Update on Biox Corp. and progress of Hamilton biodiesel plant
Friday, January 13th, 2006
I had a chat this week with Tim Haig, president and CEO of Oakville, Ontario-based Biox Corp., which announced back in June 2004 its plan to build a 60-million-litre a year biodiesel production facility in Hamilton.
The company’s plan from the beginning has been to better showcase its advanced, lower-cost approach to making biodiesel from vegetable oils, seed oils, waste animal fats and recycled cooking oils. And its effort has been partly funded by Sustainable Development Technology Canada.
Haig said construction of the plant is on schedule, and that it will officially be completed before the end of the first quarter of 2006 — i.e. soon. He said he’s very pleased with the renewable fuels standard introduced in Ontario, and commitments from both the federal Liberals and Conservatives to introduce similar targets federally. Beyond that, however, his attention is on Europe, where the market for biodiesel is more mature and shows more promise, and the United States, where promotion of biodiesel has become an issue of energy independence for Americans.
“We’re intent to deploy our tech to the highest and best use jurisdictions,” he said, adding that Biox will build and operate its own plants, either alone or in partnership with others. Asked which countries in Europe show most promise, he was reluctant to get specific. “There are some countries more advanced, less advanced. It’s a question of do you go to countries that understand biodiesel more but have more players, or do you go to new jurisdictions,” he explained. “Those are the questions we’re asking and trying to answer now.”
Asked about the ongoing debate over whether investment in biofuel production is misguided, he was dismissive. “There is no debate on biodiesel and there is no debate on cellulose. There may be a debate on grain-based ethanol, but I think that’s been put to bed,” he said, referring to studies from the U.S. Department of Energy showing that you get more energy out of ethanol than what it takes to produce it.
Of course, Cornell’s David Pimentel has come to the opposite conclusion, something not lost on the anti-biofuel movement. “Anybody can be insane,” said Haig. “If you want to talk crazy we’ll talk crazy. Anybody who wants to look at the science properly will see that the energy balance is positive.”

Tyler Hamilton is editor-in-chief of Corporate Knights magazine and a business columnist for the Toronto Star, Canada's largest daily newspaper. In addition to this Clean Break blog, Tyler writes a weekly column of the same name that discusses trends, happenings and innovators in the clean technology and green energy market. This blog is a personal project started in April 2005. It is not an official blog of the newspaper.