China, U.S. firms sign bio-fuel deal

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China's biggest egg producer said Friday it will cooperate with a major U.S. meat supplier to establish a bio-fuel company in the United States with a total investment of 1.8 billion U.S. dollars.

Beijing DQY Agriculture Technology Co., Ltd. (DQY) and Virginia-based Smithfield Foods will set up a joint venture co-run by their subsidiaries, Beijing Helee Bio-Energy (HELEE) and Murphy-Brown, DQY said in a press release.

The joint venture will adopt core technologies from HELEE and launch a pig farm biogas project this year, the company said, citing an agreement it signed with the Smithfield Foods in Des Moines, capital of the U.S. state of Iowa, on Thursday.

According to the agreement, the biogas project will produce 3.5 million cubic meters of methane annually and have a power generating capacity of 1 megawatt, the DQY said.

It noted the project will be able to produce 7 million kwh of electricity each year and cut 42,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions annually.

The two companies also plan to utilize wastes at more than 2,600 pig farms of the Smithfield Foods over the next 10 years, which will lead to the reduction of carbon dioxide emissions by 21 million tonnes annually, four times the current yearly emission of Chicago, according to DQY.

Smithfield Foods is the largest U.S. meat supplier with a market share in the country of 22.5 percent, while the DQY accounts for 45 percent of the Chinese egg market and has a biogas power project in Beijing that generates 14 million kwh of electricity per year.

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