BUTTER FROM
FARM SHOW SCULPTURE WILL POWER TRACTORS
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — After the
conclusion of the Pennsylvania Farm Show, which runs from Jan. 5
to Jan. 12, about 900 pounds of butter used in the event’s
famous butter sculpture will be scraped off its frame by Penn
State farm operations workers, plopped into barrels and brought
back to the university and State College Area High School for
conversion into biodiesel.
Donated by Land O’Lakes Inc., the
butter will be converted into fuel by a chemical process
currently used by both Penn State and the high school to recycle
waste oils from cafeterias and dining halls into biodiesel,
which is then used to power tractors and other equipment. The
butter to be recovered from the sculpture will not provide a
huge amount of biofuel, according to Glen Cauffman, manager of
Penn State’s farm operations, but it is indicative of the
potential that agricultural and waste products offer for
displacing much of the petroleum used by our society.
“Doing some rough calculations-
the 900 pounds of butter equates to about 810 pounds of biofuel,”
he says. “We can get about a gallon of biofuel from every 7
pounds, so that means the butter when converted would provide
about 116 gallons of fuel. At today’s petroleum prices, that
would be worth about $377. The big tractor we run on 100 percent
biofuel here at Penn State uses about 5 gallons per hour, so the
butter from the sculpture represents about 23 hours of use for
the tractor.”
Recovering the butter from the
sculpture, Cauffman notes, is a small example of how the United
States can reduce its dependence on foreign oil, and it’s is a
neat metaphor showing biofuels’ potential. “In this case, I
really like the concept of butter being used for biofuel that
will power a tractor to plant corn that will feed dairy cows, so
they can produce milk that will be churned into more butter,” he
says. “It kind of closes the circle of life in a very green,
environmentally friendly way.
“Otherwise, all of this butter
that was made into something beautiful is wasted. It is an
important lesson to teach the kids, and for society in general,
that we can’t be wasting things if we are to greatly reduce our
reliance on petroleum. We must recycle waste material to further
our total energy picture.”
This year’s butter sculpture,
sponsored by Pennsylvania Dairy Promotion Program and
Mid-Atlantic Dairy Association, depicts a dairy cow with three
students boarding a school bus. Sculptor Jim Victor of
Conshohocken began crafting the design in mid-December and spent
approximately 10 days sculpting the tribute to education.
Paul Heasley, agricultural
sciences teacher at State College Area High — where biofuels are
made through a partnership between the school’s Career and
Technical Center, agricultural sciences program and science
department — is pleased by the message the
butter-sculpture-recovery effort sends to his students. The high
school uses the biofuel to run equipment such as lawnmowers.
“Our kids have been making
biodiesel for a year and a half from recycled cooking oils,” he
says. “It’s an educational activity that teaches them the
chemistry behind fats and fuels and converting oil into fuels,
and it is teaching them about the differences in the combustion
of petroleum products versus biofuels. Hopefully, it makes the
kids think about the benefits of alternative energy and green
energy.”
Cauffman believes it is vitally
important to teach young people the importance of green energy.
“Both Penn State and the State College Area School District are
providing experiential learning to the generation of people who
will be faced with solving the petroleum crisis during their
lifetimes,” Cauffman says. “These kids will be very much
affected by the price, politics and environmental concerns
surrounding petroleum.”