Alternative Fuels Power Anheuser-Busch Breweries
30 7월 2008 - 11:36PM
PR Newswire (US)
One in Seven Anheuser-Busch Beers Will Be Brewed Using Alternative
Fuels by End of 2009 ST. LOUIS, July 30 /PRNewswire/ -- More than
five billion 12-oz. servings of beer -- or about one in seven beers
brewed by Anheuser-Busch in the United States -- are expected to be
brewed using renewable fuel by the end of 2009*, thanks to
environmental efforts at the company's 12 U.S. breweries. The
company's breweries in Houston and Fairfield, Calif., are currently
installing alternative energy technology that will be operational
by year end, and as a result the company's U.S. breweries will run
on more than 15 percent renewable fuel. The Houston brewery will
use biogas from a nearby landfill as part of an alternative fuel
plan that when combined with the facility's bio-energy recovery
system (BERS), is anticipated to provide more than 70 percent of
the brewery's fuel needs. The Fairfield brewery will use BERS, a
technology that turns brewing wastewater into fuel, and receive
electricity from solar panels being hosted on-site. "We have a long
history of protecting and preserving the environment, and these
projects will move us closer to our goal of running our U.S.
operations on 15 percent renewable fuel by 2010," said Doug
Muhleman, group vice president, Brewing Operations and Technology,
Anheuser-Busch, Inc. "It's part of our pledge to be better
environmental stewards of the world we share." Anheuser-Busch has
entered into an agreement with Ameresco McCarty Energy to purchase
biogas from Allied Waste Services' McCarty Road Landfill in
Houston, making use of an alternative fuel source for the company's
local brewery. The biogas is a natural byproduct of waste
decomposition at the landfill. Currently, some of the biogas from
the McCarty Road Landfill is being captured, processed and sold to
a local utility, while the excess is flared (burned without energy
recovery). Ameresco plans to capture some of that unused biogas and
transport it to the Anheuser-Busch brewery through a six-mile
underground pipeline. The Fairfield brewery will generate 15
percent of its fuel needs from a Bio-Energy Recovery System (BERS)
that is currently under construction. BERS technology turns
nutrients in brewing wastewater into renewable biogas that is used
to decrease the use of natural gas. In addition, the Fairfield
brewery has entered into an agreement with SunEdison to host a
solar power plant on the brewery's property. The solar energy
system will generate the equivalent of approximately 3 percent of
the brewery's electricity needs and also generate Renewable Energy
Certificates (RECs) for businesses or individuals to purchase to
offset their use of fossil fuel energy and greenhouse gas
emissions. The 1.18 megawatt (DC) photovoltaic system will be
constructed during the late summer. Once the Houston and Fairfield
projects are operational, 10 of Anheuser-Busch's 12 U.S. breweries
will be producing renewable fuel. Plans are currently underway to
construct the 11th BERS in Williamsburg, Va., in 2009. The
company's brewery in Fort Collins, Colo., does not operate a BERS
but applies nutrient-rich brewery wastewater to nearby land to grow
crops that can be turned into biofuel. Anheuser-Busch is also
exploring the use of wind, solar, wood and landfill gas at several
other breweries. Anheuser-Busch's 12 U.S. breweries also recycle or
reuse more than 99 percent of the solid waste from their brewing
and packaging processes -- a tradition that began in the late 1800s
when the company first recycled brewers' grain into cattle feed.
This amounted to nearly four billion pounds of materials such as
spent grain, beechwood chips, plastic, glass cullet, cardboard and
metal in 2007. In addition, employees are encouraged to look for
ways to conserve energy, water and raw materials in daily
operations at the breweries and learn how to conserve energy and
recycle at home through environmental fairs and the company's
annual "Green Week," a yearly tradition dating back to 1990. "We
have great employees who work hard every day to ensure our
breweries are conserving water, energy and raw materials as part of
our Blue Ocean initiative, an enhanced productivity plan to deliver
more than $1 billion in savings through 2010," Muhleman said. "With
our Blue Ocean project, we're examining everything we do to make
sure we are brewing our beers in a way that's efficient, considers
our environmental impacts and maintains the high standards of
quality our customers expect when they drink a Budweiser." As a
member of the U.S. EPA Climate Leaders Program, Anheuser-Busch has
committed to reduce total greenhouse gas emissions to 5 percent
below 2005 levels by the year 2010 for all of its U.S. operations.
Using EPA standards, this reduction in total greenhouse gas
emissions is the equivalent of taking nearly 30,000 passenger
vehicles off the road or heating more than 14,000 homes. In
addition, the company has also committed to increasing the total
use of renewable fuel from 8 percent to 15 percent in the same time
period. Based in St. Louis, Anheuser-Busch is the leading American
brewer, holding a 48.5 percent share of U.S. beer sales. The
company brews the world's largest-selling beers, Budweiser and Bud
Light. Anheuser-Busch also owns a 50 percent share in Grupo Modelo,
Mexico's leading brewer, and a 27 percent share in China brewer
Tsingtao, whose namesake beer brand is the country's best- selling
premium beer. Anheuser-Busch ranked No. 1 among beverage companies
in FORTUNE Magazine's Most Admired U.S. and Global Companies lists
in 2008. Anheuser-Busch is one of the largest theme park operators
in the United States, is a major manufacturer of aluminum cans and
one of the world's largest recyclers of aluminum cans. For more
information, visit http://www.anheuser-busch.com/. * "More than
five billion 12-ounce servings" and "about one in seven beers
brewed by Anheuser-Busch" are figures derived from taking the
company's U.S. beer production in 2007, converting it to equivalent
12-ounce servings and multiplying the figure by the estimated
percentage of renewable fuel the company plans to use at its U.S.
breweries in 2009. DATASOURCE: Anheuser-Busch CONTACT: Anthony
Paraino, +1-314-577-3453, , or Ellen Bogard, +1-314-577-9615, ,
both of Anheuser-Busch Web site: http://www.anheuser-busch.com/
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