U.S. Department Of
Energy Publishes Research Roadmap For Developing Cleaner Fuels
07/07/2006
Source: LOHAS Weekly
Newsletter
Author: DOE/U.S. Department
of Energy
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today released an
ambitious new research agenda for the development of cellulosic
ethanol as an alternative to gasoline. The 200-page scientific
"roadmap" cites recent advances in biotechnology that have made
cost-effective production of ethanol from cellulose, or inedible
plant fiber, an attainable goal. The report outlines a detailed
research plan for developing new technologies to transform
cellulosic ethanol--a renewable, cleaner-burning, and
carbon-neutral alternative to gasoline--into an economically
viable transportation fuel.
"Cellulosic ethanol has the potential to be a major source
for transportation fuel for America's energy future," Under
Secretary for Science Raymond L. Orbach said. "Low production
cost and high efficiency require transformational changes in
processing cellulose to ethanol. DOE's Genomics: GTL program is
poised to help do just that."
The roadmap responds directly to the goal recently announced
by Secretary of Energy Samuel W. Bodman of displacing 30 percent
of 2004 transportation fuel consumption with biofuels by 2030.
This goal was set in response to the President's Advanced Energy
Initiative.
The roadmap identifies the research required for overcoming
challenges to the large-scale production of cellulosic ethanol
to help meet this goal, including maximizing biomass feedstock
productivity, developing better processes by which to break down
cellulosic materials into sugars, and optimizing the
fermentation process to convert sugars to ethanol. Cellulosic
ethanol is derived from the fibrous, woody and generally
inedible portions of plant matter (biomass).
The focus of the research plan is to use advances in
biotechnology -- first developed in the Human Genome Project and
continued in the Genomics: GTL program in the Department's
Office of Science -- to jump-start a new fuel industry whose
products can be transported, stored and distributed with only
modest modifications to the existing infrastructure and can fuel
many of today's vehicles.
The new roadmap was developed during a December 2005 workshop
hosted jointly by the Office of Biological and Environmental
Research in the Office of Science and the Office of the Biomass
Program in the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy.
The success of the plan relies heavily on the continuation of
the partnership between the two offices established at that
workshop.
"Biofuels represent a tremendous opportunity to move our
nation toward a reduced dependence on imported oil," DOE
Assistant Secretary for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
Alexander Karsner said. "We fully intend to use all of our
resources and talent to support the President's goal of breaking
our addiction to oil, while also enhancing our energy security." |