D1 Oils and BP form biofuels joint venture
British biofuel producer D1 Oils Plc announced yesterday a joint venture with BP Plc that will see D1 nearly double its schedule for planting oilseed trees, lifting its share price 10 per cent. Under the deal, BP also has an option to buy new D1...
British biofuel producer D1 Oils Plc announced yesterday a joint venture with BP Plc that will see D1 nearly double its schedule for planting oilseed trees, lifting its share price 10 per cent.
Under the deal, BP also has an option to buy new D1 shares, representing about a sixth of the enlarged company, at an average price of 251 pence.
"This is a major uplift in the scale of our planting target overall," D1 Oils chief executive officer Elliott Mannis told reporters.
Firms like BP and other large petroleum companies are keen to secure a supply of biofuel to meet UK government regulations that five per cent of automotive fuel must be made up of biofuels by 2010.
But biofuels are becoming controversial because they have put up food prices as farmers swap from producing food crops to biofuels that are often subsidised. Palm, soybean and rapeseed oils are increasingly used for biofuels.
The joint venture will aim to plant one million hectares of jatropha trees, which produce vegetable oil, over the next four years compared to around 600,000 hectares D1 had been targeting.