Oilgae Blog - The Latest from the World of Algae Fuels
2000 algae ponds across the country
You are at: Oilgae Blog."We feel really good about where the project is today from where it was three months ago," said Roy Hunter, executive director of MSDC.
Hunter called the project "a very costly enterprise. We're looking at $170 million plus to build the ethanol, biodiesel and biogas and all the other components that go in to make a green energy project."
The future site for the EcoAlgae plant has still not been determined, said Hunter, though progress on the matter is being made.
In completion of the project, Hunter said, 2000 algae ponds will be constructed across the county, with as many as 2,500 such ponds, eventually. Each pond would be one acre in size.
"If I were a betting man, I'd bet this was going to happen and it's going to happen in the next 90 days, but, things happen," Hunter said. "This project is in Saline County because something happened someplace else that brought Frank (Imo) here."
Imo is a farmer from Montgomery County and a partner in the EcoAlgae project.
This plant would be the first of its kind in the nation.
"It blows my mind to think that we might actually get it here," said Hunter. "I think that we've convinced Frank that this is where it needs to be, now it's just a matter of getting all the contracts in place."
He added, "Lieutenant Governor, whatever help you can give us would be immensely helpful."
Hunter estimated that 40 jobs will be created immediately, with up to 100 over the next two years.
"What a great time to be growing, and in renewable fuels, something that's going to be around for a long, long time," said Hunter. "And it's not the complete answer, but it is part of the answer."
Kinder mentioned he had been told by some of his rice-farmer friends that the waste stalk of rice, which was previously burned by farmers, has the densest cellulose structure in nature. Though rice is not widely grown in Missouri, it is commonly grown south of his home in Cape Girardeau.
"A lot of us think that, long term, this is more promising that corn ethanol," said Kinder.
Many waste products, including trash, are able to provide cellulosic ethanol, said Hunter. "It's an ideal project for agricultural communities."
"I'm not sure if this board I chair can do anything" to help the project along, said Kinder of the Missouri Development Finance Board, though he said he would look into the possibility.
Imo spoke of an organic fertilizer, called the Montana Micronutrient Booster, which he provided to the Midwest Research Institute, an independent, nonprofit organization, along with about 25 other organizations across the globe. MRI's findings were that the addition of MMB yielded a total of 300 percent of the algae's standard growth.
"It's nice to have these folks on board, saying that what Frank and his group have done is legitimate," said Hunter.
21 percent of the algae matter is oil, which can be turned into bio-diesel. Another 12 percent is carbohydrates, which can be made into ethanol. Yet another 50 percent is organic protein. Tyson has been involved in talks regarding the possibility of feeding hogs with this protein.
"The main thing algae feeds on is CO2, so we take the CO2 from the ethanol plant and pump it into the algae ponds. It's a closed-loop system, it's a negative carbon footprint," said Imo. "It's … what our country needs."
"We think it should be available to chickens, turkeys, everything," said Hunter. He added that it would relieve the current strain on corn.
"We need everyone around the state to be involved for it to be successful," said Hunter. "Lieutenant Governor Kinder has a tremendous number of contacts around the state. This is a very big package and involves a lot of people, and we don't want to have to repackage it every time we sell it."
"I am vitally concerned about jobs and economic development, and this is a promising project that can lead to both of those," said Kinder. "I want to be all over this in any way I can … I came to be briefed and give it a boost in whatever way I can."
During the meeting, the members of MSDC present also discussed with Kinder their desire to further develop the area at the intersection of Interstate 70 and U.S. Highway 65.
Some of the problems mentioned include the need for a water tower and about three miles of piping for water service, which Hunter estimated would cost $750,000.
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Labels: algae biodiesel USA, algae oil production, bio diesel
Algae oil to be refined by Carlsbad company
You are at: Oilgae Blog.Do you know that oil derived from algae is an exciting renewable fuel possibility? - see Oilgae for more.
Algae oil to be refined by local company - By Stella Davis - from Current Argus, Jan 24, 2007
Excerpts
1. A Carlsbad family with roots steeped in Eddy County and the agriculture industry is seeking $1.4 million in WIPP acceleration funds to build a $2.8 million biodiesel plant in Carlsbad that will refine oil from algae and other feedstock.
2. Th co plans to partner with Center of Excellence for Hazardous Materials Management (CEHMM) to produce the biodiesel fuel.
3. The co considers that it is critical for the algae oil and plant to be parallel. If they don't have a plant in Carlsbad, then they would have to take the algae oil to another plant
4. Co will process soy and canola seed until they are ready for the algae oil to go to the plant.
5. The director of the CEHMM program says that the success of their oil from algae program is "in the feeding of algae"
6. The CEHMM director sees Carlsbad as a prime spot for algae production and sees the possibility of the creation of a multi-billion dollar industry, because, "We use non-arable land and brine water to produce algae as an abundant source of oil that does not compete with food," he said. "We are sitting on an ocean of brine"
Organizations & personalities mentioned: Ronnie Walterscheid, his wife, Sheila; his brother Phillip and his wife, Melissa; daughter Katie Aves and her husband, Richard and patriarch of the family Henry; Cetane Energy; Doug Lynn, CEHMM interim director; U.S Department of Energy
Nature gave us oil from algae; perhaps we should try Nature's way again
Oilgae - Oil & Biodiesel from Algae
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algOS - Biodiesel from Algae Open Source
About Oilgae - Oilgae - Oil & Biodiesel from Algae has a focus on biodiesel production from algae while also discussing alternative energy in general. Algae present an exciting possibility as a feedstock for biodiesel, and when you realise that oil was originally formed from algae - among other related plants - you think "Hey! Why not oil again from algae!"
The objective of Oilgae is to facilitate exploration of oil production from algae as well as exploration of other alternative energy avenues.
Labels: algae biodiesel USA, algae oil production
Partnership Aims to Replace Oil with Biocrude
You are at: Oilgae Blog (Oilgae - Oil & Biodiesel from Algae Home Page)See also: Oilgae Blog Article Directory for a complete listing of all Oilgae blog posts - covering news, research and updates on biodiesel from algae & other plant feedstock, ethanol, and other renewable energy such as wind energy, hydrogen, hydro-energy, tidal/wave energy, geothermal, solar energy & nuclear energy
Scientists hope soon grow oil from algae
By Scott Nance, Oct 18 2006
Excerpts:
1. A small California firm has partnered with one of the largest U.S. government labs in an effort to create biocrude oil by the year 2010. The project aims to use algae to replace dependence on imported oil.
2. Funded by LiveFuels Inc., the scientific alliance will be led by Sandia National Laboratories, a U.S. Department of Energy national lab, and is expected to sponsor dozens of labs and hundreds of scientists by the year 2010.
3. Algal oil is similar to soybean oil but can be grown on marginal lands unsuitable for food crops. Algae can be grown in fresh or brackish water, making it an ideal solution for farmers dealing with issues of agricultural run-off.
4. Algal oil could fill the gap for non-edible uses like biofuels, according to the company.
5. The challenge facing LiveFuels' scientists will be growing and transforming algae cheaply into biocrude within days rather than millennia, the company says.
6. Theoretically, algae can yield 1,000 to 20,000 gallons of oil per acre.
7. Various stages of research at LiveFuels are: breeding various strains of algae, working on driving down the costs of harvesting algae, and working on extracting the needed fats and oils from the algae.
Personalities mentioned: Lissa Morgenthaler-Jones, chief executive officer at LiveFuels
Organizations mentioned: Sandia National Laboratories, a DOE laboratory managed by the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA).
Full article here
Oilgae - Oil & Biodiesel from Algae
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algOS - Biodiesel from Algae Open Source
Oilgae - Oil & Biodiesel from Algae provides links, directory, web links resources for algae-based biofuels & biodiesel. Intended to be useful for research, information, inputs, news for buyers, sellers, manufacturers, traders, suppliers, producers, exporters / importers of algal oil and algal fuels. Will provide info on biofuel feedstock, algal feedstocks, algae oil and link details on fuel from algae, bio-fuel, bio-diesel, algal oils & bio-fuels production and uses, biofuels trade & market resources, price data, statistics, prices, demand-supply for buyer, seller, manufacturer, trader, supplier, exporter and producer
Labels: algae oil production, Algae-Cultivation
Algae could be fuel of the future
You are at: Oilgae Blog (Oilgae - Oil & Biodiesel from Algae Home Page)See also: Oilgae Blog Article Directory for a complete listing of all Oilgae blog posts - covering news, research and updates on biodiesel from algae & other plant feedstock, ethanol, and other renewable energy such as wind energy, hydrogen, hydro-energy, tidal/wave energy, geothermal, solar energy & nuclear energy
Algae could be fuel of the future - Slimy stuff used in experiment to cut greenhouse gases
Mark Shaffer, The Arizona Republic, Oct. 13, 2006 06:03 PM
Excerpts
1. But algae absorbing vast quantities of carbon dioxide from smokestacks at Arizona Public Service Co.'s Redhawk electric plant is being billed as an answer for greenhouse gases and a source for biodiesel and ethanol.
2. A yearlong experiment has been so successful that it's about to expand into greenhouses on the plant grounds.
3. There is hope that algae fuel will replace more than one-third of the natural gas used to power the Redhawk plant.
4. The idea is the brainchild of Isaac Berzin, who was experimenting with growing algae on the International Space Station three years ago when he came up with the idea of using it to clean up power-plant exhausts.
5. Algae ingests carbon dioxide and releases oxygen in the photosynthesis process. Algae is laden with oils that can be used to produce biodiesel, starches that can be transformed into ethanol and protein that could have a market niche in cattle and fish feed.
6. Berzin founded GreenFuel Technologies of Cambridge, Mass.
7. GreenFuel went to the desert west of Phoenix after the company struck a deal with APS to conduct a demo project beginning last year
8. Some problems faced were: (1) How to give it enough light to maximize its growth. Algae thrives on the surface of water and other moist surfaces, but the growth rate slows considerably at more than a centimeter beneath the surface. (2) How to get the carbon dioxide, which is a byproduct of electric generation, into the water rapidly enough to spur maximum growth.
9. One of the problems Japanese researchers faced was that the algae would attach to the microfibers that were necessary to produce more light for growth inside the growth containers.
10. One algae cell can produce seven others within a 24-hour period in optimum growing conditions
11. The GreenFuel CEO reckons that they could get maybe even 200 tons of algae per acre annually during mass production
12. Commercial production is expected to begin in 2008 in Arizona
13. One of the challenges is getting the right strain fast in order to be the dominant culture against its predators
14. Algae is a tremendously large resource base compared to that and other vegetable oils because you don't have to worry about a growing season
Full article here
Personalities mentioned: APS senior engineer Ray Hobbs; Cary Bullock, GreenFuel's CEO, Qiang Hu, an assistant professor of applied biological sciences at Arizona State University; John Sheehan of Denver, who led a research project for the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in the early 1990s examining smokestack emissions for algae production
Oilgae - Oil & Biodiesel from Algae
Oilgae Blog
algOS - Biodiesel from Algae Open Source
Oilgae - Oil & Biodiesel from Algae provides links, directory, web links resources for algae-based biofuels & biodiesel. Intended to be useful for research, information, inputs, news for buyers, sellers, manufacturers, traders, suppliers, producers, exporters / importers of algal oil and algal fuels. Will provide info on biofuel feedstock, algal feedstocks, algae oil and link details on fuel from algae, bio-fuel, bio-diesel, algal oils & bio-fuels production and uses, biofuels trade & market resources, price data, statistics, prices, demand-supply for buyer, seller, manufacturer, trader, supplier, exporter and producer
Labels: algae oil production, Algae-Biodiesel



















