Scientists say photosynthesis has a key role in future
energy supply
July 24, 2007
Leading experts in photosynthesis research will discuss tomorrow how
understanding the fundamental processes that plants use to turn light into
energy is a key way of securing cheap, emission-free energy in the future.
Speaking at a public discussion
in Glasgow, organised by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research
Council (BBSRC), the scientists will say that furthering our understanding
of
photosynthesis offers an innovative way of producing environmentally
friendly energy.
A renewable energy expert from
the University of Aberdeen, Professor Paul Mitchell, will also be on a
discussion panel to cover the social and environmental issues raised by this
potential new technology. Speaking ahead of the event Professor Mitchell
said that once photosynthesis was understood at a more detailed level, then
the crops needed for fuel should not take up vast areas of land.
"Biofuels have had a very bad press because it is suggested they will take
up vast areas of land and put pressure on food crops. We are now getting to
the second stage of biofuel, which are not using food crops but using the
residue - straw and forest waste.
"This takes it outside the food arena onto a stream of material which is not
being utilised. If you can then increase the level of productivity of the
plant, then you do not need so much land."
Professor Mitchell said he foresaw that in about five years the UK would
have bio-refineries, using photosynthesis technologies as they come on
stream, which would break down woody celluar material into food additives,
fibre, fuel, and chemicals.
"The creation of liquid transport fuels - that's the prize for the future,"
he said.
At the public event tomorrow evening, Professor Jim Barber of Imperial
College London will say that if we can understand exactly how plants capture
and store
solar energy, we could mimic the natural process to design solar panels
with better energy conversion rates and also develop a clean, efficient
means of producing hydrogen fuel.
Professor Christine Raines of the University of Essex will also discuss how
a better understanding of photosynthesis could lead to improvements in plant
biology and consequently better crops for biofuels.
"More solar energy strikes the
earth in one hour than all the global fossil fuels provide in a whole year,"
explains Professor Barber. "Early on in the history of life on earth, plants
developed mechanisms that took advantage of this immense energy resource and
captured it in the process that we now call photosynthesis.
"Plants use solar energy to split water into oxygen, released as 'waste',
and hydrogen which they use to help build sugars that feed the plant. We do
not fully understand how photosynthesis works, but recent key advances in
plant research mean that the time is right to consider this science as a
basis for future sustainable energy sourcing."
Sociologist Professor Steve Yearley from the University of Edinburgh and
Professor Mitchell from Aberdeen will also be on the discussion panel to
speak about the social and environmental issues raised by this potential new
technology. They will invite the audience to compare the potential benefits
and risks of photosynthesis derived energy with biofuels.
"If carefully managed, biofuels could provide a partial solution to
dwindling fossil-fuel supplies. However, the biofuels industry currently
faces criticism for pushing up food prices and damaging sensitive
ecosystems," explains Professor Steve Yearley.
"Photosynthesis on the other hand, does not carry these risks. However, the
development of any new technology can have far-reaching effects on society
and it is important that we and the wider public assess what those might be
at this early stage.
"This discussion provides an excellent opportunity for the public to have a
say about this new technology, and even help shape its development."
Source: University of Aberdeen
July 24, 2007
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