Synthetic Biology For Natural Fuel
CoolBeans writes "Making ethanol is easy. Making enough ethanol to fill every gas tank in a developed country is tricky. The Department of Energy has promised $125 million to the Joint BioEnergy Institute, a team of six national labs and universities that will be run like a startup company. They intend to create new life forms that are optimized for alcohol production. The genes of crops that produce large amounts of cellulose will be tweaked to improve the yield per acre and to increase drought and pest resistance. Microbes that produce sugar from cellulose and ethanol from sugar will be built for speed and efficiency." The article mentions as an aside that earlier this year, "the energy giant BP gave $500 million to Berkeley, Lawrence Berkeley lab, and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign for similar alternative energy research. That gift will fund the Energy Biosciences Institute, which will operate separately from the JBEI." So UC Berkeley and LBL are both participating in two separate energy-biotech research programs.
you can just grow an imperial fuckton of algae, render them down for biofuel, and use that
Google has no answer for "1 imperial fuckton in pounds"
please check your units
>> life forms that are optimized for alcohol production
My brother in law is optimized for alcohol consumption. Perhaps they could just reverse his genetic code.
But corn is more politically connected. You could say it has the politicians' ear.
What?
>They intend to create new life forms that are optimized for alcohol production.
:-) Everything is falling into place.
That's perfect, seeing as how I'm optimized for alcohol consumption
Ian Ameline
Damn! And here I am built for consuming ethanol with speed and efficiency! And not even a microbe, either.
That is all.
Won't someone please think of the algae?
Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
... just can't quite pull it from the back of my mind. Just laugh and believe I did.
Biodiesel(vegetable oil) is not renewable?!?