Archive for May, 2011

Algae Biofuel Develops Momentum – Could We See $30 Bbl Fuel?

May 4th, 2011

Algae keeps nosing around clean energy news.

It doesn’t have the sunny cache of solar or the exotic qualities of wind, tidal and geothermal power. But the rapidity of algae fuel’s reported advances are hard to ignore. At least for this former reporter.

In my backyard at the University of California, Merced, researchers received a grant to “perform a comprehensive life cycle analysis study of algae biofuels.” The money, a modest $142,747, is part of about $3.5 million issued by the California Energy Commission’s Public Interest Energy Research program.

Algae takes a back seat in the grant to other projects that include improving grid reliability, energy efficiency and automobile fuel economy. But, hey, it’s algae. Pond scum. This is the stuff that may be grown in wastewater settling ponds, harvested and turned into diesel fuel. Or food additives, you never know.

But the important thing is algae wasn’t left out. It’s not cold fusion. This stuff shows true promise as an alternative energy source.

CEC Commissioner Jeffrey Byron put it this way in a statement from the agency: “California’s strength comes from the ability to invest in energy research across the board.”

No kidding. And this pond scum just may keep oil prices from breaking the bank. Cambridge, Mass.-based Joule Unlimited announced that it has created a “cynobacterium” that secrete a product identical to ethanol or diesel fuel, according to Joule biologist Dan Robertson, quoted in dailytech.com.

This breakthrough, the company says, could enable the production of 15,000 gallons of diesel per acre annually. The company says it can do it for $30 a barrel.

That has yet to be proved commercially, of course. But developments are coming hot and heavy across the globe. Biodigest.com rattled off a handful of promising developments in Australia, topping off the list with serious production efforts by Aurora Algae and Algae.Tec.

And Oilgae.com/blog/, an aggregator of stories, lists multiple posts daily. One that caught my eye highlighted a peer review of the draft report “Biofuels and the Environment: First Triennial Report to Congress,” scheduled by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The report will give Congress a taste of what’s coming.

Expect pond scum to do more than lurk in a puddle on the floor with lobbyists during discussion.

I do like to include practical applications in these rants. Nothing epitomizes that more than the biofuel-powered Bentley Continental Supersports convertible, reportedly capable of more than 200 mph. The vehicle debuted this week at the Geneva Auto Show in Switzerland. Ami Cholia of inhabitat.com writes: “an on-board fuel supply system monitors the content of the fuel tank to make sure that power and torque remain constant regardless of the ratio of petrol to biofuel.”

Pretty cool. So it can handle anything you throw at it and still go fast. We put fuel oil in a bug once and it ran. Barely. We had to clean the plugs, but it got us out of a jam.

The Bentley, I assume, would be better.

Biofuels still must prove themselves. Ethanol, even as an additive, has gotten mixed reviews. For instance, the lawnmower mechanic in Old Town Clovis told me if I kept using that “cheap garbage gas” I’d continue to have problems with my mower’s carburetor. Her gripe? Ethanol. It gets gummy and nasty if allowed to sit too long. (Hint: use stabilizer.)

UC Merced plans to analyze emerging algae biofuels technology and provide feedback on the rather interesting concept of extracting fuel that doesn’t require much land, water or tending. And pond scum grows rapidly in any kind of water. The leftover material, after oil extraction, could be used for fertilizer.

“We will consider the efficient use of residual algae biomass as an energy rich waste stream and new harvesting techniques that could improve the sustainability of the overall process,” wrote J. Elliott Campbell and Gerardo Diaz of UC Merced and Joseph M. Norbeck of University of California, Riverside.

As I read over their proposal, I determined that the process of extracting and refining sounds far above my paygrade.

But as I was scanning through one of the many algae related websites, I found this do-it-yourself book: “Making Algae Biodiesel at Home” (Making-Biodiesel-Books.com, $99.99). It says it can, among other things, show the home brewer how to build an 80-gallon algae photobioreactor “for less than $215.”

Somehow it doesn’t sound as promising as my once prolific beer-brewing efforts in Anchorage before I was married. But who knows? The practice may catch on.

Answers To Algae Biodiesel A 7th Grader Could Understand

May 4th, 2011

Most people that are interested in algae biodiesel want to find out the answers to the following questions:
How algae biodiesel works
How is oil extracted from algae
How do scientist grow algae
Pros and cons of algae biodiesel
What can we use algae biodiesel for?

And they want the information in laymen’s terms. So we will answer a few of these questions now.

Algae as Biodiesel

Biodiesel refers to fuel produced from once living organisms. It is usually made into a liquid or gaseous state and most people use biodiesel for running vehicles or supplying electrical power via a diesel generator. Because of the plentiful resources of algae biomass in freshwater and other marine sources, extensive studies have been conducted for the use algae as a potential source of biodiesel. For the production of biodiesel, large scale cultivation of algae or alga culture is carried out in various countries throughout the world. The important fuels synthesized from algae oil are biogas, biodiesel, biomethanol, bioethanol, biobutanol and dry algal fuel (similar to coal) such as the group algae aviation fuel has created. Many countries have implemented highly sophisticated techniques for enhancing commercial-scale cultivation of algae and the united states is a front runner in this technology.

Advantages of Algae as Biodiesel

The fast growth of algae is a contributing factor for commercial algae cultivation. Some species of algae can double their mass within a day. In comparison to other biodiesel sources such as soybeans or jatropha, there are certain advantages of using algae such as:

• The amount of oil from algae is comparatively much higher (about 30 times) than land crops.
• Marine water as well as wastewater can be used for commercial cultivation of algae.
• Unlike fossil fuels, biodiesel produced from algae are biodegradable, thus reducing environmental pollution. In case there is spills of algal-based biodiesel in water sources, there are no significant adverse effects on the ecosystem.
• Algae also sequester harmful Carbon Dioxide (C02), Nitrogen (N) and emit Oxygen (O).

Studies show that about 60 percent of algal biomass can be converted into biodiesel. The microalgae species are economically beneficial for biodiesel production than other larger algae species. The amount of carbon emission after using algal biodiesel is lower than those of fossil fuels.

Since biodiesel production from algae is a relatively new technology, more research is required to develop standardized protocols for cultivation and large scale commercial algae biodiesel production. Commercial production on a large scale usually means 1million acres under cultivation. The most popular method of extracting algal lipids is using an industrial oil press. For more information on what can be accomplished with algae biofue.