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 this
summer – and gain valuable experience on an
international level.
Tony McDonald studied in the Biorenewable Fuels
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 my
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 (Iowa
Lakes) program on an international level in the
future,” McDonald said.
The 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.