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Vegawatt’s veggie oil generares electricity, hot water
Boston Herald ^ | 11 January 2009 | Donna Goodison

Posted on 01/11/2009 9:12:54 AM PST by Radix

Restaurateur George Carey understands the power and economics of oil - vegetable oil, that is.

The owner of Finz Seafood & Grill is now using waste oil from his restaurant’s deep-fryers to generate electricity and hot water at his Dedham location and save thousands of dollars in utility costs.

The oil is being recycled into fuel through a Vegawatt, a new clean energy cogeneration system designed for restaurants and food service operators that’s produced by Owl Power Co., a Boylston start-up founded last February.

Finz is the first restaurant using the Vegawatt, which essentially is a diesel generator engine that’s been converted to run on waste vegetable oil, according to Ben Prentice, Owl Power’s vice president of sales. About the size of a commercial reach-in refrigerator, the Vegawatt has cleaning, dewatering and temperature control systems that make it fully automated.

“The restaurateur only has to pour the oil into the Vegawatt and walk away,” Prentice said.

Running waste vegetable oil through a diesel engine typically is a more cumbersome process, according to Prentice. To run a car on vegetable oil, it must be started using diesel oil to warm up the vegetable oil in a separate tank to the proper viscosity. Once the vegetable oil reaches the right temperature, a switch is flipped to allow the oil to proceed through a filter for use. Before the car is shut off, it must switch back to diesel so the vegetable oil can be cleared from the engine before it cools down and becomes too thick to flow through.

Owl Power is about ready to start manufacturing the Vegawatt in Worcester for general sales in March.

The initial and primary benefits of the $22,000 units are financial, according to Prentice. The Vegawatt generates supplemental power that allows restaurants to reduce their electricity and natural gas purchases from the grid, for a about a two-year return on investment.

“A restaurant that has 80 gallons of waste oil per week from their fryers will, in Massachusetts, save over $10,000 a year in electricity and hot water costs,” he said. Restaurants also are eligible for a 10 percent federal tax credit on the purchase.

Sensors in the Vegawatt allow Owl Power to remotely monitor the system’s performance via the Internet, and restaurant owners can go online to check its performance, how much electricity is being produced and how much money they’re saving.

Restaurants typically have several options for their used vegetable oil, including paying to have it taken away. Rendering companies pay restaurants a small amount per gallon for the oil for use in perfume, cosmetics and soaps, while other companies will buy it to make biodiesel fuel. Vehicle owners who’ve converted their diesel engines to run on vegetable oil also solicit restaurants to provide it to them for free.

“A year ago, virtually every restaurant was paying to have it taken away,” Prentice said. “But because of the great interest in being green, efficiency of operations, reuse of products and the price of oil, there’s been a huge increase in the demand for the oil. And now these companies recognize they have to pay for it.”

Restaurants typically receive 10 cents to 25 cents per gallon for the oil. Vegawatt owners, meanwhile, realize a value of $2.55 per gallon, according to Owl Power.

George Carey, owner of Finz Seafood & Grill, learned about the Vegawatt from Owl Power’s owners last June at a National Restaurant Association event in Boston that focused on helping eateries become more environmentally friendly. The system has been in use outside the back of his Dedham restaurant for the last 2.5 months.

“We had been selling our oil for biodiesel for a couple of years, but this is a much better concept because it never leaves your building, and it generates electricity,” Carey said. “It’s a much greener way. There’s less of a carbon footprint because the oil that you are recycling doesn’t have to be picked up by a truck, brought to another facility, processed and then sent to another facility and sold.”

Operation of the Vegawatt also is simple, according to Carey.

“It’s as simple as putting the oil into the generator, and then the generator runs,” he said. “I’m very happy with it. Any time I can take a product like this and reuse it or recycle it on premise and save money at the same time - to generate electricity in this case - it’s a wonderful thing.”


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Food; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: energy; green

1 posted on 01/11/2009 9:12:55 AM PST by Radix
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To: Radix

I have an idea for the large scale production of an oil producing bacteria or algae. It takes sunlight to power it.

I’ll gladly give it to anyone who will put it into operation.


2 posted on 01/11/2009 9:16:20 AM PST by Battle Axe (Repent for the coming of the Lord is nigh!)
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To: Battle Axe

Freep mail me if you have an idea worth hearing.


3 posted on 01/11/2009 9:18:07 AM PST by Walkingfeather
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To: Radix

dream-merchant alert.


4 posted on 01/11/2009 9:27:36 AM PST by the invisib1e hand (revolution is in the air.)
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To: Radix
Biofuels Power

Saferenewables

5 posted on 01/11/2009 9:40:47 AM PST by pabianice
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To: Radix

Yeah But...Yeah But...
When the Nanny Government does away with Fried Foods this will be useless.

I DO Like this concept though - ingenious!


6 posted on 01/11/2009 10:39:09 AM PST by libertarian27 (Land of the Fee, Home of the Shamed)
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To: Radix
Waiting for the local codes cops to put the brakes on this. Somebody downwind is going to complain of the soot and the French fry smell gives them headaches and file suit..
7 posted on 01/11/2009 10:50:51 AM PST by RedMonqey
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To: Radix

But...but...they’re frying SEA KITTENS in that oul!


8 posted on 01/11/2009 1:36:09 PM PST by informavoracious
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