IOWA LAKES STUDENT ACCEPTS INTERNSHIP IN BRAZIL
An Iowa Lakes
Community College student from rural Scranton will have the
chance of a lifetime to get a free trip to Brazil next
summer – and gain valuable experience on an international
level.
Tony McDonald
studied in the Biomass Energy Processing program at Iowa
Lakes Community College under the direction of Dave
Peterson.
This past
summer, he worked at AGP in Emmetsburg where he had the
opportunity to really get a grasp of the biodiesel fuel
industry. When he began looking for a place to take his
second internship, he didn’t limit himself to the Midwest.
“After
already completing an internship in the biodiesel industry I
wanted to broaden by horizons and experience this industry
from a worldwide perspective,” said McDonald.
So, this
coming summer, he’ll head to Luis Eduardo Magalhaes which is
located in Bahia, Brazil, to work at Global Ag Biodiesel –
the first biodiesel facility in Bahia.
The Bahia
facility, which is just starting up, will produce 30 million
gallons of biodiesel each year.
To secure the
internship, McDonald made a connection with another Iowan.
Tyler Bruch,
formerly of rural Emmetsburg, is one of the founders of
Global Ag Biodiesel. Bruch started Bruchside Farms
International in Brazil in 2003. A family farm operation,
Bruchside International consists of 10, 500 acres. Bruch is
also an editor of Corn & Soybean Digest Magazine.
McDonald will
head off to Brazil a few days after graduation in May and
plans to stay until early August.
That’ll get
him back in the states just in time for classes at Iowa
State University, where he’ll major in Agri Business.
McDonald has
been interested in the renewable fuels industry since he was
young. He grew up on a farm which had three renewable fuels
plants within a five mile radius. McDonald’s areas of study
at Iowa Lakes were process technologies and support
equipment, as well as management classes.
“Hopefully
this internship will open doors for not only me, but other
people in the Biomass program on an international level in
the future,” McDonald said.
The Biomass
Energy Processing program began at Iowa Lakes in the fall of
2005 with instructor Dave Peterson. This course work covers
a wide range of alternative fuels that are being explored by
the industry, such as biofuels, hydrogen, methane/biogas
and, of course, ethanol. Some courses include process
technologies and support equipment, management classes and
instrumentation. The two-year program leads to an Associate
in Applied Science Degree.

Student Tony McDonald, right,
and instructor Dave Peterson, left,
look over a processing machine used in Biomass Energy
Processing classes.