Posted on 10/08/2007 11:17:35 AM PDT by According2RecentPollsAirIsGood
ANTHONY A year ago, this dusty patch of land near the New Mexico border contained little more than dirt and the odd sprig of alfalfa. Today, it is home to a $3 million laboratory that is crackling with activity.
The hi-tech lab was built for a peculiar but possibly revolutionary purpose: to explore ways algae can be used to reduce the world's dependence on oil.
An arid stretch of West Texas might seem like a strange place to study the tiny water-borne plants, but the work is more than just a big idea.
The two companies behind it, El Paso's Valcent Products and Canadian alternative energy firm Global Green Solutions, have developed a system they claim will allow for cheap mass production of algae in just about any corner of the world.
Such a breakthrough, though still untested on a wide scale, could greatly accelerate the expansion of renewable fuels like biodiesel and ethanol because the oil extracted from algae can be used to make those fuels, said the companies who own the lab through a joint venture called Vertigro.
Today, those fuels are seen as having limited potential to curb oil consumption because they rely on oils from food crops like corn and soybeans, whose prices are rising. But algae could change the equation.
"This market is enormous," said Global Green CEO Doug Frater. "And it's waiting for us."
(Excerpt) Read more at chron.com ...
HEY! HEY! HEY!
Algae won’t grow in diesel fuel if it is kept dehydrated; it is easily demonstrated using a water glass, a small amount of DF2 and a small amount of water.
When the water is added to the fuel, it simply sinks to the bottom raising the fuel as it floats on the water.
You can easily see the line where they meet and it is at this interface that the algae is allowed to grow.
Once the fuel is being pumped, trace amounts of contamined water and algae are pumped into the filters where they are trapped until they eventually overwhelm the filter and the engine being fed dies of starvation.
Eliminate the water, prevent its entry or dry the fuel with solvents and the problem can be managed.
The Bureau of Land Management administers 264 million acres of public lands,
located primarily in the 12 Western States.
The US uses about 20 million barrels of oil a day. There are 42 gallons in a barrel. So that is 840 million gallons per day. That comes out to 306.6 billion gallons per year.
Since one acre yields 100,000 gallons per year of algae oil (which we will presume is equivalent in refined product output to crude oil...which I highly doubt), then we only need 3 million acres to reduce our crude demand to zero.
Since one acre = 0.0015625 square mile, 3,066,00 acres = 4,790.625 square miles. That’s a single square about 69.2 miles per side. And the US is something like 6 million square miles.
So on the face of it, it is not completely ridiculous. But I’m very suspicious of the notion that the energy content of algae oil is equal to that of crude. I also suspect that cultivating algae bags would be quite energy (and water and carbon dioxide and labor) intensive.
Interesting concept though.
jas3
You mean on Al Gore's watch this very promising research was cut back? For shame!
renewable energy
ping
Didn’t know that, thanks for the tip!
Please Freep Mail me if you'd like on/off
And consider harvesting some other, larger creature that uses algea for food and is genetically modified for enhanced oil content, as it will be cheaper to contain in the "farm." Some efficienies would be lost of course so probably not a good idea to go much higher in the food chain.
bttt
Petroleum comes from saltwater algae, coal from freshwater plants. Algae can grow in the open ocean, does not need land, freshwater, or fertilizer. Algae can be optimized to make diesel, alcohol, or emit hydrogen gas. In addition algae can be used absorb pollution.
The leftists are starting to get worried about this, referring to algae as pond scum and algae researchers as low on the food chain. Unlike ethanol this threatens their dreams of an imposed communist lifestyle.
No brag, just fact.
And/Or add biocide that kills the algae.
I will gladly do my part. They can harvest out of the pond in my front yard and my kids fish tank.
Someone could get rich converting backyard swimming pools into personal biodiesel factories.
Better to prevent the entrainment of water for long term effectiveness; barring that, treat and pump out any tank bottoms.
National Chemsearch used to sell a product that would allow for rapid separation after agitation, such as what happens when fresh fuel is dropped in a partial tank, it also contained a basic biocide.
Don’t remember the name or whether they still sell it.
I once was in charge of 19 gensets for a VA hospital with a combined 7.5MW capacity and ordered and controlled all the fuel being used.
We eventually replaced the in-ground tanks and upgraded the system.
We need Harry Mudd and his tribles. Squish them for the oil and barbecue them over mesquite and wash them down with Shiner Bock Winter Ale! In one fell swoop we have solved the oil problem and world hunger, but we will probably be short on Shiner Beer.
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