NREL Industry Partners Move Cellulosic Ethanol Technology Forward
May 27, 2008 // Published as a news service by IHS
Collaborative scientific research between the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) and DuPont will be used to develop and commercialize technology to produce cellulosic ethanol from non-food sources, said NREL.
DuPont and its partner Genencor, a division of Danisco A/S (Authorized Shares), have announced that they will invest $140 million initially to integrate the pretreatment process and fermenting organism developed with NREL and enzyme technologies developed by Genencor in a joint venture to convert corn stover and sugar cane bagasse to ethanol.
DuPont and Genencor expect to have a pilot plant demonstrating their technology package in operation by 2009, and a commercial-scale facility operational in the next three years. The joint venture expects to license its technology package to ethanol producers.
Since 2000, the DOE has supported R&D with DuPont and Genencor through grants totaling more than $49 million for the development of pretreatment processes, advanced ethanol conversion organisms and improved enzymes.
Through Cooperative Research and Development Agreements (CRADAs), NREL has helped the companies advance the science and engineering in the technology package they will license or use to produce cellulosic ethanol. Those advancements include:
- The pretreatment process developed under the NREL CRADA with DuPont reduces capital costs. Pretreatment makes the carbohydrate portion of the corn stover more amenable to enzymatic digestion to make all biomass sugars available for fermentation to ethanol.
- A proprietary organism - based on breakthrough NREL discoveries and improvements to the biocatalyst Zymomonas mobilis - that can ferment sugars to a high concentration of cellulosic ethanol.
- In a separate CRADA, NREL worked with Genencor to reduce the cost of enzymes that break down cellulosic material so it can be more easily converted to ethanol. Less expensive Genencor enzymes are key to the joint venture.
"This is precisely the outcome we hope for from our work with industry," NREL Director Dan Arvizu said. "Developing the scientific underpinnings of technology that lead to clean, sustainable ways of powering our cars, homes and businesses is vital to the future of the nation and the world."
Source: U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL).