Algal Carbon Conversion
Private U.S. company Algenol has signed an $850 million deal with the Mexican company BioFields to grow algae that has been selected to convert water, sunlight, and the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide into motor fuel. Paul Woods, Algenol’s chief executive, said he's known about the technology for decades but that today’s record oil prices and rising alarm about global warming make it time to produce the fuel. “It really is a one-two combination that no other company can deliver,” Woods stated.
Several other algae companies are trying to enter the biofuels business by drying and pressing the organisms to make vegetable oil that can be processed into biodiesel. Woods said Algenol will use a process he invented in the 1980s to coax individual algal cells to secrete ethanol. That way, the fuel can be taken directly from the vats where the algae is grown while the organism lives on, using far less energy than drying and pressing the organisms for their oil.
Algenol plans to make 100 million gallons of ethanol, about the average annual capacity of one traditional U.S. distillery, in Mexico's Sonoran Desert by the end of the 2009. By the end of 2012, it plans to increase that to 1 billion gallons - more than 10 percent of current ethanol capacity in the United States, the world's top ethanol producer.

Algenol operates the world’s largest algae library in Baltimore, MD to study the organism that can grow in salt or fresh water, and plans on expanding the technique to locations beyond Mexico. The company is targeting to build algae-to-ethanol farms on coasts in the United States. Each 100 million gallons of ethanol from algae will absorb about 1.5 million tons of carbon dioxide, the company said. That gives Woods confidence that algae-to-ethanol is a better emissions reduction technique than capturing the gas at power plants and piping it underground. Another advantage is algae’s productivity compared to agricultural crops. Algenol estimates it can make 6,000 gallons of ethanol from an acre of land. At that rate, if all U.S. ethanol was made from algae it would only use 3 percent of the land that corn needs to make the fuel. (Reuters, 6/11/08).





