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Orange peels, newspapers may lead to cheaper, cleaner ethanol fuel

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OKIsItJustMe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-18-10 09:38 AM
Original message
Orange peels, newspapers may lead to cheaper, cleaner ethanol fuel
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2010-02/uocf-opn021610.php
Public release date: 18-Feb-2010

Contact: Chad Binette
cbinette@mail.ucf.edu
407-823-6312
http://www.ucf.edu/">University of Central Florida

Orange peels, newspapers may lead to cheaper, cleaner ethanol fuel

Scientists may have just made the breakthrough of a lifetime, turning discarded fruit peels and other throwaways into cheap, clean fuel to power the world's vehicles.

University of Central Florida professor Henry Daniell has developed a groundbreaking way to produce ethanol from waste products such as orange peels and newspapers. His approach is greener and less expensive than the current methods available to run vehicles on cleaner fuel – and his goal is to relegate gasoline to a secondary fuel.

Daniell's breakthrough can be applied to several non-food products throughout the United States, including sugarcane, switchgrass and straw.

"This could be a turning point where vehicles could use this fuel as the norm for protecting our air and environment for future generations," he said.

Daniell's technique – developed with U.S. Department of Agriculture funding -- uses plant-derived enzyme cocktails to break down orange peels and other waste materials into sugar, which is then fermented into ethanol.

Corn starch now is fermented and converted into ethanol. But ethanol derived from corn produces more greenhouse gas emissions than gasoline does. Ethanol created using Daniell's approach produces much lower greenhouse gas emissions than gasoline or electricity.

There's also an abundance of waste products that could be used without reducing the world's food supply or driving up food prices. In Florida alone, discarded orange peels could create about 200 million gallons of ethanol each year, Daniell said.

More research is needed before Daniell's findings, published this month in the highly regarded Plant Biotechnology Journal, can move from his laboratory to the market. But other scientists conducting research in biofuels describe the early results as promising.

"Dr. Henry Daniell's team's success in producing a combination of several cell wall degrading enzymes in plants using chloroplast transgenesis is a great achievement," said Mariam Sticklen, a professor of crop and soil sciences at Michigan State University. In 2008, she received international media attention for her research looking at an enzyme in a cow's stomach that could help turn corn plants into fuel.

Daniell said no company in the world can produce cellulosic ethanol – ethanol that comes from wood or the non-edible parts of plants.

Depending on the waste product used, a specific combination or "cocktail" of more than 10 enzymes is needed to change the biomass into sugar and eventually ethanol. Orange peels need more of the pectinase enzyme, while wood waste requires more of the xylanase enzyme. All of the enzymes Daniell's team uses are found in nature, created by a range of microbial species, including bacteria and fungi.

Daniell's team cloned genes from wood-rotting fungi or bacteria and produced enzymes in tobacco plants. Producing these enzymes in tobacco instead of manufacturing synthetic versions could reduce the cost of production by a thousand times, which should significantly reduce the cost of making ethanol, Daniell said.

Tobacco was chosen as an ideal system for enzyme production for several reasons. It is not a food crop, it produces large amounts of energy per acre and an alternate use could potentially decrease its use for smoking.

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kristopher Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-18-10 09:45 AM
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1. Why do people always assume that biofuels should be used for cars?
The internal combustion engine is simply too inefficient to continue using in cars. We need biofuels, not for personal transportation, but for heavy equipment and renewable electric generation. Those are the sectors that leverage the maximum benefit from these fuels.

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steven johnson Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-18-10 11:22 PM
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2. Novozymes and Genencor, two companies announce enzymes to produce ethanol from cellulonse at $2/g
This breakthrough could revolutionize temperate zone ethanol production so that it might compete with Brazilian ethanol which costs $0.83 per gallon. The deceptive part of the economics is that ethanol production is subsidized in the US, Brazil and Japan.



Novozymes (NVZ.L) and Genencor, two companies leading research & development for advanced cellulosic ethanol, separately announced breakthroughs this week at the the Renewable Fuels Association’s 15th Annual National Ethanol Conference in Orlando, Florida.

Novozymes said its new Cellic® CTec2 enzymes enable the biofuel industry to produce cellulosic ethanol at a price below US$ 2.00 per gallon for the initial commercial-scale plants that are scheduled to be in operation in 2011. This cost is on par with gasoline and conventional ethanol at the current US market prices.

Novozymes said the new enzyme can be used on different types of feedstock including corn cobs and stalks, wheat straw, sugarcane bagasse, and woodchips. The enzyme is designed to break down cellulose in biomass into sugars that can be fermented into ethanol.

Advances in enzyme development have reduced the enzyme cost for cellulosic ethanol by 80% over the past two years and enzyme costs are now down to approximately 50 cents per gallon of cellulosic ethanol, according to Novozyme's figures.



Novozymes, Genencor Unveil New Enzymes for Cellulosic Ethanol
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steven johnson Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-18-10 11:22 PM
Response to Original message
3. duplicate
Edited on Thu Feb-18-10 11:24 PM by steven johnson

duplicate
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