Blue-Green Algae Biofuel
Research Continues
January
15th, 2013 by Jake
Richardson
Researchers
at UC-Davis and one at Sandia
National Labs are exploring the use of cyanobacteria for making biofuels. At UC-Davis their
cyanobacteria produced 2.4 grams of 2.3 butanediol for each liter of material
used. This rate was the highest reported so far for such chemicals intended for
commercial development. 2,3 butanediol is an
alcohol which is suitable for use as a biofuel, like ethanol. The advantage of
producing it instead of ethanol is that it can be
converted into jet fuel, as well as used in an internal combustion engine.
(Burning this form of buatendiol generates less CO2 and therefore contributes
less to climate change.)

At Sandia, Anne Ruffing has genetically
engineered cyanobacteria to make free fatty acids. These chemicals
can be made into liquid biofuels. Her work is focused on cyanobacteria because
they are easier to genetically manipulate than eukaryotic algae. They also can
be altered to create a number of different fuels.
Additionally,
they produce the material used to make fuel outside the cell, so it can be
collected without damaging the cell. Whereas with eukaryotic algae the pre-fuel
material must be extracted from cells, which destroys them so they can’t
continue making it. As a result, a new generation of algae must be grown.
Cyanobacteria can be used over and over again. However, current yields are not
large enough to be commercially viable, which is why Ruffing is experimenting
with ways of increasing them.
“So I’m
engineering the cell, then I’m trying to learn from the cell how to work with
the cell to produce the fuel instead of trying to force it to produce
something it doesn’t want to produce,” she explained.
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