Photo: U.S. EPA
September 11, 2019
BY Ron Kotrba
Andrew Davison, founder and owner of Cape Cod Biofuels, was presented an environmental merit award by the U.S. EPA Sept. 10 for his unique biodiesel business model that, as described by the agency, improves the air and water and increases energy and community resilience.
Over the past two decades, Cape Cod Biofuels has developed a circular, or closed-loop, business model. The company works with farmers to supply 400 restaurants with vegetable oil for their cooking operations. Once the oil is used, Cape Cod Biofuels collects it back from those 400 partners, plus used cooking oil from 500 additional restaurants in the area, and converts the material into biodiesel at its community-scale production facility in Sandwich, Massachusetts.
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Cape Cod Biofuels supplies regional fleets, construction companies, landscapers, commercial fisherman, municipalities and 3,000 heating oil customers with B20 and, in some cases, B50 blends made with its own biodiesel and on- and off-road petroleum Cape Cod Biofuels sells. Since Cape Cod Biofuels blends its own fuel, the company can get retail prices for the biodiesel it manufactures. Cape Cod Biofuels also runs four company trucks on its own biodiesel.
During the 2019 National Biodiesel Conference & Expo in San Diego, Davison spoke on a panel about how Cape Cod Biofuels has been successful in writing its own grant applications and securing funding that has helped upgrade plant equipment, expand production capacity and gain more restaurant partners.
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Davison’s award was one of six given to individuals and two to organizations in Massachusetts for their work to protect New England’s environment. These environmental leaders were among 25 recipients across New England honored by EPA’s New England office at the 2019 Environmental Merit Awards ceremony Sept. 10 at Faneuil Hall in Boston.
The National Biodiesel Board, of which Cape Cod Biofuels is a member, nominated Davison for the award. “I thought it was cool just to be nominated,” Davison told Biodiesel Magazine. “I didn’t think we would win. It was a nice ceremony. It’s nice to be recognized.”
Davison says he expects to produce roughly 700,000 gallons this year out of his biodiesel production facility in Sandwich, Massachusetts, which, according to EPA, removes 50,000 pounds of carbon monoxide, 6,000 pounds of hydrocarbons and 5,000 pounds of particulate matter from New England’s air in the same time period—not to mention the significant greenhouse gas emissions reductions that come along with biodiesel use.
Broco Energy on July 17 announced a new partnership with the Massachusetts Port Authority (Massport) to deliver and transition Massport's fuel tanks to renewable diesel across its various facilities.
Shell Aviation, Accenture, and Amex GBT on July 10 announced Avelia is in the process of evolving to an industry solution with independent data hosting and a multi-supplier model helping users access the GHG benefits of SAF.
The U.S EPA on July 17 released data showing more than 1.9 billion RINs were generated under the RFS during June, down 11% when compared to the same month of last year. Total RIN generation for the first half of 2025 reached 11.17 billion.
The U.S. EPA on July 17 published updated small refinery exemption (SRE) data, reporting that six new SRE petitions have been filed under the RFS during the past month. A total of 195 SRE petitions are now pending.
European biodiesel producer Greenergy on July 10 confirmed plans to shut down its biodiesel plant in Immingham, Lincolnshire, U.K. The company temporarily suspended operations at the facility earlier this year.