Let me start with the official story: In 2009, Secretary of the
Navy Ray Mabus announced five aggressive energy goals to reduce the Department
of Navy’s consumption of energy, decrease its reliance on foreign sources of
oil, and significantly increase its use of alternative energy. The purpose of
these energy goals is to improve our combat capability and to increase our
energy security by addressing a significant military vulnerability: dependence
on foreign oil.
One of the five energy goals is to demonstrate and then deploy a “Great
Green Fleet” a Carrier Strike Group fueled by alternative sources of energy. The
demonstration takes place off Hawaii during the Rim of the Pacific
Exercise (RIMPAC), the world's largest international maritime exercise, which has
started on July 17th. The demonstration is intended to evaluate the
performance of “drop-in replacement” advanced biofuel blends and certain energy
efficient technologies in an operational setting. A larger strike group of 11
ships will follow in 2016.
The ships and aircraft will be powered by alternative fuel, either nuclear
or advanced biofuel blends. The biofuel blends are 50-50 mixtures of biofuel
(made from used cooking oil and algae) and petroleum-based marine diesel or
aviation fuel.
For this purpose, some 450,000 gallons of 100% “neat” biofuel were
purchased in November 2011 from Dynamic Fuels, LLC (a joint venture between
Tyson Foods, Inc. and Syntroleum Corporation) at a cost of $12 million, the single
largest purchase of biofuel in government history.
·
Navy surface ships are powered
using 350,000 gallons of hydroprocessed renewable diesel (HRD-76) blended with
an equal amount of marine diesel (F-76).
·
Navy aircraft burn 100,000
gallons of hydroprocessed renewable jet fuel (HRJ-5) blended with aviation fuel
(JP-5).
Both the Navy and the Air Force have been investing
hundreds of millions of dollars to test alternative fuel mixes in several types
of ships and aircraft for the past several years. The biofuels enthusiasm has
slowly faced increasing criticism, including this blog you are reading. Below I
would like to list several reasons.
Groundless
arguments: We read or hear the following statements all the time:
“DOD wants to
wean itself off of fossil fuels and foreign oil.” “This fuel often comes fom foreign countries
that are hostile to our way of life.” “Investments in an alternative to foreign
sources of fuel will help the Navy and the US become less dependent on foreign
oil, and less subject to volatility in oil prices.” “Developing these
alternatives is the only way that the U.S. can get rid of our
dependence on oil.”
“This is putting our troops in harm’s way to
defend oil interests overseas.“ “The U.S. spends between
$67 billion and $83 billion each year to defend
shipping lanes [according to estimates from RAND Corporation] in hostile waters, so we can protect our access to foreign
oil.”
Note that Canada
is the United States' leading oil supplier. If Obama administration were smart
and serious about reducing imports from unfriendly nations, they would do
something about the Keystone XL pipeline, remove restrictions and prohibitions
put on offshore (recent weeks there is progress on this front, including a House bill and a program), and develop shale gas to liquids industry among others. And for the
US military should reconsider using commercial jet fuel (like Jet A1 instead of
JP-8 in USAF aircraft and diesel instead of JP-8 in ground vehicles and
generators).
Mixing oranges with apples: Admiral
Cullom argues that “think back to the price tag on the first Blue Ray player
you saw just a few short years ago. When introduced in 2006, those devices sold
for about 500 dollars. Today they sell for well under 100 dollars. The same can
be expected to happen with some biofuels and other forms of alternative energy.”
In fact, everybody agrees that the price of biofuels will drop. But they will far
more expensive than petroleum-based fuels in the foreseeable future. Besides,
as Cliff Claven reminds us “It takes more than
twice as much fossil fuel to make a gallon of biofuel than a gallon of
gasoline, and the price of biofuels (e.g., bio-ethanol) is more volatile with
respect to both sugar prices and oil prices than is gasoline (check the
markets). “
Biofuels and
a few extra cents: Some people argue that this [House and Senate decision on the DoD’s biofuel use] is a misguided
attempt to save the few extra cents per gallon that
biofuels cost over petroleum-based fuels and an irresponsible use of public
policy. Well, DoD paid $26.7 a gallon for
biofuels to burn during the RIMPAC exercise, almost 10 times the average price of petroleum-based commercial jet fuel nowadays. Effective July 1, 2012, DLA Energy price for JP-5 is $2.33 a gallon. Do the
math: If the Navy used conventional oil instead of biofuels during the RIMPAC,
it would have spent $1.2 million, and not $12 million. Is the difference ($10.8
million) a few extra cents? This is indeed irresponsible use of public money.
Twisting the truth: Navy news reports that “This fuel was
blended with equal amounts of conventional petroleum-based fuel, producing a
total of 900,000 gallons of a 50/50 alternative fuel blend. When the fuel was
blended with equal amounts of conventional fuel, the cost of the 50/50 blends
amounted to approximately $15 per gallon, less than half the cost of the
advanced biofuels purchased in 2009.” The math is above. You decide.
“Alternative fuels for the Navy is not about being green, it’s about combat
capability,” said Navy Cmdr. James Goudreau, director of the Navy Energy
Coordination Office.
Here is a reader comment (by Cliff Claven) on National Defense Magazine: Combat capability is
not improved by spending 10, 20, or 200 times more for fuel. You do the math:
The Navy bought 20,055 gallons of Solazyme HRD-76 diesel oil for $8,574,022 =
$427.53 a gallon or $17,956 a barrel. Go to fbo.gov and search the archives for
"Solazyme" and "BAA040008." Don't forget that DOE also
chipped in $210M to Solazyme for a refinery. Dilute it with regular fuel all
you want, one gallon of biofuel still only displaces one gallon of regular fuel
and any rational person will realize the price per gallon is not reduced by
mixing.
Biofuels and oil price volatility: Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Energy Tom Hicks argues that
investments on biofuels “will help the Navy and the nation become less
dependent on foreign oil, and thus less subject to volatility in oil prices
that directly affect our readiness." Any person who makes such kind of
claims should know a bit how oil market functions.
Biofuels and
DOD’s priorities: In
May, Sen. John McCain told National Journal Daily that “adopting a ‘green agenda’ for national defense of
course is a terrible misplacement of priorities.” Well, it depends what he means with green agenda.
Better use or less use of energy is in my book not a green agenda. But
expensive biofuels are. Therefore, I completely agree with Kevin Geiss, the Air
Force’s Deputy Assistant Secretary for Energy, who stated in a Wired article that “The challenge with petroleum fuels is that
it’s a commodity. You’re trying to jump into a commodity market.” That’s not a
place for the government to be.”
Exaggerated claims as a scare tactic: In an op-ed piece in The Christian Science Monitor Lt. Gen. Norman
Seip, US Air Force (retired) says that “cutting investments in long-term
solutions like alternative fuels and energy efficiency will cost the military
and all of us dearly in the future – in money and in lives.” Energy efficiency
maybe, but the part on biofuels has nothing to do with saving lives. The
convoys in Afghanistan will still be attacked whether they carry biofuels or
conventional oil. The US Department of Defense can meet its fuel
supply needs more effectively by using petroleum products more efficiently and
protecting major transit corridors than by embracing synthetic fuels, the RAND
researchers concluded in the June 19 report.
The list goes on but this article has become too long.
So, I stop here. To be continued, perhaps.
By the way, in early
July 2012, USAF A10 Test Flight Powered by Gevo
Inc’s (, a Colorado biofuels company) Alcohol-to-Jet Fuel came with a price
tag of $59 a gallon. 11,000 gallons purchased were so expensive because they were from a
small demonstration plant which only produces 7,500-8,000 gallons a month. For
some, only a few cents extra!
As I repeatedly argued on my blog the US military should get its energy
priorities right. As far as biofuels are concerned it might be doing the right
thing but unfortunately for wrong or unjustifiable reasons at a wrong time with
too much money.
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