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POET rolls out cellulosic ethanol plant [ Home ][ Up ]
Author: James Wachai
Article:
Cellulosic ethanol is on the move. Today, POET, the top U.S.
ethanol producer, inaugurated a pilot cellulosic ethanol
plant in South Dakota. The plant’s projected to churn out 22,000
gallons of cellulosic ethanol per year. POET has an amazing,
professionally done documentary that takes you, step-by-step,
along the journey cellulosic ethanol has followed. It’s
available here.
In the press release it issued today to announce the start of
the plant’s operations, POET said in 2011, it will roll out a
$200 million commercial-scale cellulosic plant in Iowa.
Today’s announcement, of course, is a major development and a
big leap to energy independence. More good news is that
cellulosic ethanol utilizes non-food crops; so there’ll not be
politicking that food security will be compromised. A lot of
politics continues to dog food-crops-based ethanol. There are
those who claim that diverting food crops, such as corn, to
ethanol production is to blame for the current food shortages.
There are others who dismiss such an argument as baseless and
not supported by facts. Whatever the merits or demerits of using
food-crops to make ethanol, POET is demonstrating that the
journey to reliable and clean energy is unstoppable.
There’s every reason to cheer up POET, and of course the Federal
government, which provided seed money for research. Renewable
sources of energy, such as cellulosic ethanol, hold the key to
energy independence. President-Elect Baraka Obama, for instance,
has said as much on the issue. He has pro
mised massive investments into the next generation of
biofuels. POET and other companies in the biofuels business have
no excuse of not doubling efforts to produce biofuels. Political
will is already there; it’s up to them to exploit it.
About the author:
James Wachai is the author of GMO Africa, a blog discussing the
benefits of biofuels and biotechnology.