Lab makes renewable diesel fuel
by Marsha WALTON
Fossil fuels that keep our planet running — oil, natural gas, and
coal — were created from the decomposition of plants, plankton and other
organic material over millions of years.
A California lab has developed genetically altered bacteria that eat
sugars and excrete a form of diesel oil.
Scientists all over the globe today are working to create fuels with
the same properties, but without that pesky 100-million-year wait. And
“renewable petroleum” is now a reality, on a small scale, in some
laboratories.
The biotech company LS9, Inc., is using single-celled bacteria to
create an oil equivalent. These petroleum “production facilities” are so
small, you can only see them under a microscope.
“We started in my garage two years ago and we’re producing barrels
today so things are moving pretty quickly,” said biochemist Stephen del
Cardayre, LS9 vice president of research and development.
Genetic engineering
How does it work? A special type of genetically altered bacteria are
fed plant material — basically, any type of sugar. They digest it and
excrete the equivalent of diesel fuel.
Humans have used bacteria and yeast for centuries to do similar work,
creating beer, moonshine, and more recently, ethanol. But scientists’
recent strides in genetic engineering now allow them to control the end
product.
“So these are bacteria that have been engineered to produce oil,” del
Cardayre said. “They started off like regular lab bacteria that didn’t
produce oil, but we took genes from nature, we engineered them a bit
[and] put them into this organism so that we can convert sugar to oil.”
The company is currently focusing on diesel fuel, but the microbes also
can be “programmed” to make gasoline or jet fuel.
The bacteria used is a harmless form of E. coli. And the feedstock,
or food for the microbes, can be any type of agricultural product, from
sugar cane to waste such as wheat straw and wood chips. Choosing plants
with no food value sidesteps one of the biggest criticisms of another
*synthetic fuel, corn ethanol, because critics say corn should be used
as food, not fuel.
It takes a lot of microbe poop to fill a gas tank, however. Biofuel
experts tell CNN that processes like those used at LS9 are
scientifically viable, but there’s still a big leap before they can
address global energy needs.
“Scalability is really the critical issue,” said Robert McCormick,
principal engineer at the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Renewable
Energy Lab (NREL) in Colorado. “If you’ve got something that you can
make work in a test tube, that’s good, but you’ve got to be able to make
it work on a very large scale to have an impact on our petroleum
imports.”
But del Cardayre says his product has other benefits over traditional
fossil fuels.
“What we’ve done is make the same molecules from renewable sources,
so that it can go into the existing infrastructure, be made
domestically, and in an environmentally friendly way. That’s the goal,”
he said.
No cancer causing benzene
The LS9 product does not have the cancer-causing benzene that is in
other fossil fuels, and has far less sulfur, he said.
LS9 President Bob Walsh says that using existing petroleum pipelines
is critical. Ethanol, for example, requires its own distribution system
because it can corrode oil pipelines.
“You can’t put ethanol in a pipeline [and] even your car needs some
adjustments to it, whereas the product we’re making is going into the
existing system and that’s a big difference,” he said.
LS9 expects to be in large-scale commercial production in three or
four years. But del Cardayre is the first to admit that microscopic oil
fields are not a silver bullet for the world’s energy woes.
“I doubt we’re going to completely eliminate our dependence on oil,
but we’ll certainly be able to supplement the amount of oil we need in
the short term,” he said.
While energy researchers are spending tens of millions of dollars in
venture capital, NREL’s McCormick believes that “just making more” is
not enough.
“I think that the answer to reducing our petroleum-import problem and
reducing the carbon emissions from transportation is really threefold,”
he said. “It involves replacement fuels like biofuels, it involves using
much more efficient vehicles than we use today, and it involves driving
less.” Onething that McCormick and del Cardayre agree on is that energy
research is a great place to be these days if you are a scientist.
“The fun of the challenge from the science perspective is that you do
have farmers and biologists and entomologists, and biochemists and
chemical engineers, and process engineers and business people and
investors all working to solve this, and it ranges anywhere from a
political issue to a technical issue,” said del Cardayre.
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“Honestly I couldn’t think of a more exciting thing to work on as a
scientist or technologist right now,” said McCormick, a chemical
engineer.
“Part of the excitement comes from the fact that this is such a
complex problem it can’t be solved by a farmer or an ag expert, and it
can’t be solved by a chemical engineer or a chemist. “We all have to
pool our various talents and training and try to come up with a whole
new system of producing energy,” he said. “And the current energy price
environment has made literally everyone interested in replacements for
petroleum.”
Source: CNN
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