SAO PAULO --
Novozymes A/S, the world’s biggest maker of enzymes used in laundry
soap, may get 90 percent of its revenue from biofuel makers by 2030 if
more governments start promoting renewable energy, the company’s next
CEO said.
The company currently gets about 16 percent of its
revenue from biofuels and less than 1 percent from enzymes for
cellulosic-ethanol plants, which turn waste and inedible crops into
sugary liquids for fuel, according to Peder Holk Nielsen, who becomes
chief executive officer on April 1.
“If the world really wants to secure a significant
part of its liquid-fuel consumption based on biomass, this would totally
transform the enzyme business,” Holk Nielsen said in an interview.
“This would revolutionize the company.”
It’s the most detailed remarks from Holk Nielsen about
Novozymes’ strategy since Jan. 21 when he was named to replace Steen
Riisgaard as CEO.
Sales will increase in the next few years as more
cellulosic-ethanol plants begin operating and will accelerate if more
governments push distributors to start mixing the fuel with their
gasoline, Holk Nielsen said. Producing biofuel from crop waste is still
experimental and may already rival fossil fuels on price in some
countries such as Brazil.
Novozymes, based in Bagsvaerd, Denmark, had 11.2
billion Danish kronor ($2 billion) in revenue last year, with 78 percent
of that coming from enzymes sales to makers of household care products,
corn ethanol and food and beverages, the company said in a Jan. 21
statement.
Blending Rules
While many countries require fuel distributors to
blend biofuel made from food crops such as wheat, corn and sugar-cane,
few have policies in place to promote the production of fuel from their
residues, said Alejandro Zamorano Cadavid, an analyst at New Energy
Finance in New York.
“Governments are reluctant to mandate blending of
cellulosic biofuels because of high production costs,” he said. “It is
likely that only countries with strong institutions capable of
overseeing fuel markets will be inclined to set in motion a volumetric
mandate that supports cellulosic biofuel production.”
The U.S. has an annual quota calling for blending of
12.5 billion liters (3.3 billion gallons) of so-called advanced biofuel
which includes cellulosic ethanol, said Aleksandra Rybczynska, an
analyst at New Energy Finance in London.
EU Market
The European Union allows biofuels derived from
non-food raw materials to count twice toward fuel distributors’ blending
requirements. China is considering its own quota for the fuel.
The enzymes necessary to break down cellulosic raw
material cost about 30 cents for each gallon of ethanol produced, 10
times more than those used to process corn starch, Holk Nielsen said.
While enzyme costs will fall in time, most of the
gains in competitiveness with fossil fuels will come from farmers
developing more efficient processes of collecting biomass from their
fields, according to the 56-year old who currently serves as an
executive vice president leading Novozymes’s enzyme business. It costs
about $2 to produce a gallon of cellulosic ethanol in some countries
where biomass is abundant.
“Cellulosic ethanol could be a total game-changer” for
enzyme companies, he said. “Two dollars a gallon is not the end of the
story at all. It’s just where we are right now.”
Copyright 2013 Bloomberg
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2013/01/novozymes-says-biofuel-may-supply-90-of-its-revenue-by-2020
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