BioFuels Report – July 2007
David Dewher
I’ve done a little research into where the big oil companies are making their investments on the university level. I have it here in this printed one page synopsis, but I’ll give you some of what I’ve found out over the past month.
passes out the single spaced page organized into neat sections detailing different oil companies and their funding of research at different universities most of which are in the United States… Chevron and the Texas A&M Agriculture and Engineering BioEnergy Alliance announced a little over a month ago, May 29, 2007, that they have entered into a strategic research agreement to accelerate the production and conversion of crops for manufacturing ethanol and other biofuels from cellulose.
Chevron Technology Ventures is to support research initiatives over a four-year period through the Texas A&M BioEnergy Alliance, a formal partnership combining the collective strengths of The Texas A&M university system's two research agencies in agriculture and engineering: the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station (TAES) and the Texas Engineering Experiment Station (TEES).
Texas A&M is known for progressive biofuel research. For instance, Texas A&M BioEnergy Alliance partners in agriculture have developed high-yield cellulosic energy crops that can produce significantly more biomass per acre than most alternatives.
According to Dr. Elsa Murano, vice chancellor and dean of Texas A&M Agriculture and Life Sciences, they have been able to capitalize on decades of existing research into sorghum, sugarcane, forage and oil-based cropping systems, which should provide them with premier, dedicated feedstocks for biofuels and renewable energy that are sustainable within existing agricultural production systems.
As you can see on your synopsis under the heading of Chevron, I was able to learn that since the forming of the Chevron biofuels business unit in May 2006, the company has already made agreements with the following universities, $12M to Georgia Tech, $25M to the University of California at Davis, and an identified amount to the Colorado Center for Biorefining and Biofuels, which is a consortium of NREL, three Colorado universities, and other private companies. This is in addition to their internal R&D budgets for biofuel research which obviously isn’t public information.
seeing some questioning looks, says… Sorry, the NREL is the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. It is a laboratory of the US Department of Energy. They have their own website,
http://www.nrel.gov/biomass/Chevron also unveiled a new Biodiesel plant in Galveston, Texas last month. At 20 million gallons per year, with a capability to grow to 110 million, the plant is one of the first large scale soybean-based biodiesel production facilities in North America. Chevron owns 22 percent of the plant.
Chevron certainly isn’t alone in their investments. ExxonMobile has given Stanford $100M, and has even run advertisements touting its investment.
Turns out we’re not the only ones joining this bandwagon, and we probably aren’t as far ahead of the curve as we thought. That’s not bad news. It means that we can see a return on our investments sooner rather than later. It also means we need more information than we can get by reading webpages.
Of specifics for us, I think we should be talking with Larry Walker at Cornell. Cornell University is one of five Sun Grant Centers of Excellence -- regional hubs already at the forefront of researching the use of plant biomass in energy and chemical production -- and is in an excellent position to advance its leadership role in these areas.
Larry Walker, professor of biological and environmental engineering, is director of the Northeast Sun Grant Institute of Excellence, based at Cornell, which serves 14 states and the District of Columbia, from Maine to Maryland to Michigan.
I’ve arranged to meet with Professor Walker a week from Thursday, that’s July the 12th. I should have more information by our next board meeting.