Excerpts from Wine Spectator: Would You Like Fries With That Pinot Noir? (Lynn AlleyOnline November 8th, 2005)
Talk about wine and food pairing. With gas prices hovering around $3 a gallon, threats increasing to the U.S. oil supply and concerns risingover global warming, several West Coast wineries are powering theirtractors, delivery vans and, in some cases, personal cars with recycled cooking oil.
So far, Oregon seems to be at the forefront of the biodiesel movement in the wine industry, with at least eight wineries having made the switch.
Jim Bernau, owner of Willamette Valley Vineyards (WVV), said he became interested in biodiesel more than 10 years ago when university researchers and fuel garagistes began fooling around with the idea. (In fact, the use of vegetable oil in vehicles dates to 1892, when the original diesel engine, invented by Rudolf Diesel in Germany, waspowered by peanut oil.) As an experiment, Bernau made biodiesel himself for use in his tractor, but he decided it was too much work for a sustained effort.
Things have gotten easier since then. Oregon now has its own major biodiesel producer, Portland-based SeQuential Biofuels, which got its start in 2002 and obtains cooking oil from local companies such as Kettle Foods, which makes potato chips and tortilla chips. The company delivers to a growing number of Oregon businesses and also provides self-service pumps along the I-5 corridor through the Willamette Valley so that vehicles can fuel up at regular gas stations.
In August, SeQuential installed a pump at WVV. Now the winery's tractors, the cars of its employee and the six delivery vans for its Bacchus Fine Wines distributorship can fill-up on site. Shelby Zadow, WVV's customer relations coordinator, said employees are being offered 50 gallons of free biodiesel per month for their personal vehicles as an incentive to switch over. Zadow, who recently purchased a VW Golf TDI, is now using biodiesel for her 100-mile round-trip commute from Portland to the winery.
Even using more expensive biofuel, we are saving money, Bernau said. With the more efficient diesel engine vehicles, we went from gas vans at 8 to 10 miles to the gallon to vans of greater capacity with 26 miles to the gallon.
Among the other Oregon wineries using biodiesel are Argyle, Belle Pente, Bethel Heights, Mahonia, Witness Tree and Lemelson, where owner Eric Lemelson is running seven tractors on b50 and says he is happy with their performance.
There are likely to be more converts in the near future, especially if Oregon enacts tax credits for consumers and producers of biofuel, as part of Gov. Ted Kulongoski's renewable energy plan. Ed King III, owner of certified organic King Estates, plans to investigate the use of biodiesel. He said, Eliminating the use of fossil fuels on the farm isthe missing piece of the puzzle in farm sustainability.
Labels: alternative energy, biodiesel, green capitalism, transportation