Self-Sufficient: Farmers
from Sumbermanjing Wetan village in Malang find freedom from higher subsidized
fuel prices
Jakarta Globe, Dyah Ayu Pitaloka, Dec 09, 2014
Malang. Residents of Sumbermanjing Wetan village in Malang, East Java, seem unfazed by the recent price hike of subsidized fuel — unlike the rest of the country.
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Farmers from Sumbermanjing Wetan village in Malang, East Java, have devised their own method of producing bioethanol using corn and a secret enzyme. (JG Photo/ Dyah Ayu Pitaloka) |
Malang. Residents of Sumbermanjing Wetan village in Malang, East Java, seem unfazed by the recent price hike of subsidized fuel — unlike the rest of the country.
Their
secret lies in an unassuming shed of no more than 15 square meters in size,
with walls made of woven bamboo.
It is easy
to see why people often mistaken the humble structure as a chicken coop, with
the exception of a three-meter chimney sticking out of its roof. Surrounding
the dilapidated structure are discarded corn cobs, stalks and silks, all of
which completely carpet the ground.
For the
last two years, people in the village have been experimenting in turning maize
into ethanol. The scale of the production is small but substantial enough to
make residents self-sufficient.
“Of the 80
members of the Giri Makmur farmers’ cooperative, everyone has been using
bioethanol for free,” says Didik Prasetyanto, a co-founder of the effort, as he
points to two drums used to distill a batch of fermented maize.
“We use
maize to produce ethanol because there are more corn farmers [in the village]
than sugarcane farmers,” Didik says. “In the beginning, we [experimented] using
cassavas and sugarcane.”
The farmers
once struggled to buy fuel for their motorcycles and to light their stoves
because their village was so remote. Middlemen would inflate the price of
gasoline and kerosene to far above their retail prices, Didik explains.
When the
group realized they had been growing the ingredients for biofuel literally in
their back yards, they gathered together Rp 20 million ($1,620) to use as
startup capital and were soon building their makeshift distillery,
experimenting with various techniques and enzymes needed to produce their own
fuel.
Didik and
the others meticulously recorded their findings, at times consulting on their
production techniques and products with local universities.
Didik
explains that the corn is first slurried with water and a teaspoon of a dark-colored
enzyme, the contents of which the villagers closely guard as they are still in
the process of patenting their technique.
It takes
six hours for the secret enzyme to dissolve the corn, Didik explains.
The brew is
fermented for seven days, after which it is cooked for six hours at a
temperature of 87 degrees Celsius, producing a colorless and odorless ethanol
vapor that is then placed into water bottles.
The farmers
can produce up to 20 liters of ethanol at a time from about 40 kilograms of
corn, with 92 percent purity.
“The
[product] can be used as a substitute for LPG [liquefied petroleum gas] as fuel
for a stove,” Didik says. “Just a quarter of a liter can be used for about four
hours of cooking, non-stop.”
The group
has spent the past 18 months experimenting with methods to produce a concoction
that is 99 percent ethanol, which, with some adjustments to a vehicle’s engine,
can be used as a direct substitute for gasoline.
This
technical-grade ethanol is produced by distilling the corn brew twice in a
gas-powered furnace.
Didik says
the output would be equivalent to high-octane gasoline.
“The
production costs can reach up to Rp 30,000 [per liter]. With 40 kilograms of
corn and the special enzyme we can only produce up to 14 liters [of
technical-grade ethanol],” he says.
The high
production cost and low output, which makes the concoction twice the price of
its high-octane gasoline equivalent, makes the fuel available only to the
group’s members. However, the waste product can still be worth a lot of money,
Didik says.
“The
dissolved corn [...] is dried so the acidity [level] is reduced. [The corn
waste] is high in protein and is good for chicken feed,” he says.
Meanwhile,
the liquid waste is mixed with other organic ingredients and sold as mulch.
Like the fuel, these products are available for the villagers only, while the
profit goes toward more research.
“We dream
of increasing our production and selling it to the public,” Didik says, adding
that they need to first get their technique patented and find a way to reduce
production costs.
The Malang
district agriculture agency has begun to monitor the farmers’ success in
producing their own biofuel and hopes to introduce the program to neighboring
villages.
“We have
[proposed] a budget to map out the agricultural potential [of the bioethanol
program] in the district of Malang for 2015,” agency chief Tomi Herawanto says.
“We need to determine the most ideal type of crop so the process can be
sustainable without disrupting the food supply.”
Sumbermanjing
Wetan village’s success has attracted Hariyono from Krajan Lor village, located
on the southern coast of Malang, to learn more about the promising technique.
Hariyono
says he has been successful at setting up his own distillery which at the
moment can only produce the 92 percent ethanol for cooking.
“I want the
farmers [in Krajan Lor] to be able to make their own fuel. This way we won’t
have to complain about the fuel prices going up,” he says.
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