Biofuel Review - international biofuel news updated daily - Biofuels research alliance announced by ConocoPhillips
Biofuels research alliance announced by ConocoPhillips Print E-mail
Written by Giles Clark, London   
Tuesday, 01 April 2008

ConocoPhillips (NYSE:COP) and the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), announced (31st March) a strategic research alliance with Iowa State University (ISU) to identify promising cellulosic biomass conversion technologies. The collaboration, says the team, will bring three independently established programs together to help identify the most efficient and cost-effective methods for making liquid transportation fuels from plants.

The collaboration between ConocoPhillips, NREL and ISU will develop conversion technologies that will use cellulosic materials such as corn stalks, stems, leaves, other non-food agricultural residues, hardy grasses and fast-growing trees as feedstocks for future transportation fuels. The processes that will be examined in this collaboration include gasification, pyrolysis and fermentation.

“ConocoPhillips is committed to the development of technologies that will convert sustainable non-food feedstocks into transportation fuels that will be critical to the nation’s energy security,” said Stephen Brand, ConocoPhillips senior vice president, Technology. “We are hopeful that this collaboration will expand the knowledge base and speed the development of these environmental technologies.”

“Research cooperation among government, industry and academia is needed to efficiently address the many questions about how to find the best ways to convert biomass to liquid transportation fuels,” said Tom Foust, technology manager for NREL's National Bioenergy Center.

“The thermochemical and biochemical conversion of cellulosic biomass into liquid fuels has great promise to be a clean and renewable source of energy that doesn't compete with our food supply,” said Robert C. Brown, Iowa Farm Bureau director of the Bioeconomy Institute at Iowa State. “This research collaboration brings together the complementary strengths of a major energy company, a national energy laboratory and a land-grant university to advance these technologies and move them closer to the marketplace.”




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