• Home
  • About Me
  • Experience

EarthSpin

Science Concepts for the Masses

Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Adding Value to Biofuel Waste

06/09/2014 by Stacy W. Kish

Screen shot 2014-06-09 at 3.47.19 PMWhat do you get when you cross E. coli with biofuel waste products?  A new process that may revolutionize the economic development of the growing biofuel industry.

Biofuels represent the best sustainable, secure, and renewable alternative to fossil fuels. Unfortunately, biofuel production is beset by the same problem as traditional petroleum refining – excess waste. In traditional refining, only about 60 percent of the crude oil becomes gasoline, the rest is used to make other products. Similarly, as biofuel production increases, the market is being flooded with its waste byproducts, specifically glycerin, also known as glycerol.

Glycerin is cheap and abundant in the current marketplace. Although there are many potential uses for the substance, it is difficult to break it down into products with greater economic value.

With funding from USDA’s Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service (CSREES), Ramon Gonzalez at Rice University developed a new fermentation process that usesE. coli to convert glycerin into high-value chemicals, like succinate.

Succinate and its derivatives have an annual domestic market of more than $1.3 billion. Succinate is used in a variety of products including flavoring agent in food and beverages, an intermediate compound for dyes and perfumes, and medical applications. Another product, formate, is principally used as a preservative and antibacterial agent in livestock feed.

Most of the waste glycerin comes from the production of biodiesel, one of the two types of biofuels (the other being ethanol). Biodiesel is converted from a variety of oils, including rapeseed and soybean oils, mustard, flax, sunflower, and palm oil, waste vegetable oil, animal fat oil, and algae.

About one pound of glycerin is produced for every 10 pounds of biodiesel. According to the National Biodiesel Board, U.S. companies produced about 450 million gallons of biodiesel in 2007. With 60 new plants capable of producing 1.2 billion gallons of biofuel slated for operation by 2010, an answer to the glycerin question cannot come soon enough.

“Biodiesel producers used to sell their leftover glycerin, but the rapid increase in biodiesel production has left them paying to get rid of it,” Gonzalez said. “The new metabolic pathways we have uncovered pave the way for the development of new technologies to convert this waste product into high-value chemicals.”

Technologies based on Gonzalez’s work have been licensed to Glycos Biotechnologies Inc., a Houston-based startup company that plans to open its first demonstration facility within the next 12 months.

The research team is now working to further understand the biochemical pathways used by the organism to break down the glycerol so new organisms can be engineered for the production of fuels and other chemicals from glycerol.

“Our goal goes beyond using this discovery for a single process,” Gonzalez said. “We want to use the technology as a platform for the ‘green’ production of a whole range of high-value products.”

CSREES funded this research project through the National Research Initiative Biobased Products and Bioenergy Production Research program. Through federal funding and leadership for research, education and extension programs, CSREES focuses on investing in science and solving critical issues that affect people’s daily lives and the nation’s future. For more information, visit www.csrees.usda.gov.

Originally Posted October 20, 2008

http://www.nifa.usda.gov/newsroom/impact/2008/nri/10201_biofuels.html

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
Like Loading...

Related

Posted in Climate, Plants | Tagged biofuel, E. coli, renewable energy |

  • Archives

    • October 2025 (1)
    • February 2025 (1)
    • August 2024 (1)
    • April 2024 (2)
    • October 2023 (1)
    • August 2023 (2)
    • April 2023 (2)
    • March 2023 (1)
    • February 2023 (1)
    • November 2022 (1)
    • October 2022 (2)
    • September 2022 (1)
    • August 2022 (4)
    • June 2022 (1)
    • March 2022 (1)
    • January 2022 (1)
    • December 2021 (1)
    • October 2021 (2)
    • September 2021 (1)
    • August 2021 (1)
    • June 2021 (2)
    • May 2021 (2)
    • April 2021 (2)
    • March 2021 (1)
    • February 2021 (1)
    • December 2020 (2)
    • April 2020 (2)
    • December 2019 (1)
    • November 2019 (2)
    • October 2019 (1)
    • February 2019 (2)
    • December 2018 (1)
    • September 2018 (1)
    • August 2018 (2)
    • June 2018 (1)
    • May 2018 (2)
    • August 2017 (1)
    • July 2017 (1)
    • November 2014 (2)
    • June 2014 (29)
    • March 2010 (2)
    • February 2010 (1)
    • December 2009 (1)
    • October 2009 (1)
    • August 2009 (1)
  • Categories

    • Blinding People with Science (18)
    • Climate (21)
    • Food (19)
    • Genetics (13)
    • Geology (7)
    • Medicine (19)
    • Nutrition and Health (21)
    • Physics (7)
    • Plants (14)
    • Psychology (3)
    • Uncategorized (1)
  • Pages

    • About Me
    • Experience

Blog at WordPress.com.

WPThemes.


  • Reblog
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • EarthSpin
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • EarthSpin
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Copy shortlink
    • Report this content
    • View post in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d