Chinese scientists are working on new technologies and breeding
oil-rich rapeseed species to fuel its fast-growing economy with
bio-fuel.
Experts attending an ongoing international conference on
rapeseed say that China, whose annual rape production is 30 percent
of the world total, should use farmland to manufacture bio-diesel,
an effort that will reduce its dependency on petroleum-based diesel
and cut emissions.
Rape is recognized by scientists the world over as one of the
best raw materials for bio-diesel.
"The development of the global bio-diesel industry offers China
new opportunities," said Wang Shoucong, an official with the
Ministry of Agriculture. "The government should foster research
work to nurture high-yield rapeseed species, develop new
technologies to increase bio-diesel output and expand rape
production in south China in the slack season."
China grows 7 million hectares of rape, with an annual output of
13 million to 14 million tons. A new species of rapeseed Chinese
scientists bred last year contained a record high 54.72 percent of
oil.
But because of backward technologies the country is making only
100,000 tons of bio-diesel a year out of rapeseed, said Prof. Huang
Fenghong at the oilseed research institute of the Chinese Academy
of Agricultural Sciences.
As the world's third largest oil importer after the United
States and Japan, China imported a record 36 million tons of
refined oil last year, 15.7 percent up on 2005, to fuel its 10.7
percent economic growth.
Experts say biofuels are the fourth most important energy source
after coal, oil and natural gas.
Vehicles fueled by bio-diesel do not produce sulphur dioxide and
generate less carbon monoxide and other harmful gases.
One of the country's largest bio-fuel projects has been carried
out in the southwestern border province of Yunnan, with 25,000
hectares of oil-rich jatropha curcas trees planted last year to
yield bio-diesel for automobiles.
Scientists say the oil content of the seeds of jatropha curcas
trees is around 30 percent.
By 2020, China's will be able to produce 12 million tons of
bio-liquid fuel such as fuel ethanol and bio-diesel, replacing some
10 million tons of refined oil products, predicted Han Wenke,
deputy director of the Energy Research Institute of the National
Development and Reform Commission (NDRC).
(Xinhua News Agency March 29, 2007)
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