24/11/2010 (Biofuels Digest) - In Hawaii, controversy is brewing over the Hawaiian Electric Co. (HECO) and subsidiary Maui Electric Co.’s plans to import Malaysian palm oil to produce biodiesel for the state. Since the project was first announced in 2007, it has been met with opposition from environmental groups concerned about the lack of sustainability of the palm oil.
HECO has now formed Hawaii Biofuel Foundation to present the Roundtable on Sustainable Biofuels’ standards to the state, a move which has also angered local environmental activists.
Controversy Swirls Over Use Of Malaysian Palm Oil Biodiesel In Hawaii
In early 2007, Hawaiian Electric Co. and  subsidiary Maui Electric Co. announced plans by BlueEarth Biofuels to  construct a mega-sized palm oil refinery on Maui, which would have been  the largest in the world. Since that time, several respected Hawaii  environmental and cultural groups have raised a red flag against the  idea of importing Malaysian palm oil to Hawaii.   
Sierra Club-Maui, Maui Tomorrow Foundation and several Oahu  organizations stated that merely replacing one imported fuel with  another does nothing for our energy security, local economy or  sustainability. In fact, the cultivation of palm oil results in  wide-ranging impacts of devastation to rain forest habitats through  slash-and-burn clearing, which releases more carbon into the atmosphere  than any reductions in HECO's or MECO's smokestack emissions.
Undaunted by criticism that palm oil imported from Southeast Asia can never be sustainable, HECO  forged an alliance with the Natural Resources Defense Council and  concocted sustainability standards for imported biofuels. The idea was  soundly criticized during a round of community meetings held on three  islands and at Public Utility Commission hearings.
Despite turning down a biodiesel importation docket in 2008-09, the PUC last June approved HECO's request to import 2.5 million gallons of palm oil from Southeast Asia for testing on Oahu and at MECO's Maalaea power plant.
Tests are not needed. MECO already knows  that biodiesel is cleaner burning, since it has contracted with Pacific  Biodiesel for years to provide locally recycled vegetable oil biodiesel  for generator startups to meet Environmental Protection Agency and  Department of Health emissions standards.
HECO claims that palm oil represents a  bridge to the future, hoping that agricultural entrepreneurs might begin  producing oil crops locally for conversion to biodiesel. But, that same  reasoning was used in 2006 when Hawaii mandated 10 percent ethanol in  our gasoline. To date, no one has produced ethanol commercially in  Hawaii. We import all our ethanol from the Mainland – where it is  federally subsidized – and from Brazil.
The bridge to the future referred to by HECO's  spokesman would be a grim future indeed for diminishing rain forests,  endangered orangutans and hundreds of other mammals, plants, insects, as  cited in a November 2008 National Geographic cover story.
It may take years for any oil crops planted in Hawaii today to  mature and produce. Furthermore, the 2006 “Biodiesel Crop Implementation  In Hawaii” report indicates that even if all the available agricultural  acreage in Hawaii were planted to fuel crops, it wouldn't come close to  fulfilling our energy needs. It makes far more sense to utilize any  locally produced biodiesel for transportation fuel and to move away from  burning imported fuels for electricity. Wind, solar and wave energy are  viable alternatives.
Yet, we now have learned that HECO has  formed a nonprofit advocacy group, Hawaii Biofuel Foundation, which will  conduct statewide meetings in December to present the Roundtable for  Sustainable Biofuels Standard for Hawaii. It has the appearance of  another exercise to allow HECO and MECO  to continue foot-dragging and obstruction of efforts to integrate more  local renewables and to promote proved energy conservation and  efficiency efforts.
Hawaii environmental groups are partnering with the international organization Rainforest-Rescue.org to spread the news of HECO's  ill-conceived palm oil importation plan across the globe. More than  17,000 people have added their names to protest the action. Their  concerns will be conveyed to HECO, MECO, Hawaii's elected leaders, the PUC and NRDC.
Will you add your voice to speak for a better Hawaii energy future  to reduce our foreign dependency, to keep our energy dollars here at  home and to provide well-paying energy jobs in Hawaii?
- Rob Parsons is the conservation chairman for Sierra Club-Maui, vice president of Maui Tomorrow Foundation and has served on the Greenhouse Gas and Carbon Emissions Working Group of the Maui County Energy Alliance. Lance Holter is chairman of Sierra Club-Maui and a Maui Tomorrow board member.
 




















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