Anything Into Oil
Technological savvy could turn 600
million tons of turkey guts and other waste into 4 billion barrels of
light Texas crude each year
By Brad Lemley
Photography by Tony
Law
DISCOVER Vol. 24 No. 05 | May 2003
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Gory refuse, from
a Butterball Turkey plant in Carthage, Missouri, will no longer go
to waste. Each day 200 tons of turkey offal will be carted to the
first industrial-scale thermal depolymerization plant, recently
completed in an adjacent lot, and be transformed into various
useful products, including 600 barrels of light oil.
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In an industrial park in Philadelphia sits a new machine
that can change almost anything into oil.
Really.
"This is a solution to three of the biggest problems
facing mankind," says Brian Appel, chairman and CEO of Changing
World Technologies, the company that built this pilot plant and has
just completed its first industrial-size installation in Missouri.
"This process can deal with the world's waste. It can supplement
our dwindling supplies of oil. And it can slow down global
warming."
Pardon me, says a reporter, shivering
in the frigid dawn, but that sounds too good to be true.
"Everybody says that," says Appel. He is a tall, affable
entrepreneur who has assembled a team of scientists, former
government leaders, and deep-pocketed investors to develop and sell
what he calls the thermal depolymerization process, or TDP. The
process is designed to handle almost any waste product imaginable,
including turkey offal, tires, plastic bottles, harbor-dredged muck,
old computers, municipal garbage, cornstalks, paper-pulp effluent,
infectious medical waste, oil-refinery residues, even biological
weapons such as anthrax spores. According to Appel, waste goes in one
end and comes out the other as three products, all valuable and
environmentally benign: high-quality oil, clean-burning gas, and
purified minerals that can be used as fuels, fertilizers, or
specialty chemicals for manufacturing.
Unlike other
solid-to-liquid-fuel processes such as cornstarch into ethanol, this
one will accept almost any carbon-based feedstock. If a 175-pound man
fell into one end, he would come out the other end as 38 pounds of
oil, 7 pounds of gas, and 7 pounds of minerals, as well as 123 pounds
of sterilized water. While no one plans to put people into a thermal
depolymerization machine, an intimate human creation could become a
prime feedstock. "There is no reason why we can't turn sewage,
including human excrement, into a glorious oil," says engineer
Terry Adams, a project consultant. So the city of Philadelphia is in
discussion with Changing World Technologies to begin doing exactly
that.
"The potential is unbelievable,"
says Michael Roberts, a senior chemical engineer for the Gas
Technology Institute, an energy research group. "You're not only
cleaning up waste; you're talking about distributed generation of oil
all over the world."
"This is not an incremental change. This is a
big, new step," agrees Alf Andreassen, a venture capitalist with
the Paladin Capital Group and a former Bell Laboratories director.
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The offal-derived
oil, is chemically almost identical to a number two fuel oil used
to heat homes.
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Andreassen and others anticipate that a
large chunk of the world's agricultural, industrial, and municipal
waste may someday go into thermal depolymerization machines scattered
all over the globe. If the process works as well as its creators
claim, not only would most toxic waste problems become history, so
would imported oil. Just converting all the U.S. agricultural waste
into oil and gas would yield the energy equivalent of 4 billion
barrels of oil annually. In 2001 the United States imported 4.2
billion barrels of oil. Referring to U.S. dependence on oil from the
volatile Middle East, R. James Woolsey, former CIA director and an
adviser to Changing World Technologies, says, "This technology
offers a beginning of a way away from this."
But first things first. Today, here at the plant at Philadelphia's
Naval Business Center, the experimental feedstock is turkey
processing-plant waste: feathers, bones, skin, blood, fat, guts. A
forklift dumps 1,400 pounds of the nasty stuff into the machine's
first stage, a 350-horsepower grinder that masticates it into gray
brown slurry. From there it flows into a series of tanks and pipes,
which hum and hiss as they heat, digest, and break down the mixture.
Two hours later, a white-jacketed technician turns a spigot. Out
pours a honey-colored fluid, steaming a bit in the cold warehouse as
it fills a glass beaker.
It really is a lovely oil.
"The longest carbon chains are C-18 or so,"
says Appel, admiring the liquid. "That's a very light oil. It is
essentially the same as a mix of half fuel oil, half gasoline."
Private investors, who have chipped in $40 million to develop
the process, aren't the only ones who are impressed. The federal
government has granted more than $12 million to push the work along.
"We will be able to make oil for $8 to $12 a barrel," says
Paul Baskis, the inventor of the process. "We are going to be
able to switch to a carbohydrate economy."
Making oil
and gas from hydrocarbon-based waste is a trick that Earth mastered
long ago. Most crude oil comes from one-celled plants and animals
that die, settle to ocean floors, decompose, and are mashed by
sliding tectonic plates, a process geologists call subduction. Under
pressure and heat, the dead creatures' long chains of hydrogen,
oxygen, and carbon-bearing molecules, known as polymers, decompose
into short-chain petroleum hydrocarbons. However, Earth takes its own
sweet time doing this—generally thousands or millions of
years—because subterranean heat and pressure changes are
chaotic. Thermal depolymerization machines turbocharge the process by
precisely raising heat and pressure to levels that break the
feedstock's long molecular bonds.
Many scientists
have tried to convert organic solids to liquid fuel using waste
products before, but their efforts have been notoriously inefficient.
"The problem with most of these methods was that they tried to
do the transformation in one step—superheat the material to
drive off the water and simultaneously break down the molecules,"
says Appel. That leads to profligate energy use and makes it possible
for hazardous substances to pollute the finished product. Very wet
waste—and much of the world's waste is wet—is
particularly difficult to process efficiently because driving off the
water requires so much energy. Usually, the Btu content in the
resulting oil or gas barely exceeds the amount needed to make the
stuff.
That's the challenge that Baskis, a
microbiologist and inventor who lives in Rantoul, Illinois,
confronted in the late 1980s. He says he "had a flash" of
insight about how to improve the basic ideas behind another
inventor's waste-reforming process. "The prototype I saw
produced a heavy, burned oil," recalls Baskis. "I drew up
an improvement and filed the first patents." He spent the early
1990s wooing investors and, in 1996, met Appel, a former commodities
trader. "I saw what this could be and took over the patents,"
says Appel, who formed a partnership with the Gas Technology
Institute and had a demonstration plant up and running by 1999.
Thermal depolymerization, Appel says, has proved to be 85
percent energy efficient for complex feedstocks, such as turkey
offal: "That means for every 100 Btus in the feedstock, we use
only 15 Btus to run the process." He contends the efficiency is
even better for relatively dry raw materials, such as plastics.
So how does it work? In the cold Philadelphia warehouse, Appel
waves a long arm at the apparatus, which looks surprisingly low tech:
a tangle of pressure vessels, pipes, valves, and heat exchangers
terminating in storage tanks. It resembles the oil refineries that
stretch to the horizon on either side of the New Jersey Turnpike, and
in part, that's exactly what it is.
Appel strides to
a silver gray pressure tank that is 20 feet long, three feet wide,
heavily insulated, and wrapped with electric heating coils. He raps
on its side. "The chief difference in our process is that we
make water a friend rather than an enemy," he says. "The
other processes all tried to drive out water. We drive it in, inside
this tank, with heat and pressure. We super-hydrate the material."
Thus temperatures and pressures need only be modest, because water
helps to convey heat into the feedstock. "We're talking about
temperatures of 500 degrees Fahrenheit and pressures of about 600
pounds for most organic material—not at all extreme or energy
intensive. And the cooking times are pretty short, usually about 15
minutes."
Once the organic soup is heated and
partially depolymerized in the reactor vessel, phase two begins. "We
quickly drop the slurry to a lower pressure," says Appel,
pointing at a branching series of pipes. The rapid depressurization
releases about 90 percent of the slurry's free water. Dehydration via
depressurization is far cheaper in terms of energy consumed than is
heating and boiling off the water, particularly because no heat is
wasted. "We send the flashed-off water back up there,"
Appel says, pointing to a pipe that leads to the beginning of the
process, "to heat the incoming stream."
At this stage, the minerals—in turkey waste, they come mostly
from bones—settle out and are shunted to storage tanks. Rich in
calcium and magnesium, the dried brown powder "is a perfect
balanced fertilizer," Appel says.
The
remaining concentrated organic soup gushes into a second-stage
reactor similar to the coke ovens used to refine oil into gasoline.
"This technology is as old as the hills," says Appel,
grinning broadly. The reactor heats the soup to about 900 degrees
Fahrenheit to further break apart long molecular chains. Next, in
vertical distillation columns, hot vapor flows up, condenses, and
flows out from different levels: gases from the top of the column,
light oils from the upper middle, heavier oils from the middle, water
from the lower middle, and powdered carbon—used to manufacture
tires, filters, and printer toners—from the bottom. "Gas
is expensive to transport, so we use it on-site in the plant to heat
the process," Appel says. The oil, minerals, and carbon are sold
to the highest bidders.
Depending on the feedstock
and the cooking and coking times, the process can be tweaked to make
other specialty chemicals that may be even more profitable than oil.
Turkey offal, for example, can be used to produce fatty acids for
soap, tires, paints, and lubricants. Polyvinyl chloride, or PVC—the
stuff of house siding, wallpapers, and plastic pipes—yields
hydrochloric acid, a relatively benign and industrially valuable
chemical used to make cleaners and solvents. "That's what's so
great about making water a friend," says Appel. "The
hydrogen in water combines with the chlorine in PVC to make it safe.
If you burn PVC [in a municipal-waste incinerator], you get
dioxin—very toxic."
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Brian Appel, CEO
of Changing World Technologies, strolls through a thermal
depolymerization plant in Philadelphia. Experiments at the pilot
facility revealed that the process is scalable—plants can
sprawl over acres and handle 4,000 tons of waste a day or be
"small enough to go on the back of a flatbed truck" and
handle just one ton daily, says Appel.
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The technicians here have spent three years
feeding different kinds of waste into their machinery to formulate
recipes. In a little trailer next to the plant, Appel picks up a
handful of one-gallon plastic bags sent by a potential customer in
Japan. The first is full of ground-up appliances, each piece no
larger than a pea. "Put a computer and a refrigerator into a
grinder, and that's what you get," he says, shaking the bag.
"It's PVC, wood, fiberglass, metal, just a mess of different
things. This process handles mixed waste beautifully." Next to
the ground-up appliances is a plastic bucket of municipal sewage.
Appel pops the lid and instantly regrets it. "Whew," he
says. "That is nasty."
Experimentation
revealed that different waste streams require different cooking and
coking times and yield different finished products. "It's a
two-step process, and you do more in step one or step two depending
on what you are processing," Terry Adams says. "With the
turkey guts, you do the lion's share in the first stage. With mixed
plastics, most of the breakdown happens in the second stage."
The oil-to-mineral ratios vary too. Plastic bottles, for example,
yield copious amounts of oil, while tires yield more minerals and
other solids. So far, says Adams, "nothing hazardous comes out
from any feedstock we try."
"The only
thing this process can't handle is nuclear waste," Appel says.
"If it contains carbon, we can do it." à
This Philadelphia pilot plant can handle only seven tons of waste a
day, but 1,054 miles to the west, in Carthage, Missouri, about 100
yards from one of ConAgra Foods' massive Butterball Turkey plants,
sits the company's first commercial-scale thermal depolymerization
plant. The $20 million facility, scheduled to go online any day, is
expected to digest more than 200 tons of turkey-processing waste
every 24 hours.
The north side of Carthage smells like
Thanksgiving all the time. At the Butterball plant, workers
slaughter, pluck, parcook, and package 30,000 turkeys each workday,
filling the air with the distinctive tang of boiling bird. A factory
tour reveals the grisly realities of large-scale poultry processing.
Inside, an endless chain of hanging carcasses clanks past
knife-wielding laborers who slash away. Outside, a tanker truck
idles, full to the top with fresh turkey blood. For many years,
ConAgra Foods has trucked the plant's waste—feathers, organs,
and other nonusable parts—to a rendering facility where it was
ground and dried to make animal feed, fertilizer, and other chemical
products. But bovine spongiform encephalopathy, also known as mad cow
disease, can spread among cattle from recycled feed, and although no
similar disease has been found in poultry, regulators are becoming
skittish about feeding animals to animals. In Europe the practice is
illegal for all livestock. Since 1997, the United States has
prohibited the feeding of most recycled animal waste to cattle.
Ultimately, the specter of European-style mad-cow regulations may
kick-start the acceptance of thermal depolymerization. "In
Europe, there are mountains of bones piling up," says Alf
Andreassen. "When recycling waste into feed stops in this
country, it will change everything."
Because
depolymerization takes apart materials at the molecular level, Appel
says, it is "the perfect process for destroying pathogens."
On a wet afternoon in Carthage, he smiles at the new plant—an
artless assemblage of gray and dun-colored buildings—as if it
were his favorite child. "This plant will make 10 tons of gas
per day, which will go back into the system to make heat to power the
system," he says. "It will make 21,000 gallons of water,
which will be clean enough to discharge into a municipal sewage
system. Pathological vectors will be completely gone. It will make 11
tons of minerals and 600 barrels of oil, high-quality stuff, the same
specs as a number two heating oil." He shakes his head almost as
if he can't believe it. "It's amazing. The Environmental
Protection Agency doesn't even consider us waste handlers. We are
actually manufacturers—that's what our permit says. This
process changes the whole industrial equation. Waste goes from a cost
to a profit."
He watches as burly men in
coveralls weld and grind the complex loops of piping. A group of 15
investors and corporate advisers, including Howard Buffett, son of
billionaire investor Warren Buffett, stroll among the sparks and
hissing torches, listening to a tour led by plant manager Don
Sanders. A veteran of the refinery business, Sanders emphasizes that
once the pressurized water is flashed off, "the process is
similar to oil refining. The equipment, the procedures, the safety
factors, the maintenance—it's all proven technology."
And it will be profitable, promises Appel. "We've done so
much testing in Philadelphia, we already know the costs," he
says. "This is our first-out plant, and we estimate we'll make
oil at $15 a barrel. In three to five years, we'll drop that to $10,
the same as a medium-size oil exploration and production company. And
it will get cheaper from there."
"We've
got a lot of confidence in this," Buffett says. "I
represent ConAgra's investment. We wouldn't be doing this if we
didn't anticipate success." Buffett isn't alone. Appel has lined
up federal grant money to help build demonstration plants to process
chicken offal and manure in Alabama and crop residuals and grease in
Nevada. Also in the works are plants to process turkey waste and
manure in Colorado and pork and cheese waste in Italy. He says the
first generation of depolymerization centers will be up and running
in 2005. By then it should be clear whether the technology is as
miraculous as its backers claim.
EUREKA:
Chemistry, not alchemy, turns (A) turkey offal—guts,
skin, bones, fat, blood, and feathers—into a variety of useful
products. After the first-stage heat-and-pressure reaction, fats,
proteins, and carbohydrates break down into (B) carboxylic oil, which
is composed of fatty acids, carbohydrates, and amino acids. The
second-stage reaction strips off the fatty acids' carboxyl group (a
carbon atom, two oxygen atoms, and a hydrogen atom) and breaks the
remaining hydrocarbon chains into smaller fragments, yielding (C) a
light oil. This oil can be used as is, or further distilled (using a
larger version of the bench-top distiller in the background) into
lighter fuels such as (D) naphtha, (E) gasoline, and (F) kerosene.
The process also yields (G) fertilizer-grade minerals derived mostly
from bones and (H) industrially useful carbon black.
Garbage
In, Oil Out
Feedstock is funneled into a grinder and mixed with water
to create a slurry that is pumped into the first-stage reactor, where
heat and pressure partially break apart long molecular chains. The
resulting organic soup flows into a flash vessel where pressure drops
dramatically, liberating some of the water, which returns back
upstream to preheat the flow into the first-stage reactor. In the
second-stage reactor, the remaining organic material is subjected to
more intense heat, continuing the breakup of molecular chains. The
resulting hot vapor then goes into vertical distillation tanks, which
separate it into gases, light oils, heavy oils, water, and solid
carbon. The gases are burned on-site to make heat to power the
process, and the water, which is pathogen free, goes to a municipal
waste plant. The oils and carbon are deposited in storage tanks,
ready for sale.
— Brad Lemley

A Boon to Oil and Coal
Companies
One might expect fossil-fuel companies to fight thermal
depolymerization. If the process can make oil out of waste, why would
anyone bother to get it out of the ground? But switching to an energy
economy based entirely on reformed waste will be a long process,
requiring the construction of thousands of thermal depolymerization
plants. In the meantime, thermal depolymerization can make the
petroleum industry itself cleaner and more profitable, says John
Riordan, president and CEO of the Gas Technology Institute, an
industry research organization. Experiments at the Philadelphia
thermal depolymerization plant have converted heavy crude oil, shale,
and tar sands into light oils, gases, and graphite-type carbon. "When
you refine petroleum, you end up with a heavy solid-waste product
that's a big problem," Riordan says. "This technology will
convert these waste materials into natural gas, oil, and carbon. It
will fit right into the existing infrastructure."
Appel says a modified version of thermal depolymerization could be
used to inject steam into underground tar-sand deposits and then
refine them into light oils at the surface, making this abundant,
difficult-to-access resource far more available. But the coal
industry may become thermal depolymerization's biggest fossil-fuel
beneficiary. "We can clean up coal dramatically," says
Appel. So far, experiments show the process can extract sulfur,
mercury, naphtha, and olefins—all salable commodities—from
coal, making it burn hotter and cleaner. Pretreating with thermal
depolymerization also makes coal more friable, so less energy is
needed to crush it before combustion in electricity-generating
plants.
— B.L.
Can
Thermal Depolymerization Slow Global Warming?
If the thermal depolymerization
process WORKS AS Claimed, it will clean up waste and generate new
sources of energy. But its backers contend it could also stem global
warming, which sounds iffy. After all, burning oil creates global
warming, doesn't it?
Carbon is the major chemical
constituent of most organic matter—plants take it in; animals
eat plants, die, and decompose; and plants take it back in, ad
infinitum. Since the industrial revolution, human beings burning
fossil fuels have boosted concentrations of atmospheric carbon more
than 30 percent, disrupting the ancient cycle. According to
global-warming theory, as carbon in the form of carbon dioxide
accumulates in the atmosphere, it traps solar radiation, which warms
the atmosphere—and, some say, disrupts the planet's
ecosystems.
But if there were a global shift to
thermal depolymerization technologies, belowground carbon would
remain there. The accoutrements of the civilized world—domestic
animals and plants, buildings, artificial objects of all kinds—would
then be regarded as temporary carbon sinks. At the end of their
useful lives, they would be converted in thermal depolymerization
machines into short-chain fuels, fertilizers, and industrial raw
materials, ready for plants or people to convert them back into long
chains again. So the only carbon used would be that which already
existed above the surface; it could no longer dangerously accumulate
in the atmosphere. "Suddenly, the whole built world just becomes
a temporary carbon sink," says Paul Baskis, inventor of the
thermal depolymerization process. "We would be honoring the
balance of nature."
— B.L.
To learn more about the thermal depolymerization process,
visit Changing World Technologies' Web site:
www.changingworldtech.com.
A
primer on the natural carbon cycle can be found at
www.whrc.org/science/carbon/carbon.htm.