor would be
beneficial grown in rotation with cotton or soybeans because it
controls several species of pathogenic nematodes. It also yields
three times the oil of soybeans on a per-acre basis.
“That’s hard to ignore,” Baldwin said. “It’s a highly desirable
oil in diesel engines and is easily processed into biodiesel.”
The goal of the Mississippi
State University (MSU) research is to give producers options
as they diversify their farm production and to identify the best
oilseed crops for the production of biodiesel in Mississippi.
Crop diversification is a farm management tool to limit risk.
Alternative crops may give producers new crop options while also
helping to reduce American dependence on foreign oil.
Rafael Hernandez, a chemical engineer in MSU’s Bagley College of
Engineering, is evaluating the oils produced by alternative
crops to see if they will perform well as biodiesel.
“Several crops have been identified that would generate oil in
large quantities that could be used for the production of
biodiesel in the Southeast,” Hernandez said. “Our objective in
chemical engineering is to take these crops, extract the oils
and find the optimum chemical conditions for the production of
high-quality biodiesel.”
Hernandez said MSU is producing biodiesel in small quantities
now for research and evaluation purposes.
“We can envision in the future producing biodiesel from the
animal fats within MSU’s cafeteria or from oil extracted from
MSU crops to run the shuttle system on campus,” Hernandez said.
In August, MSU held a heavily attended biodiesel workshop to
educate producers and the public on this renewable fuel’s
potential. Based on high interest and attendance, another
similar workshop is planned for next year. |