08 August 2008

Algae Has Never Believed in Peak Oil

Algae doesn't think in terms of limits. A single-celled algae, gazing out across the Pacific Ocean, has only one thought: "That looks like a good place to spread out and grow!" In fact, algae thinks exactly the same thing about a wastewater pond, a brackish estuary, or a large freshwater lake. Algae was meant to grow fast, needing only sunlight, CO2, and a few nutrients from water--wastewater will do. Algae has never believed in peak anything.
• Algae can thrive in fresh, brackish, or seawater — and very little of that is required.

• There is no need for any soil, much less good soil, as algae grow hydroponically.

• With more than 20,000 known varieties of algae, species can be chosen for high lipid content (e.g., for diesel fuel) or high sugar content for distillation purposes.

• In desert climes it can be harvested on a day-by-day basis because it grows so quickly.

All it takes is sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide to provide the energy for arguably the most complex process we see in nature: photosynthesis. _Source
What about cellulosic biofuels? Is there a conflict between cellulosic fuels and algae biofuels?
.....the market for transportation fuels is big enough for cellulose and algae; they compete with petroleum, not with each other......extraction of fuel from algae depended on flat land, abundant water, sun and injections of CO2. _EcoWorld
At this time, algae biodiesel costs between $15 and $20 a gallon to produce. Dozens of research efforts are aimed at bringing the cost of production for algal biodiesel into the competitive range. The University of Virginia, University of Arkansas, Cal Poly, and other research institutions are rushing to make breakthroughs in the economic production of algal fuels. One particularly innovative approach to algal fuels is the use of algae as part of a three-pronged bio-energy-food eco-industry, combining a fish farm, algae production, and feed production.
Instead of having a waste stream [from the fish farm] that contaminates the environment or needs costly disposal, combining the Aqua-Sphere with algae production creates a second income stream by producing feedstock for biodiesel. Papadoyianis also sees benefits to the biodiesel industry as aquaculturists move into algae production. “The way I see it, buying a piece of land and constructing an algae facility and having a whole staff just to produce the algae will make your cost of production go way up,” he says. “We are looking at this as a secondary crop that doesn’t take a huge secondary investment. For a medium-sized operation you can basically use the same staff as you have for the fish operation.

The process could be diversified even further as the company develops a third product, an insect-based fish food it calls Ento-Protein. The product would replace food currently made from fish meal, which has more than doubled in price since 2006, and is made from insects grown on agricultural waste and industrial coproducts, including distillers dried grains from ethanol plants. Papadoyianis foresees using the algae cake remaining after the oil is extracted as another feedstock for the Ento-Protein operation. _Biodiesel
A two day conference dealing with algae as "the new oil" is coming up October 23-24 at the Woodlands, in Texas. More from the National Algae Association

More energy and bioenergy news at Al Fin Energy blog.

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4 Comments:

Blogger Snake Oil Baron said...

Combining aquaculture, agriculture and algae farms in close proximity could indeed have some interesting effects in reducing waste streams, minimizing transportation costs for each industry's feed-stocks and making for more efficient packaging and processing facilities. Large indoor growing environments which have been proposed for other purposes might be used for some of the industries to prevent water vapor loss in arid climates and vapor condensers might be able to provide water in the more water intensive areas of a closed complex if they were linked by ventilation channels to the regions like the aquaculture which would be giving off a lot of water vapor.

If you just look at the rind of land along the North African nations and just focus on the area where the elevation is comparable to that which a rural homeowner in North America would be willing to dig for well water it seems like a very small space but when you zoom in and realize that the land is dotted with irrigation agriculture (the inefficient ring spraying kind) and small scale orchards, you can see that the potential for something on a larger scale with far more productivity is there. Aquaculture would generate a much higher value product than plant crops and if plans for desert solar projects go ahead the cheaper energy could be advantageous to all of those industries especially the refineries and processing plants.

If you assume that industries using highly efficient water usage would be willing to pump water to a higher elevation than your average North American homeowner - especially if it meant producing expensive species of fish and valuable chemicals and fuels, the amount of usable land stops looking like a thin rind and begins to look like a thick peel. It might still be dwarfed by the Sahara itself but it is nothing to sneeze at.

Friday, 08 August, 2008  
Blogger al fin said...

That type of project requires financing, and once built it requires continual maintenance. The problem with large parts of the third world is that the former does not usually pay back, and the latter is virtually non-exsistent.

Saturday, 09 August, 2008  
Blogger Don Cox said...

I think you are right that algae are a promising source of fuel, but only in high tech countries. ________ The word "algae" is plural, so "A single-celled algae" should be either "A single-celled alga" or "A single algal cell".

Monday, 11 August, 2008  
Blogger al fin said...

Thanks for the correction, Don. Next time, I'll leave out the article "A", and change "has" to "have", allowing "algae" to specify a plurality. Such phrasing would also imply a group algal mind. ;-)

I agree that in the near-term, algae biofuels will be technologically challenging. Eventually, I see the process becoming less technically demanding, as different approaches compete in the marketplace.

Monday, 11 August, 2008  

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