looks like Algenol has some powerful friends...
CO2 figures big here...
these guys are going to be HUGE players
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
The company has 40 bioreactors in Florida, and as part of the demonstration
project plans 3,100 of them on a 24-acre site at Dow's Freeport, Tex., site.
Among the steps still being improved is the separation of the oxygen and water
from the ethanol. The Georgia Institute of Technology will work on that process,
as will Membrane Technology and Research, a company in Menlo Park, Calif. The
National Renewable Energy Laboratory, an Energy Department lab, will study
carbon dioxide sources and their impact on the algae samples.
*****************************************************************
--- In oil_from_algae@yahoogroups.com, "Tom Catino" <tomcatino716@...> wrote:
>
> Algae Farm Aims to Turn Carbon Dioxide Into Fuel
> Algenol Biofuels
> Algenol grows algae in troughs filled with saltwater that becomes saturated
with carbon dioxide.
>
> Published: June 28, 2009
> Dow Chemical and Algenol Biofuels, a start-up company, are set to announce
Monday that they will build a demonstration plant that, if successful, would use
algae to turn carbon dioxide into ethanol as a vehicle fuel or an ingredient in
plastics.
>
> Because algae does not require any farmland or much space, many energy
companies are trying to use it to make commercial quantities of hydrocarbons for
fuel and chemicals. But harvesting the hydrocarbons has proved difficult so far.
>
> The ethanol would be sold as fuel, the companies said, but Dow's long-term
interest is in using it as an ingredient for plastics, replacing natural gas.
The process also produces oxygen, which could be used to burn coal in a power
plant cleanly, said Paul Woods, chief executive of Algenol, which is based in
Bonita Springs, Fla. The exhaust from such a plant would be mostly carbon
dioxide, which could be reused to make more algae.
>
> "We give them the oxygen, we get very pure carbon dioxide, and the output is
very cheap ethanol," said Mr. Woods, who said the target price was $1 a gallon.
>
> Algenol grows algae in "bioreactors," troughs covered with flexible plastic
and filled with saltwater. The water is saturated with carbon dioxide, to
encourage growth of the algae. "It looks like a long hot dog balloon," Mr. Woods
said.
>
> Dow, a maker of specialty plastics, will provide the "balloon" material.
>
> The algae, through photosynthesis, convert the carbon dioxide and water into
ethanol, which is a hydrocarbon, oxygen and fresh water.
>
> The company has 40 bioreactors in Florida, and as part of the demonstration
project plans 3,100 of them on a 24-acre site at Dow's Freeport, Tex., site.
Among the steps still being improved is the separation of the oxygen and water
from the ethanol. The Georgia Institute of Technology will work on that process,
as will Membrane Technology and Research, a company in Menlo Park, Calif. The
National Renewable Energy Laboratory, an Energy Department lab, will study
carbon dioxide sources and their impact on the algae samples.
>
> Algenol and its partners are planning a demonstration plant that could produce
100,000 gallons a year. The company and its partners were spending more than $50
million, said Mr. Woods, but not all of that was going into the pilot plant. The
company had applied to the Energy Department for financing under the stimulus
bill, but would build a pilot plant with or without a grant, he said.
>
> With a stimulus grant, he said, the division of spending would be slightly
more than 50 percent from the private sector, although the normal level was 20
percent. The project would create 300 jobs, he said, adding that Algenol and Dow
were "incredibly hopeful" of getting the grant, partly because they had a
combination of an innovative start-up company, a major company with extensive
experience in industrial processes, a university and a national laboratory.
>
> At Dow, Peter A. Molinaro, a spokesman, said that the ethanol was "intriguing
to us as a feedstock, because the chemistry is simple." Dow is already working
on using ethanol from Brazilian sugar cane as a replacement for natural gas as
an ingredient in plastics.
>
> When Congress created a tax subsidy for ethanol, it raised the price for
nonfuel users like Dow, he said. "We're looking at options, and this is one," he
said.
>
>
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/29/business/energy-environment/29biofuel.html?_r=\
1&scp=1&sq=algenol&st=cse
>