Green Bullet
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Science News |
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Keywords
EXPLORATIONS, ALGAE, BIOFUEL, CLEANTECH, GREG
MITCHELL, WILLIAM GERWICK, MARK HILDEBRAND |
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Description
Scientists take aim with tiny algae and
their giant promise as the biofuel solution of
the future.
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Newswise - Bell-bottoms… Designer jeans… Disco… Big hair…
Gas shortages.
Some icons of the 1970s are emblazoned in the memories of
those old enough to remember. A few styles, to the dismay of
many, have come back in vogue-oil-related crises among them.
Broad anxiety over fuel manifested again in 2008, illuminating
the dark side of the nation’s continued oil addiction.
Out of the ‘70s oil crisis came U.S. government funding for
research evaluating the prospects of new fuel sources derived
from terrestrial plants such as corn and soybeans, as well as
algae. But when oil prices plummeted in the late 1980s and
‘90s, interest in such biofuel programs waned and support dried
up. Now 21st century gas prices-which bolted upward to $4.50 a
gallon in California earlier this year-have sparked a
renaissance in the search for new biologically based energy
solutions.
Today, the most fervent attention in biofuel development has
shifted from soil to the sea, and specifically to marine algae.
Scientists at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San
Diego, along with researchers at UCSD’s Division of Biological
Sciences, are part of an emerging algal biofuel consortium that
includes academic collaborators, CleanTECH San Diego, regional
industry representatives, and public and private partners.
Scripps scientists see algae as a “green bullet,” science
and society’s best hope for a clean bioenergy source that will
help loosen broad dependence on fossil fuel, counteract climate
warming, and power the vehicles of the future.
As far back as he can recall, Scripps biologist Greg
Mitchell has been fascinated by plants and photosynthesis. His
interest lies in Earth’s basic energy patterns and how sunlight
drives fundamental biological functions and energizes the
world’s ecosystems.
He has built his scientific career on researching
photosynthesis, the process in which the planet’s green
organisms integrate sunlight, carbon dioxide, nutrients, and
water to produce oxygen and carbohydrates, creating
biomass.
Since he arrived at Scripps in 1987, Mitchell has kept close
tabs on advancements in studies of algae as a potential source
for biofuels, including landmark experiments by the U.S.
Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory, a
research and development facility. Scripps Professor Emeritus
Ralph Lewin had a hand in these efforts in the early 1980s when
he successfully grew marine algae for biofuel in experimental
ponds.
As funding for such projects evaporated in the 1990s,
Mitchell never took his eyes off the field.
Marine algae, as Mitchell is quick to point out to anyone
who asks, are the most efficient organisms on Earth for
absorbing light energy and converting it into a natural biomass
oil product, the biofuel equivalent of crude oil.
“Algae yields five to 10 times more bioenergy molecules per
area, per time, than any terrestrial plant,” said Mitchell, a
native of oil-rich Houston, Texas. “Nothing else comes
close.”
From a sustainability perspective, algae hold the upper hand
against other biofuel candidates, such as corn and soybeans.
Algae can be grown on barren desert land using salt water,
averting competition with agricultural cropland and the need
for large amounts of precious fresh water for irrigation.
Since they require carbon dioxide for growth, algae are
inherently carbon neutral, and they can suck up CO2 directly
from industrial pollution sources. Furthermore, algae can feed
off the nutrients in discarded wastewater. Adding yet another
layer to their allure, the rich protein left over from algae
harvests can be converted to animal feed.
“There is still a lot of work to do, but algal-derived
biofuels have the potential to become a major source of
transportation fuel,” says Bernard Raemy, executive vice
president of Carbon Capture Corporation, a company growing
algae in ponds for biofuel research in California’s Imperial
Valley desert.
Raemy acknowledges that a string of challenges lies ahead,
but with appropriate investment he believes a new algal biofuel
industry, based on collaborations with public and private
sectors, could be built within 10 years.
“Given their advantages, I believe marine algae are not only
the most promising option for bioenergy fuel, but the only
option that can scale up massively at the global level,” said
Mitchell. “Most scientists who understand these processes are
concluding that algae has the best chance. There is no silver
bullet when it comes to energy, but there is a green bullet, or
rather a green missile.”
The prospect of squeezing billions of gallons of biofuel oil
from marine algae is enticing, but to transform tiny
lime-green-colored plant-like organisms into a viable and
realistic fuel option, they must be tested and grown on a
massive scale. Intermediate-sized, and eventually immense,
algae production sites will be required to produce an
economically relevant quantity of algae-based oil for biodiesel
fuel in cars, trucks, and airplanes.
Such facilities are beginning to emerge, featuring farms
with vast oval-shaped ponds capable of churning out hundreds of
pounds of algal biomass per day. But these facilities are in
their formative stages and face an array of problems, from
selecting which species of algae are the best candidates for
biofuel output to addressing the threat of airborne
contaminants that invade algae ponds and disrupt growth
processes.
In 2005, as gas prices continued to rise and long-term oil
supplies grew increasingly suspect, interest in algal biofuel
research began to stir and society began to awaken on a large
scale to the issues of fossil fuel emissions and a warming
planet. Mitchell, who spent years promoting algal biofuel but
was largely dismissed, jumped in with zeal. He began organizing
seminars and meetings on the topic, in addition to coordinating
efforts with national and international algal biofuel
stakeholders. He played a pivotal role in establishing a new
algal biomass organization and helped plan summits on the topic
in San Francisco in 2007 and Seattle in 2008.
At the same time, Mitchell’s laboratory began evaluating
various species of algae for their biofuel potential. Today,
the lab is evaluating diverse algal growth scenarios and
resultant biological models, or test cases, which could be
applied in algal pond farms.
Scripps Oceanography, UC San Diego, and San Diego in general
are uniquely positioned to lead algal biofuel efforts,
according to Mitchell. Besides his laboratory, efforts have
emerged across Scripps, including initiatives by scientists
William Gerwick, Mark Hildebrand, Mike Landry, Brian Palenik,
and Maria Vernet.
“By virtue of the expertise found at Scripps and UC San
Diego, this region has a fundamental critical mass of
talent-with biological oceanographers, aquatic microbiologists,
UCSD biologists, and a world-class biotechnology
industry-that’s not available anywhere else,” Mitchell
said.
Up one floor from Mitchell’s office inside Scripps
Oceanography’s Sverdrup Hall is William Gerwick’s bustling
laboratory, part of Scripps’ Center for Marine Biotechnology
and Biomedicine.
A 1981 Scripps Ph.D. graduate in oceanography who returned
as a professor in 2005, Gerwick is one of several researchers
at Scripps searching for new biomedical products from ocean
resources to help treat human diseases such as cancer.
Two years ago Gerwick and then-UCSD undergraduate student
Cameron Coates, now a graduate student at Scripps, began
applying the tricks of the marine drug discovery trade to algal
biofuel development.
“Algae are my life,” said Gerwick, who believes algal
biofuel development will require expertise across several
disciplines. “There is an amazing transformation happening at
the moment with a groundswell of interest in new energy
sources.”
Gerwick’s team deciphers the structures of molecules and
probes the metabolic processes that produce unique and
sometimes medically promising compounds. Such expertise could
similarly help unlock the mysteries of algae’s biofuel
potential. The organism’s energy sources reside in its
production of lipid oils, or fat molecules, that store energy.
Algae produce and store globules of lipids in a fashion similar
to the way fat is generated and accumulated in human
bodies.
A relatively simple chemical process turns the solid lipid
globules to liquid. A few more steps convert the liquid to
biodiesel fuel for cars and trucks, and, in the near future,
jet fuel. Because algae reproduce quickly-they can double their
numbers in a single day-it’s believed they can more efficiently
produce many more gallons of oil per acre than any other
source.
Gerwick’s team is working on methods to rapidly identify
algae species to address situations in which algal biofuel
ponds of one species are contaminated with another.
They are also using an imaging technique called mass
spectrometry to explore the inner workings of organisms at the
molecular level. The tool is helping the scientists determine
the mechanisms of the genes that produce lipid molecules in the
hopes of boosting lipid oil production by adding certain
molecules to algal cultures.
“We have tested about 15 different ways for eliciting
(lipids),” said Gerwick. “We see some evidence in which we were
able to greatly expand their growth rate and production of
oils. It’s early but I’m excited.”
Like Gerwick, Scripps biologist Mark Hildebrand only
recently initiated algal biofuel studies in his laboratory at
Scripps’ Hubbs Hall.
Hidebrand is optimistic about algae’s contribution to future
bioenergy solutions, but he is realistic about the challenges
ahead. And he is especially sensitive to misinformation being
generated to the public about algae and biofuel. He
particularly winces when he comes across public descriptions of
biofuel algae as “common pond scum.”
For the record, many algae targeted for biofuel inhabit the
sea, rather than terrestrial ponds. And the algae Hildebrand
studies, tiny algae called diatoms, are far from scummy. He is
quick to point out, backed by striking nano-scale images of the
one-celled organisms, that they, in fact, can be quite
beautiful.
He and members of his lab are probing a catch-22 presented in
algal biofuel research. Algae mainly produce desired lipid oils
when they are starved for nutrients. Yet if they are limited in
nutrients, they don’t grow well. Give them a healthy diet of
nutrients and they grow just fine, but they produce
carbohydrates instead of lipids.
Thus Hildebrand is investigating how genes are turned on, or
“expressed,” in lipid production.
“If we can grow cells under conditions where they are not
making lipids and another batch where they are, we can compare
changes in gene expression patterns and that will help us
identify the genes that are induced when lipids are produced,”
said Hildebrand.
Hildebrand uses fluorescent dye to measure lipid content and
is developing genetic manipulation tools to induce or repress
the expression of these genes. He is also seeking to determine
how the cell is “partitioning” carbon between lipids or
carbohydrates, and then looking to metabolically engineer the
cell to use more carbon for lipid synthesis.
Such investigations and others by his colleagues are vital,
Hildebrand said, in order to lay a badly needed basic research
foundation for the emerging algal biofuel industry.
The monumental upside of algae, Hildebrand maintains, is
that lipids have shown great promise as a robust energy source.
Oils derived from certain algae species have already been
converted to fuel. Now it’s a matter of economics and the
engineering needed to ramp up to large-scale production, along
with a range of trials and tribulations that must be
addressed.
“We know almost nothing about how lipids are synthesized and
where the gene regulation is occurring. It’s like proposing to
develop agriculture without understanding how plants grow,”
said Hildebrand. “We’ll need to keep studying new areas and
coming up with new solutions because new problems will need to
be addressed. That’s the beauty of basic research.”
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