Showing posts with label algae. Show all posts
Showing posts with label algae. Show all posts

Monday, November 8, 2010

Beyond Corn Ethanol: Bioproducts from 'Garbage'


Though algae has great promise to secrete oils or be biomass itself,  algae always seems to about “five years away,” according to Dr. William J. Orts of USDA’s agriculture research service  in Albany, CA who spoke at UC Davis Energy Institute this past week.

Seemingly to prove his point, one of the large oil companies has been running a TV advertisement, featurng a middle-aged researcher:

“It is was 1975 and my professor at Berkeley asked if I wanted to change the world.   I said sure.  And he said, ‘Let's grow some algae’.”

Dr Orts talk, “Agriculturally Derived Biofuels and Bioproducts: Going Beyond Corn Ethanol” began with corn ethanol summary: Though it is in production now, enjoys a $0.51 per gallon subsidy  and “we know how to do it,”   it suffers from several drawbacks, including a bad carbon footprint when all the fertilizer use and transportation is factored in.  Ethanol is also corrosive, so can not be put into pipelines, and there is not enough of it to make a real dent in US demand for transportation fuels.

Much research is now focused on second generation biofuels.  Energy crops are “very hot now”, he said, for example switchgrass.    Dr. Orts outlined the basic line of attack on cellulosic biomass (think: harder to degrade corn or rice stalks, not the corn) by pointing out that  we should learn from anything that ‘eats wood’, from fungus to cows.  

Like algae, it is not so easy.   Whereas corn starch breaks down with just 2-3 enzymes, heavy cellulosic materials can need 16.  The goal for many researchers is finding the right “3-in-1” kind of sauce with the right genetic-modified material and optimized enzymes to seek out and attack the chemical and biological weaknesses of cellulose.

But Dr. Ortis then turned to one of his favorite approaches which can work now:  garbage.  Garbage, or municipal solid waste ( MSW), is about 40% cellulosic.    MSW - the waste,  plastic bottles and all - can be sorted,  ‘cooked’ in the right environment  (temperature, enzymes, etc) to yield biofuel (ethanol) or biogas (ex: natural gas) or even paper for paper plates.  (There are hopes of this new bioproducts industry will even replace petroleum  in the manufacture of man-made  fibers, polymers or even the medicines that we have become so used to. )

The city of Salinas is planning   a project with uses pre-treatment and sorting MSW.   The equipment then “cooks” it and  creates ethanol.   It avoids the landfills completely.  And, it can be done now.
 

Announcement:
http://calendar.ucdavis.edu/event_detail.lasso?eventID=11730

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Algae and Santa Cruz

I found Laura Chesky's As Green As It Gets (GTWeekly, August 19, 2009) a fascinating article about potential for harvesting oil from algae in Santa Cruz. .

Here's a very clear explanation of why algae harvesting isn't so easy, by Amada Leigh Haag, who's been covering algae for awhile for several publications.

This morning I spoke with Peter Koht, the city's Economic Development Coordinator.   He cautioned that the timeline in the GTWeekly article might be a little "optimistic" (probably will not start this year) since it takes time for permits and approvals.

But Koht is very excited about the project and considers Jonathan Trent, the NASA scientist, to be quite a visionary, even a "genius" with very sharp ideas.   Google has helped fund the algae project.   Officially, the city has offered to help the AlgaeOMEGA project obtain permits, but not formally endorsed the project.

Not just in Santa Cruz, but I've been hearing about algae research in Watsonville, as well as over the hill.  Will post when I hear.