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BLACK-GOLD BLUES U.S. green lights 'anything into oil'Defense Department OKs facilities turning natural produce into energyPosted: August 13, 2008 8:45 pm Eastern By Joe Kovacs
A Georgia company looking to solve America's energy problem has finally teamed up with the federal government, hoping to make millions of barrels of oil every day from virtually anything that grows out of the Earth. "What this means is that with the seven pilot plants – the military likes to refer to them as demonstrations – with those being built … it gives us the real-time engineering data that we need to finish the designs for a full-scale production facility," J.C. Bell, the man behind the project, told WND today. "In 18 months or so, we will start manufacturing oil directly from waste and we will build up to about 500,000 barrels a day within two years. In another six months, we'll reach a million barrels a day." As the United States now imports about 13 million barrels of oil a day, the only obstacle then to total energy independence from foreign sources will be the money needed to develop the processing plants, he said. (Story continues below) "Working with the USDA we've identified enough waste material around the country, we truly believe we can make the United States totally energy independent of foreign countries in about five years," he said. WND originally reported on the project in March as Bell, an agricultural researcher, confirmed he'd isolated and modified specific bacteria that will, on a very large scale, naturally and rapidly convert plant material – including the leftovers from food – into hydrocarbons to fuel cars and trucks. That means trash like corn stalks and corn cobs – even the grass clippings from suburban lawns – can be turned into oil and gasoline to run trucks, buses and cars.
He said he made the discovery standing downwind from his cows at his food-production company, Bell Plantation, in Tifton, Ga. "Cows are like people that eat lots of beans. They're really, really good at making natural gas," he said. "It dawned on me that that natural gas was methane." WND also reported how the national news media more or less ignored his announcement of a potential solution to America's dependence on Middle East nations for its oil. But the U.S. military was listening. And Bell now confirms his agreement with the Department of Defense, the Defense Energy Support Center and the Army will have seven demonstration facilities built at Fort Benning and Fort Stewart in Georgia, Fort Bragg in North Carolina, Fort AP Hill in Virginia, Fort Drum in New York and Fort Lewis in Washington, as well as one more installation in San Pedro, Calif. "We should have all of the plants running within 60 days," he said. "This is a big step in our growth, from the engineering that we develop with these plants, we will be able to build our full-scale production facilities and be in full production in the next 12 to 18 months. "Everyone now accepts the fact that we can make oil through bacterial action and now it is just a matter of time and money until we are turning out one million to two million barrels per day," he said. He told WND the first full-scale facility probably will cost $100 million to $125 million to build, and that an investment of $2.5 billion likely will be needed to reach a production level of a million barrels per day. But he said the return – even if the oil were sold for $70 a barrel, just half of what it was going for six weeks ago and still substantially lower than the current market rate of about $110 a barrel – would be significant. "It will feel very, very good to be to the point where we finally turn off the spigot from overseas," he said. The process previously had been verified, said Dr. Art Robinson, a research professor of chemistry at the Oregon Institute of Science and Medicine who publishes the Access to Energy newsletter. "These other ways [of producing energy] work; the only question is if they're competitive in price. Any hydrocarbon under pressure and temperature can turn into oil." How big does Bell believe the process eventually could be? "With minor changes in the agricultural and forestry products, we could create two to two and a half billion tons of biomass a year, and you're looking at five billion barrels of oil per year," he said.
Related offers: Tire gauges and windmills will not get it done! DRILL FOR AMERICAN OIL Magnetic Bumper Sticker Collection Set Let my people DRILL! Magnetic Bumper Sticker DRILL DRILL DRILL! Magnetic Bumper Sticker Drill For American Oil NOW Magnetic Bumper Sticker Oil does not come from dinosaurs Proof Al Gore full of hot air on 'global warming' Previous stories: National news media burying amazing oil breakthrough? Anything that grows 'can convert into oil' Billions of gallons of oil in North Dakota, Montana Anything that grows 'can convert into oil' New data: Maybe oil isn't from dead dinos Discovery backs theory oil not 'fossil fuel' Brazil reports massive oil discovery $1 billion a day for foreign oil Massive oil field found under Gulf' 'Black Gold' strikes Big Oil 'nerve' 'Hundreds of years' of oil available Joe Kovacs is executive news editor for WorldNetDaily.com and author of the No. 1 best-selling book that champions the absolute truth of Scripture and reveals the underreported glorious destiny of Christians, "Shocked by the Bible: The Most Astonishing Facts You've Never Been Told."
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