Energy Biosciences Institute Funds First 49 Projects
May 06 2008 - 12:00PM
PR Newswire (US)
BERKELEY, Calif., May 6 /PRNewswire/ -- The Energy Biosciences
Institute, the world's largest public/private consortium dedicated
to the application of biosciences to the energy sector, has
announced an initial set of 49 research projects for funding during
the first year of EBI's 10-year program. (Logo:
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20000724/NYM120LOGO) Projects
are being supported at all three of the public partner institutions
-- the University of California, Berkeley; the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; and Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory. The international energy company BP is funding the
decade of work with $500 million, about $20 million of which is
supporting the first package of projects. Research is being pursued
in four categories related to exploring the opportunities for
production of cellulosic biofuels -- feedstock development, biomass
depolymerization, biofuels production, and the socio-economic
impacts of cellulosic biofuels development. A second initiative,
concerned with fossil fuel bioprocessing, is expected to receive
funding later this year. By applying bioscience and biotechnology
techniques to the energy industry, EBI will seek to develop the
methods and technologies that will enable the transition from a
fossil fuel-based energy economy to a balanced portfolio relying
more upon renewables and cellulosic or algal biofuels with greatly
reduced environmental impacts. An initial thrust of EBI research
will be the development of environmentally benign transportation
fuels from non-food biomass (cellulosic biofuels). This involves
identifying the most suitable species of plants for use as energy
crops, and improving methods of breeding, propagation, harvesting,
storage and processing of biomass to next-generation fuels. A
central objective is to ensure that this is done in a sustainable
way without negative impacts on food production or the environment.
In this respect, a notable feature of the EBI research portfolio is
an emphasis on investigation of the environmental and socioeconomic
aspects of cellulosic biofuels. Chris Somerville, a plant
biochemist at UC Berkeley and EBI's Director, said the
establishment of the EBI represents a significant opportunity to
explore solutions to the world's most intractable and critical
technology challenge. "We've embarked on a commitment to develop
new solutions to global energy needs through the deployment of new
technologies based on advances in knowledge about biological
processes," he said. "The enormous progress in understanding basic
biological processes achieved during the past several decades have
not previously been brought to bear in the energy sector, so we
believe that there may be fundamentally new opportunities to reduce
the environmental impacts of energy production and use. "In
addition," he continued, "we believe that the multi-disciplinary
approach in EBI, bringing together biology, chemistry, engineering
and economics in the same building, will lead to completely new
perspectives on how to approach these problems." Somerville is
assisted by Steve Long, the Institute's Deputy Director who
oversees work at the University of Illinois, including a 340-acre
Energy Farm, and by Paul Willems, the Associate Director who
oversees the BP employees within the Institute. From an initial
list of more than 250 pre-proposals from researchers at the three
institutions, EBI management employed a competitive peer review
system to narrow the field to 49 high-priority research efforts
that have received funding. Program research is conducted mostly
within the EBI, so that the post-doctoral and graduate student
researchers from different disciplines will work side-by-side. This
will ensure synergy across fields and will provide a training
environment and a broad appreciation of the scientific,
technological, environmental, economic and policy issues that must
all be addressed to achieve the Institute's goal of environmentally
sustainable bioenergy. The initial research is being conducted in:
FEEDSTOCK DEVELOPMENT: Eight projects and programs are seeking to
identify and breed plant species that can maximize cellulosic
biomass production on a global scale and to learn how to grow and
harvest them sustainably. A primary goal is to discover plants that
can produce more biomass, using minimal land, water and energy.
BIOMASS DEPOLYMERIZATION: Fashioning fuel from plants requires the
use of individual sugar molecules that make up most of a plant's
body. Biofuel production requires isolating these molecules by
severing the chemical bond that holds them together, among the most
critical and difficult steps in the process. Today's practices are
costly and inefficient. Nineteen projects are determined to find a
less costly but effective depolymerization method, a requirement
for ensuring that biofuels can be reasonably priced. BIOFUELS
PRODUCTION: More productive ways of converting
lignocellulose-derived sugars to fuels is the subject of five
projects. Methods used for biofuels today are similar to the
fermentation practices used to make beer and wine, but they are not
adequate for the large-scale production of cellulosic biofuels. EBI
researchers seek ways to boost the concentration of fuel produced
by the biofuel fermenting process. This could lead to a significant
reduction in the cost of making biofuels. ENVIRONMENTAL, SOCIAL AND
ECONOMIC DIMENSIONS: The EBI will seek to understand the potential
environmental, economic and societal impacts of meeting a growing
portion of the world's energy needs through biofuels. This includes
answering questions surrounding the amount of land globally
available for biofuel production, the consequences of using land to
grow biofuel crops, the effect of a biofuel industry on food crops,
and the effects of production on the environment. The answers may
assist policymakers as they attempt to regulate this transitioning
industry. Seventeen projects have been funded to begin to find
those answers. A complete list of projects, including brief
descriptions and principal investigators, can be found on the EBI
web site at:
http://www.energybiosciencesinstitute.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=vi
ew&id=184&Itemid=7 (Due to the length of the link, please
copy and paste into your browser.)
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20000724/NYM120LOGO
http://photoarchive.ap.org/ DATASOURCE: EBI Institute CONTACT:
Valerie Corr, BP, +1-630-821-3206, ; or Robert Sanders,
+1-510-643-6998, , or Ron Kolb, +1-510-643-6255, , both of
University of California, Berkeley; or Melissa M. Edwards,
University of Illinois, +1-217-333-0873, ; or Lynn Yarris, Lawrence
Berkeley National Laboratory, +1-510-486-5375, Web site:
http://www.bp.com/ http://www.berkeley.edu/ http://www.uiuc.edu/
http://www.lbl.gov/
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