FARMING SCOTLAND MAGAZINE

Page 73

Article

From whisky to biofuel: How three Scottish businesses have teamed up to beat the world

Three Scottish companies have joined forces to accelerate the launch of a potentially worldbeating biofuel technology. The companies are Ardnamurchan Distillery, Woodlands Renewables and Scotland’s first bio refinery, Celtic Renewables, based in Grangemnouth. Celtic Renewables has already attracted £43million of investment and the new bio refinery will be able to produce one million litres of sustainable biochemicals annually and five large-scale refineries are planned worldwide in the next five years. The plant will use Celtic Renewables’ patented technology to convert 50,000 tonnes of biological material into renewable chemicals, sustainable biofuel, and other commercially and environmentally valuable commodities. The catalyst for the cooperation by the three companies is serial Scottish investor Donald Houston of Ardnamurchan Estates who has substantial stakes in all three companies. Mr Houston said: ”Celtic Renewables needs a biproduct of whisky distilling called pot ale to assist in its testing process before starting full production of its biochemicals and biofuel. “The pot ale is piped over the hill from the distillery to the neighbouring Woodland Renewables, a local business set up to repurpose the distillery’s by-products whilst adding value to the local economy. At the Woodland Renewables plant it is combined with draff (another distillery by-product) and turned into a nutritious animal feed used on the peninsula to feed local livestock. Woodland Renewables will transport part of their pot ale stock to Celtic Renewables.

Celtic Renewables CEO Mark Simmers & President and founder Professor Martin Tangney OBE

“Since their launch, sustainability has been a major component of Ardnamurchan Distillery’s overall strategy. Looking at new ways to improve their sustainability and circular economy, this innovative technology developed by Celtic Renewables fits perfectly with the distillery’s objective.“ Alex Bruce, the Ardnamurchan Distillery MD said: “We designed The Ardnamurchan Distillery to be as sustainable as possible, and we continue to monitor and develop this as new technologies become available. Our energy all comes from local renewable sources (hydro and biomass) and our coproducts, which are traditionally produced in all distilleries, are supplied to our neighbours, Woodland Renewables. “From there they add value to the local circular economy by providing highly nutritional animal feed to livestock on Ardnamurchan, and we are incredibly excited that they also now deliver additional value to

Celtic Renewables for conversion into sustainable chemicals and biofuels. This combination is a fantastic example of collaborative, high value and sustainable long-term investment in the Scottish economy.” Celtic Renewables’ President and founder Professor Martin Tangney OBE said: “These tests we will be conducting with the whisky residue are the culmination of the lab work we started at Edinburgh Napier University in 2008 which led to the formation of our company in 2012. The substantial equity investment that enabled us to spinout Celtic Renewables came entirely from Donald Houston. “Since then, we have gone on to raise over £43million in multiple rounds and Donald has contributed consistently along the way. “Donald took the risk on us when we had nothing more than a lab-based research project but with ambition for global domination, and he has been both a committed financial

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investor and a stalwart investor in the people and the concept behind the company ever since. “Once in production we will have contracts for consistent supply of significant volumes of pot ale from the Scotch whisky industry. With the plant being commissioned we needed an ad hoc supply of pot ale on demand. Donald has stepped in to meet that need, to get us through to the full production phase.” Donald Houston added: “Both Celtic Renewables technology and a new distillery such as Ardnamurchan Distillery require long term financial investment before seeing any returns. The time taken to start commissioning the renewable plant and produce a saleable output is very similar to that of having a saleable whisky ready on the market. This long-term investment strategy rather than the usual short-term commonly offered to start-ups, is crucial to the health of our economy. I am proud to be a part of this longtern view.” 73


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Machinery

11min
pages 130-137

Finance

4min
pages 128-129

Life on the Islands

3min
page 126

Scottish Forestry

3min
pages 118-119

People

2min
page 121

Forestry

3min
page 117

Part 3 of Native: Life in a vanishing landscape

7min
pages 124-125

Sunday Roast with Honey Berry Wine

1min
page 127

R.S.A.B.I

2min
page 122

Support for men

5min
page 120

Scottish Land & Estates

4min
page 115

Conservation Matters

5min
pages 113-114

Scottish Game Fair

5min
pages 110-111

Estate

2min
page 112

With Linda Mellor

3min
page 116

Southern Belle

4min
page 109

Edinvale event

1min
page 108

Spinks Smokies

5min
pages 106-107

Hotels and kitchen gardens

5min
pages 102-103

Aquaculture

5min
pages 98-99

Food from the shielings

6min
pages 104-105

Pigs

3min
page 91

Dairy

4min
pages 92-93

Crofting

8min
pages 95-96

The Vet

5min
page 97

Scottish Dairy Hub

3min
page 94

Sheep

3min
pages 87-89

National Sheep Association

4min
page 90

Scotsheep

12min
pages 82-86

Quality Meat Scotland

4min
page 81

Livestock

3min
pages 79-80

Farm Advisory Service

3min
page 77

Science & Technology

2min
page 76

Robotic bees

2min
page 78

Whisky to biofuel

3min
page 73

LBK Packaging

2min
page 28

Farm accidents and workers rights

2min
page 27

Farming for the Climate

3min
page 75

Organics

2min
page 26

Open Farm Sunday

7min
pages 20-21

World Farming

3min
page 22

James Hutton Institute

5min
pages 13-14

Mash and malt

2min
page 18

Ice creams

1min
page 16

Scottish Government

3min
page 19

NFU Scotland

3min
page 23

Growing vegetables on Mars!

3min
page 15
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