From these beakers to your gas tank. A few years ago, the idea of cellulosic ethanol--making liquid fuel from wood, grasses, and agriculture residue--was a foreign concept to most. Now many consumers, industrialists, and policy makers consider making cellulosic ethanol on a commercial scale one of the most important technical challenges for society.
Mascoma is one company in the race, with what it hopes is a breakthrough in cellulosic ethanol through biotechnology.
General Motors invested in the company earlier this year and on Friday named its director of global energy systems R&D to Mascoma's board. On Friday, Mascoma also opened up its lab in Dartmouth, N.H., to describe its technology and report on its progress.
The feedstocks, from left to right, are corn stover (stalks and leaves), hardwood chips, switchgrass, and paper sludge (what's leftover from paper processing).
Photo by Martin LaMonica/CNET Networks
Caption by Martin LaMonica
To this world, were gasoline prices are unstable as our minds have. That now we had this kind of technological modernization that currently on process of study, which will up storm the front of top oil producers in the world. Will now then be robbed out of as this new innovation came out. Well, as we can see, this would give us a high note when it comes to its market. The idea will then be given that, countries like United States, lay its dollars to adopt this kind of technology that would simplify and make it economical for the consumers, as well as it would bank your left trust funds.
Joseph 'bluestella' Buluran
Monday, September 22, 2008
The making of Ethanol 'superbug'
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)

0 comments:
Post a Comment