Cyanobacteria to The Rescue

cyanobacteria2.jpg

Soon we may have the technology to turn carbon dioxide into ethanol using only bacteria and sunlight, thanks to University of Hawai'i scientist Pengcheng "Patrick" Fu.

Fu has engineered a strain of freshwater cyanobacteria to feed on carbon dioxide and emit ethanol as waste in the presence of sunlight, according to an article in the Honolulu Advertiser. Fu says that he is two to three years away from creating a full-scale ethanol plant using these tiny critters. Producing ethanol this way is faster and less costly than producing it using crops, he says. According to the article,

"The benefit over other techniques of producing ethanol is that this is simple and quick—taking days rather than the months required to grow crops that can be converted to ethanol, Fu said.

And he believes it can be done for significantly less than the cost of gasoline and also less than the cost of ethanol produced through conventional methods.

Also, this system is not a net producer of carbon dioxide: Carbon dioxide released into the environment when ethanol is burned has been withdrawn from the environment during ethanol production.

To get the carbon dioxide it needs, the system could even pull the gas out of the emissions of power plants or other carbon dioxide producers. That would prevent carbon dioxide release into the atmosphere, where it has been implicated as a major cause of global warming."

 

 

Comments

Pro-bacterial

This is the only economically viable alternative to fossil fuels I've heard of, made especially tantalizing as it feeds on the CO2 that imperils us. I truly hope technology can see this to its end before too long.

In any case, it will be impossible for the juggernaut of industrialization to continue on at the current pace for much longer -- downscaling and localization is our only future.

 

;)

st

 

"The future is frightening, but I feel fine." - The Dandy Warhols

The Poison and the Cure

that's great! Let the inertia of the poison help fuel the force of the cure.

How bout less than 3 years.

This is truly good news if it works. I'm hoping for a space race enthusiasm for this kind of aternative energy that pushes up our time frame's exponentially.

how does it stop?

so when we hit critical mass for ethanol - e.g., in the wild? - how does it stop? how can we possibly keep track of bacteria? can they be programmed to self-destruct and prevented from evolving? yikes.