Posts Tagged ‘Ethanol’

The Petri Dish Overfloweth with Algae Advancements

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

Algae, algae, algae. The research that is occurring on this second generation fuel has overfloweth the petri dish as just this week there have been five major algae announcements.

  1. W2 Energy, based in Canada, announced that it has completed its Sunfilter commercial scale algae bioreactor.
  2. Algaeventure Systems said that it has begun receiving orders for its algae harvesting, dewatering, and drying technology. The company that has placed the order is General Atomics.
  3. Energy & Environmental Research Center (EERC) at University of North Dakota was awarded a subcontract by SAIC to use its proprietary technology to produce jet fuel from algal oils.
  4. Kent BioEnergy, based on California, announced that it is going to establish a division of the company in Charleston South Carolina, partnering with a Grant Know, a local entrepreneur.
  5. Algenol Biofuels, a Florida based company, has threatened to leave the state and now they are working with CEO Paul Woods to entice his company to stay.

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If Cash for Clunkers Survives, Will Ethanol Funding Suffer?

Friday, July 31st, 2009

junk cars

If you could get it into the dealer, it was Cash for Clunkers material. (Flickr/iboy daniel)

Congress saves the day! It miraculously comes up with $2 billion to save the bankrupt Cash for Clunkers program, which somehow ran through it's meager funding in just four days! But the $2 billion wasn't just lying around--it was effectively hijacked from the stimulus funds intended to provide loan guarantees for renewable fuels. And the ethanol lobbyists aren't too happy.

I predicted here that the $1 billion in funding would not last long. I said June 20: "The problem with CARS (Car Allowance Rebate System) is the limited $1 billion funding and the July 1 to November 1 window to grab a piece of it. If you want fed assistance to buy your next green car, apply now, because it won't last long. President Obama weighed in today as a cheerleader for renewing the program, a speech he undoubtedly didn't realize he'd have to make:

The program was originally funded with $4 billion, but the budget process resulted in drastic cuts. Some observers thought that even $1 billion was too much, and that there would be money left over on October 31, when the program would have ended.

Bob Dinneen, president and CEO of the Renewable Fuels Association (RFA), commented that "One of the advantages of the Cash for Clunkers program is putting more fuel-efficient cars on the road, however these new cars should also be running on renewable fuels like ethanol in order to benefit both the changing climate and the domestic economy. For the U.S. long-term auto and fuel needs, it seems counterproductive to limit the renewable fuels industry."

Sure, but how many of the millions of flexible-fuel vehicles already on the road actually run on ethanol? Not many, unfortunately -- and a lot are big gas-guzzlers such as Chevy Tahoes and Ford Expeditions.

Shaquille O’Neal Helps to Debut the World’s First E-Fuel MicroFueler

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

Who needs a gas station to fill your tank with ethanol? Not you. GreenHouse has just announced the E-Fuel MicroFueler, a portable in-home micro-refinery system that turns organic waste into ethanol. The first installation of the E-Fuel MicroFueler was in the home of none other than basketball great Shaquille O’Neal, who lives in Pacific Palisades a subdivision in LA.

The E-Fuel MicroFueler coverts the organic waste into ethanol for about two-thirds the cost of gasoline. The final product is E100 (100 percent ethanol) which burns cleaner emitting significantly less emissions into the air. The only vehicles designed to run on E100 are the IndyCars which in 2007 became the first motorsports league to sanction a renewable fuel.

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Clean Fuels Foundation Launches Florida FFV Awareness Project

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

A national consumer awareness campaign aimed at owners of flexible fuel vehicles (FFVs) was officially launched in Orlando, Florida today at the Farm-to-Fuel Summit. The project is a cooperative effort between key Florida state government interests, gasoline/E85 distributors, the ethanol industry, and several nonprofit environmental and energy advocacy groups.

Ironically, Florida has one of the largest contingencies of FFVs in the country. Out of the current 8 million FFVs on the road, 500,000 are Florida residents. I know most of you assume they are in the Midwest but can you say snowbirds? Like many other states announcing initiatives to spur the development of alternative fuels such as ethanol, Florida is no different. At the helm of this initiative is Charles Bronson, Florida Commissioner of Agriculture and Consumer Services.

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Biofuel Startup Announces Huge Yields From Engineered Organism

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

A Massachusetts company, Joule Biotechnologies, has unveiled what it says is a technological breakthrough that uses genetically engineered organisms, sunlight, water, and concentrated carbon dioxide to produce up to 20,000 gallons of biofuel per acre. The much-watched startup claims that its secret organisms, coupled with photo bioreactors, not only directly produce an ethanol-like fuel but also secrete the fuel continuously. As a result, Joule officials say, its so-called “helioculture process” can produce up to 20,000 gallons of biofuel per acre — four to 10 times greater than algae-based biofuel experiments — and can do so at $50 per gallon, which is far cheaper than other algal biofuel processes. Independent observers said that while Joule’s technology looks promising, it still faces many hurdles as it attempts to take its breakthrough from the lab and mass-produce fuel. Joule says it will open a pilot plant in the Southwest early next year and commercially produce biofuels by the end of 2010. Joule’s project is one of several well-financed efforts to genetically engineer organisms to produce biofuels.

This piece originally appeared on Yale Environment 360
Copyright Joule Biotechnologies

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Growing Sustainable Biofuels: Common Sense on Biofuels
Synthetic Microbes for Biofuel Production: Fuels Rush In

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(Posted by Yale Environment 360 in New Science at 12:27 PM)