donate now
Truly Sustainable Renewable Future
April 17, 2012 – 10:42 am | No Comment

Advanced Biofuels are high-energy liquid transportation fuels derived from: low nutrient input/high per acre yield crops; agricultural or forestry waste; or other sustainable biomass feedstocks including algae.  The key word is “sustainable.”
A technical definition that …

Read the full story »
Business News/Analysis

Federal Legislation

Political news and views from Capitol Hill.

More Coming Events

Conferences and Events List in Addition to Coming Events Carousel (above)

Original Writing, Opinions Advanced Biofuels USA

Sustainability

Home » Feedstock, Field Crops, International, R & D Focus

The “New Jatropha”: SG Biofuels Partners with Life Technologies to Accelerate New Cultivar Development by 60 Percent; Product Line This Year, Says CEO

Submitted by on January 12, 2010 – 9:05 amNo Comment

by Jim Lane (Biofuels Digest)  In California, jatropha pioneer SG Biofuels announced a strategic alliance with Life Technologies Corporation, a provider of innovative life science solutions, to advance the development of Jatropha as a sustainable biofuel.

The alliance brings together SG Biofuels’ Genetic Resource Center, featuring the largest and most diverse library of Jatropha genetic material in the world, with the advanced biotechnology and synthetic biology tools of Life Technologies.

The partnership will initially include sequencing the Jatropha curcas genome, allowing for the rapid introduction of new traits targeted toward increasing the yield of the oil-producing plant. Life Technologies will also become a strategic partner in SG Biofuels.

…SG is on track to release its first product this year, and to commence rapid commercialization of its library of jatropha DNA. The company is ultimately expected to release a set of genetically-modified jatropha cultivars and a set of non-GMO cultivars. Prospective customers: jatropha developers, strategic investors from the oil and chemical industries looking for long-term substitutes for fossil petroleum, and landholders in jatropha’s potential geographies in Latin America, Asia and Africa, where jatropha has grown wild for many years but has struggled to make the transition from locally produced genome to industrial bioprocessing platform.

“Jatropha the plant did not fail,” Haney contends, “jatropha the business model failed.”   READ MORE  and MORE

Related posts:

  1. Life Cycle Assessment of Biofuels from Jatropha curcas in West Africa: a Field Study
  2. GreenGold Ray Energies Aims to More Than Double Its Jatropha Crude Oil Output by 2011
  3. SG Biofuels Discovers Cold-Tolerant Jatropha; May Open US for More Cultivation
  4. Indian States Fast-Track Jatropha 2.0, a Special Biofuels Digest Report
  5. Egypt to Cultivate Jatropha Plant for Biofuels

Tags:

Comments are closed.