Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

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Zimbabwe ethanol plant should put fuel on market by June

Zimbabwe ethanol plant should put fuel on market by June

http://www.zddt.org

Written by The Editor Monday, 14 March 2011 13:47

Zimbabwe should see renewable ethanol come to market in June this year.

The news comes as Green Fuels, the company setting up an ethanol plant in 
Zimbabwe’s Lowveld region, reports delays to construction efforts at the 
plant.

“The key components of the plant have been sourced from Brazil and this 
material has been shipped to the country through Durban port facilities,” 
Green Fuel general manager, Graeme Smith, said in a
statement.

Unfortunately a strike by South African port authorities means delays of 
three months will be experienced.

“The strike action had a ripple effect on the transportation of our parts 
for the distillery, boiler section, as well as the mill house. At this stage 
it is safe to say our ethanol will be on the market by June this year,” said 
Smith.

Daily News reports that the company said it had now implemented a 24-hour 
work schedule to complete the construction of the plant. The project, which 
on completion and when fully operational will employ more than 10 000
people, will help reduce the price of fuel in Zimbabwe.

The by-products from the plant will be used to produce electricity, enough 
to light up the whole of Manicaland and also produce large quantities of 
stock feed.

The community is also benefitting through outgrower projects, while 
irrigation schemes in the area have been revived after Green Fuels repaired 
the Agricultural Rural Development Authority (ARDA) pumps which had not been 
working for more than five years.

“Eight hundred Green Fuel technicians have been working around the clock to 
ensure that the plant will be operating by June, ready to start processing 
over 5,000 hectares of sugarcane into high quality anhydrous ethanol.

“The current phase of the first plant will require 11500ha and will produce 
350,000 litres a day of Ethanol for 300 days, which equates to just over a 
100 million litres annually.

Phase two will progression to 150 million litres a year and 250 million 
litres in phase three,” said Smith.

Green Fuels, using their agricultural company, Macdom and Rating 
Investments, is growing cane on vast swathes of land on Chisumbanje and 
Middle Sabi estates under a build, operate and transfer arrangement with 
Arda.

ARDA will inherit everything, including state-of-the-art mechanisation at 
the end of the agreement whose lifespan is 20 years.

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