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 » Algae/Other Aquatic Organisms, Feedstock, R & D Focus, States

USU Research: Algae May Fix Logan’s Sewage Mess

Submitted by on August 28, 2009 – 2:21 pmNo Comment

by Brian Maffly (Salt Lake Tribune)  For the past several years, detergents and agricultural runoff have turned Logan’s five wastewater lagoons into a phosphate-filled soup, posing a menace to sensitive wildlife habitat downstream and racking up costly clean-up bills.

But nature could be coming to the rescue in the form of green slime.   A collaborative project between the city and the Utah State University Research Foundation will use the ponds to grow algae, which might not only fix the phosphate problem for little money but produce energy. The city has won a $500,000 state grant to begin converting the 460-acre lagoon complex into an algae farm as a small-scale pilot project.  READ MORE

Related posts:

  1. Algae Biofuels Project in New Mexico Advances
  2. Missouri Cooperatives Partner with Universities on Carbon Capture Research
  3. Greener Dawn Research Releases 90-Page Algae Biofuels Report
  4. St. Louis Researchers Launch Algae Research
  5. A New Use for Algae: Natural Gas

Tags: ,

Comments are closed.