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Friday, August 03, 2012

Ka`u News Briefs Aug. 3, 2012

`Aina Koa Pono plans to use local eucalyptus as feedstock for its biorefinery to be built near Wood Valley Road above
Pahala. Photo from ainakoapono.com

`AINA KOA PONO’S BIOFUEL REFINERY, planned just off Wood Valley Road on Meyer Camp Road above Pahala, will be built, according to a press release co-written by `Aina Koa Pono and Hawai`i Electric Light Company. According to the statement, `Aina Koa Pono plans to construct a refinery using thermal microwave depolymerization (Micro Dee) technology and to ship fuel to HELCO’s oil-burning plant near the airport in Kona and also off-island through a mainland distributor.
      The statement says that HELCO and `Aina Koa Pono have “asked the Hawai`i Public Utilities Commission for approval of a new contract for `Aina Koa Pono to supply locally grown and processed biofuel on Hawai`i Island.” If approved, the contract would allow the utility to raise the price of electricity to customers on O`ahu and the Big Island to pay for the biofuel, which initially is expected to cost more than fossil fuel. The cost of the fuel that `Aina Koa Pono would charge the utility, however, would be less than proposed last year when the PUC turned down a similar contract between `Aina Koa Pono and the utility.
AKP's website states that the company was formed "to develop
sustainable, renewable, reliable, environmentally sound energy
solutions that generate local economic development
opportunities in Hawai`i."
      `Aina Koa Pono partner Chris Eldridge confirmed on Wednesday that the selected site for the refinery remains near Wood Valley Road. The release says: “Construction is expected to require 400 workers over three years. The farm and processing plant will bring about 200 agricultural and processing jobs to Ka`u, create new businesses to support the industry.” Eldridge said the biofuel facility will be modular and consist of some 27 units, each approximately 10 feet wide by 20 feet tall and 30 feet long.
      According to plans described last year, there would be a refinery mill stack more than 80 feet tall and a mill yard to store wood, grasses and other agricultural inputs plus additives to the processing such as zeolite, which would be shipped in.
      The mill site is near Ka`u Coffee Mill and macadamia husking plant, below Keaiwa reservoir where a hydroelectric plant is also planned.
      According to the press release, “`Aina Koa Pono has entered into an agreement with Edmund C. Olson Trust II and the Mallick Trust to farm over 12,000 acres of under-utilized private agricultural land in Pahala that was once part of Ka`u Sugar Company. `Aina Koa Pono will initially harvest and process existing invasive plants, eucalyptus trees and local green waste such as macadamia nut husks, tree trimmings, coffee pulp and hulls,” the press release states.
      Eldridge said “the operation can provide other farmers a revenue stream from their agricultural waste. Farmers can also benefit from the charcoal by-product that is an environmentally sound fertilizer.”
      The press release says that, “Under the agreement, `Aina Koa Pono would provide 16 million gallons per year of renewable biofuel to replace fossil fuel used at the Keahole Power Plant on Hawai`i Island and other plants in the future. An additional eight million gallons will be produced for sale to Mansfield Oil Company, a privately owned fuel distributor."
      According to the press release, “`Aina Koa Pono will “provide biofuel over 20 years at a fixed price formula, providing economic security from volatile oil prices. The new contract will save electricity customers $125 million over 20 years when compared to an earlier contract which was not approved by the PUC. The use of renewable biofuel, along with many other renewable energy projects, will also help Hawai`i meet the legal requirement that 40 percent of electricity come from renewable sources by 2030. The 16 million gallons of biofuel each year represents close to 100 percent of the Keahole plant’s present annual fossil fuel use.
      “`Aina Koa Pono is working with the Hawai`i Agriculture Research Center to select the most appropriate non-invasive perennial crops to farm and convert to biofuel, such as long-term tree crops, sweet sorghum varieties, non-seeding napier grass and other tested sterile grasses,” the press release states. It says that “`Aina Koa Pono is also consulting with Hawaiian Islands Land Trust regarding appropriate biofuel crops.”
AKP's website states that Micro Dee compresses "to 50 minutes the
millions of years it takes nature to convert biomass into crude oil."
      Speaking for `Aina Koa Pono, Eldridge said: “We are committed to being a good neighbor and steward, producing sorely needed renewable, clean fuel and bringing jobs and economic opportunity where they are greatly needed. We respect the community and its cultural character and believe that over time we will earn its trust." The Hawaiian words `Aina Koa Pono mean "Good for the Land."
      He said that `Aina Koa Pono has engaged R.M. Towill and SMS Research to conduct broad community outreach in Ka`u to identify issues and concerns of local residents. “These voluntary efforts will include assessing how the operations and processes will affect the environment in and around Ka`u,” states the press release.
      The press release acknowledges that the “PUC did not approve an earlier contract between Hawai`i Electric Light Company and `Aina Koa Pono, citing concerns about price and other considerations. The new contract contains a reduced price for review by the PUC with input from the Consumer Advocate.”
      HELCO President Jay Ingacio said, “We have re-negotiated the AKP contract to meet the PUC’s concerns and believe there is significant value to Hawai`i of this and future biofuel contracts. If Hawai`i is to reach our clean energy goals and get off oil, we need to pursue all possible renewable resources, including biofuel which can be a bridge to future technologies. Locally grown and processed biofuel can be used in existing power plants at costs that can help us stabilize volatile petroleum-based electricity prices. It can keep Hawai`i green and create jobs rather than sending millions of dollars out of state for energy.”
      The filing asks the PUC to approve sharing the cost difference between locally grown and produced renewable biofuel and the fossil fuel it replaces among customers of Hawai`i Electric Light Company and Hawaiian Electric Company. If the proposed surcharge were in place in 2015, the estimated incremental cost spread among Hawai`i Island and O`ahu customers based on fuel price projections could be about 2/10th of one cent or from $0.84 to $1.00 per month for a residential bill of 500 to 600 kilowatt-hours. The surcharge would not begin until AKP begins deliveries of biofuel and will decrease over time as petroleum-diesel prices rise.
      “Hawai`i Island already has the highest level of renewable energy in the state, getting more than 40 percent of its energy from renewable sources. Renewable energy requirements are calculated on a consolidated basis for all our service territories, so O`ahu has benefited from Hawai`i Island’s leadership,” said Robbie Alm, Hawaiian Electric executive vice president.
      “This contract provides for future delivery of AKP biofuel to other islands. It’s reasonable that the cost of advancing a local biofuel industry in Hawai`i be shared among more than just Hawai`i Island customers. Fossil fuel prices are expected to continue their erratic upward climb, so in time the cost of AKP biofuel is expected to be less than the cost of the oil it displaces,” Alm said.
      `Aina Koa Pono has partnered with Mansfield Oil Company (mansfieldoil.com) on the mainland to handle its distribution and supply arrangements for the biofuels produced by the Ka`u plant. Mansfield will also purchase some eight million gallons of biofuel per year for sale and distribution first in Hawai`i, the press release states. “Mansfield, which is privately owned, is one of the nation’s largest distributors of fuel and operates an integrated network of refiners, terminals, carriers and retailers throughout North America,” the press release states.
      The press release says that `Aina Koa Pono will use a unique technology licensed from Sustainable Biofuels Solutions, LLC. This thermal microwave depolymerization (Micro Dee) technology is currently in use at a demonstration plant in North Carolina, “which has been operational since early 2012. Micro Dee accelerates the natural decomposition and metamorphosis of biomass to crude liquid to just 50 minutes," Eldridge said. “AECOM (aecom.com), a global engineering and technical services company, is completing tests of this technology. Results have met or exceeded projections, and AECOM has determined that the Micro Dee process, now a second-generation technology, is now poised for optimal renewable liquid fuel production.”
      See ainakoapono.com.

`I`iwi sketch by John D. Dawson
VOLCANO ART CENTER GALLERY in Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park displays paintings by John D. Dawson that feature natural history studies of the park daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. starting tomorrow. An opening takes place from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. tonight. Entrance to the exhibit and reception are free, and park entrance fees apply. For more, call 967-7565 or visit volcanoartcenter.org

SHIZUNO NASU teaches creative flow and dance based on Hara Tanden chi energy to all levels tomorrow from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Volcano Art Center’s Niaulani Campus in Volcano Village. For more information, call 967-8222 or email julie@volcanoartcenter.org.

SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS AT PAHALAPLANTATIONCOTTAGES.COM AND KAUCOFFEEMILL.COM.

Thursday, August 02, 2012

Ka`u News Briefs August 2, 2012

`Aina Koa Pono is working with SBS which says it has good results from it Micro Dee test facility in North Carolina for
a biofuel refinery it plans along Wood Valley Road. Image from sbsbiofuels.com
BIOFUEL REFINERY TECHNOLOGY planned for a site along Wood Valley Road has passed a 24-hour certification test, according to the website of MELE Associates, Inc. MELE, led by retired Admiral, Dr. Melvin Chiojioji, is working with Sustainable Biofuels Solutions, a partnership between  MELE and TekGar, LLC. TekGar created the proposed microwave biofuel technology, now known as Micro Dee, which has been selected by `Aina Koa Pono for Ka`u.
      The Sustainable Biofuels Solutions partnership, was established to “bring together MELE’s engineering and project development expertise with TekGar’s advanced renewable energy technologies,” the website says. MELE reports that on April 6, 2012, the test “was successfully performed and completed, on the Micro Dee technology at our demonstration facility in North Wilkesboro, NC.” The demonstration plant is located within a facility called Industrial Process Solutions, a 225,000 square foot building inside an industrial park.
      According to MELE, “the test produces Oil and BioChar, and samples are now en-route to be tested by third party laboratories. AECOM, an engineering procurement and construction company, was present throughout the duration, taking data during the entire testing period. "AECOM’s representatives were pleased with the results…We are currently engaging in discussions with several interested parties to begin the next processes: Project Financing, Risk Insurance, and Project Development.” The MELE site refers to biofuels-solutions.com for the latest news and more information on the technology.
SBS, in conjunction with AECOM, reports successfully
completed certification testing Micro Dee at a
demonstration facility in North Wilkesboro, NC.
Photo from biofuels-solutions.com
      The Sustainable Biofuels Solutions website describes the technology. “SBS’s Micro Dee technology creates renewable drop-in diesel fuel from various forms of biomass and MSW (Municipal Solid Waste) using a technique called Continuous Microwave Thermo Catalytic Depolymerization.”
      The website also says, “SBS’s production processes are closed loop systems that are energy efficient and environmentally friendly. Total feedstock utilization with minimum waste creation is one of the goals of our process solution.”
      An update today on the website says that third party validation of the Micro Dee system confirms the “ability to produce 120 gallons of oil per ton of wood based feedstock.”
      Feedstock proposed for Ka`u is expected to come from grasses, trees and other locally grown input.
      The SBS website states that the “SBS has demonstrated that the Micro Dee process generates a minimum of 80 gallons of renewable diesel fuel and roughly 800 pounds of high quality biochar from one ton of biomass or MSW. The process is so efficient that roughly 85% of the BTU value of most feedstocks is converted into revenue-generating commodities.”
      According to SBS, “In the case of higher-yield feedstocks, the output is even greater: one ton of tire shred generates roughly 120 gallons of fuel.”
      During public meetings in Ka`u, `Aina Koa Pono promised that it would not use tires or municipal garbage to feed the refinery. The Sustainable Biofuels Solutions website offers a film on the refinery process at http://www.Biofuels-solutions.com/technologies.php.

1921 Dedication Ceremony of Hawai'i National Park, five years after the establishment of the park in 1916. The original caption published in the August 1921 edition of Paradise of the Pacific describes the scene as the "Dedication of the Hawai`i National Park. Part of the On-lookers at the Ceremony on the Rim of the Fire-pit of the Volcano." Photo from the library collection at Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park.
HAWAI`I VOLCANOES NATIONAL PARK was 96 years old yesterday and the park’s Centennial Anniversary is four years away. Hawai`i Volcanoes was the fifteenth park to join the National Park Service, which has 397 national parks – including eight in Hawai`i. Established on Aug. 1, 1916, the same year as the National Park Service itself was founded. Hawai`i National Park, as it was called then, is also comprised of Haleakala National Park on Maui. In 1961, Haleakala became its own separate national park.
      “There have been many positive changes and landmark events over the last 96 years at Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park,” said Park Superintendent Cindy Orlando. “And this year, there are many special events to celebrate.”
Image from hawaiivolcanoes.areaparks.com
      On Aug. 27, the United States Mint will officially release the Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park quarter, as part of its America the Beautiful Quarters Program. The first day anyone can get the quarter will be at a public ceremony and coin exchange Aug. 29, at the park from 1:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. The evening before, on Aug. 28, the park will host a coin forum as an After Dark in the Park program, for coin enthusiasts and other interested members of the public. The event starts at 7 p.m. in the Kilauea Visitor Center auditorium. Both event are free, but park entrance fees may apply.
      This year also marks the 40th anniversary of UNESCO’s World Heritage Program, and the 25th anniversary of the 1987 inscription of Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park as a World Heritage Site. “UNESCO designated the park as a World Heritage Site for its superlative attributes of universal value important to the common heritage of humanity – in particular, the biological, cultural and geologic resources of the park,” says a statement from HVNP. Special commemorative events and presentations will soon be announced.

OCEAN VIEW NEIGHBORHOOD WATCH meets tonight at 7 p.m. in the Community Center. Call 939-7033 for more.

John D. Dawson paintings displayed in
Volcano this weekend.
Image from Volcano Art Center Gallery
THE COAST GUARD’S 222ND BIRTHDAY will be celebrated at Kilauea Military Camp on Saturday. The event is open to authorized patrons and sponsored guests. Park entrance fees apply. For more, call 967-8371.

PAINTINGS BY JOHN D. DAWSON will be displayed daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Volcano Art Center Gallery in Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park starting Saturday and continuing through Sunday, Sept. 16. A Part Of His Nature, MMXII, exhibits paintings by Dawson that feature natural history studies of the park. An opening reception will be held this Saturday from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Entrance to the exhibit and reception are free, but park entrance fees may apply. For more, call 967-7565 or visit volcanoartcenter.org.

DANCING ON THE EARTH, led by Shizuno Nasu will be held at Volcano Art Center’s Niaulani Campus on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Nasu teaches creative flow and dance to all levels. Warm-up and expressive dance movements based on Hara Tanden chi energy. Advanced registration advised; $45/$40 VAC members. For more call, 967-8222 or email julie@volcanoartcenter.org.

SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS AT PAHALAPLANTATIONCOTTAGES.COM AND KAUCOFFEEMILL.COM.

Wednesday, August 01, 2012

Ka`u News Briefs August 1, 2012

Supporting alternative energies, such as hydroelectric for the Ka`u Coffee Mill (above), and biofuel for the electric utility and transportation are part of the Edmund C. Olson Trust II plan. Photo by Julia Neal
EDMUND C. OLSON TRUST II has renewed its commitment with `Aina Koa Pono to lease some 3,000 acres and a location for a test site for a biofuel refinery near the corner of Wood Valley Road and Meyer Camp Road. Olson said this morning that the biofuel processor will be a test plant and much smaller than earlier planned and would allow trial runs for the new technology.
Along with offering land for a biofuel project,
Edmund C. Olson plans to restore the old Keaiwa Reservoir
for irrigation and a hydroelectri plant. Photo by Julia Neal
      `Aina Koa Pono plans to work with the company offering a new microwave processing technology. A test plant will be moved from North Carolina to the land above Pahala, Olson said. He said he is not an investor in the venture but offered to lease land in his quest to help provide green energy for the state. He is also working on a small hydroelectric plant for his coffee mill and macadamia husking plant on Wood Valley Road. He said that the local hydroelectric plant could power up more than 300 homes in Pahala. On O`ahu, some of his land is planned for windmills. 
      `Aina Koa Pono has retained the public relations firm Hastings & Pleadwell to make its case to the community. The Public Utilities Commission turned down a proposal from `Aina Koa Pono last year to sell biofuel to Hawaiian Electric Co., a plan that would have raised electric rates on the Big Island, Maui, Moloka`i, Lana`i, and O`ahu. Electric rates are the highest in the country. `Aina Koa Pono has also said it wants to make biofuel for transportation.

Rep. Mazie Hirono.
Photo from mauidemocrats.org
Mufi Hannemann.
Photo from hgea.org
WHILE PUBLIC WORKERS WERE “on the public dime,” Ka`u County Council candidate Bradley Westervelt, Mayor Billy Kenoi, congressional candidate Mufi Hannemann and a spokesperson for U.S. Senate candidate Mazie Hirono gave campaign speeches, according to a story in this morning’s West Hawai`i Today. One of the venues was in Ka`u, at Na`alehu gym.
      The Nancy Cook –Lauer article says only those candidates endorsed by the United Public Workers union were invited to speak during two-hour “educational and information meetings” to which state and county workers were sent, during their work time. The meetings were scheduled around the island, July 2, 3, 23, and 24.
      “Section 2-83 of Article 15 of the Hawai`i County Code of Ethics prohibits county employees from using county time, equipment or facilities for campaign purposes,” the story reports.
      Les Kondo, Executive Director of the state Ethics Commission, told West Hawai`i Today, “It’s inappropriate to use state resources, including state time, for campaign purposes.”
      West Hawai`i Today estimated the cost of the meetings to county taxpayers: “anywhere from $15,978.60 to $28,695.28 in salaries alone,” plus travel time to the venues. In addition to Na`alehu, sessions were held at West Hawai`i Civic Center, North Kohala Public Library, Waimea Civic Center, Honoka`a High School Cafeteria and Afook-Chinen Civic Auditorium, the newspaper reported.
Bradley Westervelt.
Photo from Bradley Westervelt
      Cook-Lauer wrote that when District 6 County Council Candidate Bradley Westervelt was asked “whether he thought campaign forums are an appropriate use of taxpayer money, he broke the connection and did not call back.” Westervelt said he did call back and left a message. He said he doesn't know if it is inappropriate to campaign to public workers while they are on the job as he is unfamiliar with their UPW contract. He said he did give speeches to government workers at West Hawai`i Civic Center and Na`alehu gym, which are located in areas connected with the district where he is attempting to win the County Council seat.
      According to West Hawai`i Today, council member Brenda Ford, who is running against Westervelt for the District 6 council seat, said the following: “As a former union steward on the mainland, I absolutely support the right of the unions to take two hours or whatever to talk to their union employees. I absolutely disagree with any electioneering by union management or by candidates on county property and on county time … It should be flat-out illegal for anyone to campaign like this … what’s next? Bring in your ballot to the meeting and let them fill it out for you?”
Mayor Billy Kenoi.
Photo from
hawaiicountymayor.com
      The story reports union members saying that blue sheets with the names of endorsed candidates were given out by the UPW during the meetings.
      According to Cook-Lauer, state UPW Director Dayton Nakanelua said the practice of having such meetings during work is protected in the union contract and has been upheld in court.
      Mayor Billy Kenoi told West Hawai`i Today that he was not campaigning. “I was invited by the UPW leadership,” Kenoi said. “I went there to thank the workers for all their hard work and to promise that I would continue to work hard and to work fairly.”
      See more at westhawaiitoday.com.

COUNTY CLERK JAMAE KAWAUCHI plans a press conference today to go over her reasons for conducting, July 21 through 23, an audit of the Hawai`i County registered voters database. According to a Nancy Cook-Lauer story in this morning’s West Hawai`i Today, Kawauchi examined the register, understanding that Hawai`i county’s 101,728 registered voters represent a relatively high percentage – 71.2 percent of the island’s 18-years-and-older population, reported by the 2010 census. The story said “she found that several Hawai`i County voters voted twice in the 2010 elections and some people were registered more than once in the county elections office database.”
      The Associated Press is reporting that Kawauchi found that four people voted twice and that between 50 and 60 people were registered more than once. Kawauchi has discussed the situation with the Attorney General’s office and the state Office of Elections and is expected to explain more today, the story says.
      According to West Hawai`i Today, “The problems she revealed predate her tenure as County Clerk.” Kawauchi became County Clerk in 2011.County Council Chair Dominic Yagong told West Hawai`i Today: “All Jamae was trying to do was be thorough. When everything does come out, people will understand why she did what she did.”

A 3.1 MAGNITUDE EARTHQUAKE struck as a sharp jolt at 4:51 a.m. today. It was located in the ocean, 10 miles east, southeast of Na`alehu, 12 miles south, southeast of Pahala and 14 miles northeast of the Lo`ihi Seamont, the underwater volcano off the coast of Ka`u.

KA`U SCHOOL OF THE ARTS announced a recess from language classes during August. Spanish Circulo will resume on Monday, September 10 at 10 a.m. Hawaiian Pohai starts Tuesday, September 11 at 6 pm, followed by Community Singers rehearsal at 7:30 pm. All three of these weekly activities will take place at Discovery Harbour Community Hall. For more information, call 929-7544.

OCEAN VIEW NEIGHBORHOOD WATCH meets tomorrow night at 7 p.m. in the Community Center. Call 939-7033 for more.

SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS AT PAHALAPLANTATIONCOTTAGES.COM AND KAUCOFFEEMILL.COM.