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peppertree

(23,343 posts)
Sun Jul 2, 2023, 06:44 PM Jul 2023

First solar-powered soy oil plant in the Americas opens in Argentina

The first “green” soybean oil production plant in the Americas, 100% powered with solar energy and without waste or the use of chemical solvents, was inaugurated in the town of San Andrés de Giles, northwest of Buenos Aires, on Thursday.

The 16,000 ft² plant, powered by 412 photovoltaic panels, was developed not by one of Argentina's large agro-industrial conglomerates (most of them owned by U.S., European, or Chinese interests) - but by Rumará, a locally-owned and women-owned medium firm.

“It is the first industrial plant in America that will produce soybean oil from renewable energy,” Industry Secretary José Ignacio de Mendiguren, 72, exulted. “It's a project led by women, which adds value, industrializes rural areas and boosts the countryside, and transforms a product of 500 dollars a ton into one of 1,600 dollars a ton.”

Financed by the Argentine Development Bank (BICE) and the CreAr subsidized business credit program, the plant has a milling capacity of 250 tons of soybeans daily - equivalent to 95,000 tons a year.

Currently, the firm works with 22,000 owned and leased acres of prime Pampas land, has 40 employees and sells mainly to the domestic market. The new plant, however, will allow them to begin exporting.

Green soybean oil, which was registered under the Oil Green brand, is the first to be produced based on renewable and clean energy. In addition, production does not generate waste and no solvents are used in the preparation of the product.

Argentina is the world's fourth-largest soy oil producer, and the top exporter - earning $7 billion for the hard currency-strapped country last year alone (nearly 8% of goods exports).

At: https://euro.eseuro.com/trends/557309.html



Argentine Economy Minister Sergio Massa (center-left, with blue tie) and Industry Secretary José Ignacio de Mendiguren (center-right, with green tie) headline the opening of the first first “green” soybean oil plant Argentina - and in the Americas - on Thursday.

Massa described the plant, developed by one of the few women-owned agroindustrial firms in the country, as “what Argentines can do if we align the work of the State with the will, the desire for investment, the capacity, the talent, the creativity of the private sector - and above all the entrepreneurial vocation of Argentines.”

Massa, 51, is running for president on the ruling, center-left Union for the Homeland ticket - whose chances have been throttled by 114% inflation and a record drought that has tightened hard-currency access in severely-indebted nation of 46 million.
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First solar-powered soy oil plant in the Americas opens in Argentina (Original Post) peppertree Jul 2023 OP
My deepest gratitude to the "Women-owned firm Rumar. Think. Again. Jul 2023 #1
Hear, hear peppertree Jul 2023 #2
And those are only the well-known cases... Think. Again. Jul 2023 #3
+1 peppertree Jul 2023 #4
+1 Think. Again. Jul 2023 #5

peppertree

(23,343 posts)
2. Hear, hear
Sun Jul 2, 2023, 07:50 PM
Jul 2023

It's never easy for a small business in Argentina - particularly one owned by women.

Two of the biggest court cases down there in recent years, in fact, involve women who were defrauded by male siblings and relatives after the family patriarch died:

There's Dolores Etchevehere (etch-eh-vereh) - whose brother, Luis, was Agriculture Minister under Trump's pal Macri (2018-19). Luis and the other brothers essentially shut her out of most of the family farming interests - the biggest in Entre Ríos Province.

With what she salvaged (the case is ongoing), she started the province's largest organic farm.

And Esmeralda Mitre (mee-treh), whose family controls the country's 2nd-largest newspaper, the right-wing La Nación.

After years of lawsuits, she finally wrested the 40% share she was entitled to - much to Macri's chagrin, since she's a staunch centrist herself (plus, he was trying to gain a controlling interest - back when he thought he could run for the 2023 nomination).

And there many less well-known cases - a common tale in Latin America.

 

Think. Again.

(22,456 posts)
3. And those are only the well-known cases...
Sun Jul 2, 2023, 08:12 PM
Jul 2023

I can't imagine the situations where women who don't have a chance to be publicly heard are being cheated, abused, and worse.

Thank goodness for those who can and ARE trying to break that system down.

peppertree

(23,343 posts)
4. +1
Sun Jul 2, 2023, 08:24 PM
Jul 2023

A sad glimpse into what Republicans would have us go back to, if they could - but, if they get their way, without so much as the right to sue.

Which, as you know, is what they want for everyone who's not in the 1% - women or not.

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