星期二, 8 7 月, 2025
Home PV News DoE: Gene could increase biomass yield

DoE: Gene could increase biomass yield

The researchers at the US Department of Energy’s (DoE) BioEnergy Science Center (BESC) says the clostridium thermocellum could be used to genetically modify biomass plants to produce more ethanol, avoiding the use of expensive enzymes to break down plants’ barriers guarding the sugars.


The microorgamisms could produce their own enzymes unlocking the sugars in biomass and fermenting them into ethanol in a single step.



Energy Secretary Steven Chu says: “This discovery is an important step in developing biomass crops that could increase yield of ethanol, lower production costs and help reduce our reliance on imported oil.”


BESC is led by Oak Ridge National Laboratory and is one of three DoE Bioenergy Research Centers established by the DoE's Office of Science in 2007. The team’s results were published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisment -

Most Popular

Al Kharsaah: A Pioneering Solar Power Plant in Qatar

Located 80 km west of Qatar's capital, Doha, the Al Kharsaah Solar PV Independent Power Producer (IPP) project is the country's first large-scale solar...

OMV Petrom Buys 50 Pct Stake in Gabare Solar Project

OMV Petrom S.A. has acquired a 50 percent stake in the Gabare solar project from Enery Element, a large-scale project in Byala Slatina, near...

RWE 7.5MW/11MWh battery energy storage start commercial operation in Netherlands

Power generation firm RWE has put a BESS in the Netherlands into commercial operation, its first that is capable of providing inertia to the...

Gurīn Energy selects Saft’s battery energy storage system for first Japanese project

Saft, a subsidiary of TotalEnergies, has been selected by leading Asian renewable energy developer Gurīn Energy to supply a battery energy storage system (BESS)...