Set
amid cornfields and cow pastures in eastern Holland is a shallow pool
rapidly turning green with algae that is harvested for animal feed,
skin treatments, biodegradable plastics and, with increasing interest,
biofuel.
In a warehouse 120 miles southwest, a bioreactor of clear plastic tubes
is producing algae in pressure-cooker fashion that its manufacturer
hopes will one day power jet aircraft.
Experts say it will be years, maybe a decade, before this simplest of
all plants can be efficiently processed for fuel. But algae could go a
long way toward easing the world’s energy needs and responding to
global warming.
Algae is the slimy stuff that clouds your home aquarium and gets
tangled in your feet in a lake or ocean. It can grow almost everywhere
there is water and sunlight, and under the right conditions it can
double its volume within hours. Scientists and industrialists agree
that the potential is huge.
“This is the ultimate fast-growing organism,” said Peter van den
Dorpel, chief operating officer, AlgaeLink, which makes bioreactors for
speeding reproduction. “Algae is lazy. It eats carbon dioxide and
produces oxygen.” It has no roots, no leaves, no shoots. “It grows so
fast because it has nothing else to do. It just swims in the water.”
Farming algae doesn’t require much space or good cropland, so it avoids
the fuel-for-food dilemma that has plagued first- and second-generation
biofuels, such as corn, rapeseed and palm oil.
It can grow in fresh water, polluted water, seawater or farm runoff. It
can purify sewage by feeding on the nitrogen and phosphates in human
waste. And it is rich in oil. The most common types farmed today have
an oil content of 30 per cent, and some have 70 per cent or more.
Algae also consumes nearly twice its weight in carbon dioxide, the most
common greenhouse gas that is discharged by vehicles, power plants and
many heavy industries.
Seeking to cut its carbon emissions, the European Union last year
mandated that 20 per cent of its energy must come from renewable
sources by 2020, up from 8.5 per cent now.
Scientists estimate that airlines are to blame for at least two per
cent of man-made carbon emissions, which could be sharply reduced by
algae-based aviation fuel.
One promising idea in climate change technology focuses on capturing
carbon from industry and storing it harmlessly in the ground. But algae
farms can put that carbon to good use.
“Capturing CO2 is the easiest element” in algae production, said Carel
Callenbach, director of Ingrepro Micro Ingredients, which operates the
largest algae farms in Europe, producing 80 tonnes a year.
Companies have been making biodiesel from algae for years, Callenbach
said, but there’s no money in the fuel. It is expensive to make, and so
far it cannot be produced in commercial quantities like ethanol or some
other biofuels.
But now, spurred by profit-busting increases in petroleum prices,
Boeing and some airlines are exploring whether algae can be refined
economically to a kerosene-grade fuel to run their fleets. KLM Royal
Dutch Airlines has contracted with AlgaeLink and other companies to
scout prospects.
“The advantage is that it can be used in the present structure. You
don’t have to totally rebuild airplanes,” said Nanke Kramer, a KLM
spokeswoman. She said that KLM had no results yet from its initial
experiments, and that it was too early to say whether aviation fuel
would be feasible.
Rene Wijffels, a professor of bioprocess engineering at Wageningen
University and Research Center in Wageningen, said he did a feasibility
study last year for an energy company on algae for fuel and was
surprised by the results.
“We found the costs were high but not as high as we thought.” At $3.20
a pound, he said, “it was too expensive for a biofuel, but not that far
away.”
Biofuel production is shackled by two factors: the limited availability
of nutrients and an unfavorable energy balance. “If you use the present
technology, you will put in more energy than you get out,” Wijffels
said.
Those problems can be solved, but it will take time and investment, he
said.
The race to make gas from goo is on around the world. Industries,
institutes and universities from Argentina and Brazil to New Zealand
are pouring millions of dollars into new technologies. In the US,
Arizona State University is trying to develop an aviation fuel,
Brunswick Community College in North Carolina is exploring ways to
extract oil from algae with ultrasonic waves, and dozens more
facilities are sorting out which of the hundreds of thousands of algae
types bloom fastest with the richest attainable oil.
The Netherlands has long been ahead in farming technology and has one
of the world’s highest crop yields. It has as many barnyard animals as
it does people — 16 million — and it is the world’s second-largest
exporter of agricultural products, after the US.
At Ingrepro’s algae farm in Borculo near the border with Germany, the
scum from the 21,500-square-foot pool is filtered and processed into
flaky green strips that crumble to the touch. The carbon exhaust from
the steam engine used to dry the algae is pumped back into the pool.
Algae oil goes into paints, resins and bioplastics. Fuel has the lowest
value of any product, Callenbach said. The key to profiting from algae
farming is in the cake left after extracting the oil. Ingrepro turns it
into dozens of products, including horse feed and weed killer for golf
courses. As a food additive for humans, it is a source of healthy
omega-3 fatty acids.
AlgaeLink, by contrast, sells bioreactors rather than algae products.
It nurtures the algae in a closed and controlled environment of clear
tubes, speeding the reproductive process by two to four times as the
water turns darker. But the process requires much more energy than open
pools.
Van den Dorpel says making jet fuel will be viable within a few years
if petroleum prices stay above $100 a barrel. Callenbach says algae
fuel may be profitable in about five years.
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