(Posting this again, for some reason Mail Archive didn't get it. - K)

John Benemann was co-author of the book that sparked all the interest 
in biodiesel from algae: "A Look Back at the U.S. Department of 
Energy's Aquatic Species Program-Biodiesel from Algae", by John 
Sheehan, Terri Dunahay, John Benemann, Paul Roessler, July 1998, 
National Renewable Energy Laboratory, U.S. Department of Energy. 328 
p, 3.5Mb:
http://www.nrel.gov/docs/legosti/fy98/24190.pdf

See also:

Krassen Dimitrov
http://www.nanostring.net/Algae/CaseStudy.pdf

-----

http://www.theoildrum.com/node/2541
The Oil Drum | The Man Who Wrote the Book on Algal Biodiesel
May 17, 2007

by John Benemann

I saw with some interest the guest post on "Has the Algae Cavalry 
Arrived" posted by Heading Out and written by fireangel about the 
claims being made by GreenFuel Technologies (GFT) Corporation. I have 
some standing in this matter, both as Manager of the International 
Network on Biofixation of Carbon Dioxide and Greenhouse Gas Abatement 
with Microalgae (operated by the Int. Energy Agency, Greenhouse Gas 
R&D Programme) and also as a researcher in this field for over 30 
year. My comments here are my own, of course, and don't necessarily 
reflect those of the GhG R&D Programme or others involved in the 
Biofixation Network. In brief:

1. The post by fireangel, based on the analysis by Dr. Krassen 
Dimitrov's, is generally correct, although some details regarding 
algae physiology and mass culture are arguable. However, those would 
not change the general conclusions of this posting. Well done!

2. The claims for biodiesel production rates being made by GFT, among 
many others in this field, exceed anything based on biological or 
physical theory, as also pointed out in this posting. They are truly 
bizarre.

3. The use of closed photobioreactors (>$100+/m2) for such 
applications is totally absurd.

4. I am on the record as stating that this is "It's bizarre; it's 
totally absurd." (see below article from the American Scientist last 
year, which quotes me to that effect. This was a correct quote, and 
in context).

5. Open ponds, at <$10/m2 can be as productive as closed 
photobioreactors. The arguments that closed systems are better than 
open ponds are incorrect - they both have their particular 
applications and benefits/drawbacks. It all depends on the situation 
and applications. The main difference is that open ponds are much 
cheaper.

6. Open ponds may plausibly be considered for algae biofuels 
production, but this assumes that indeed the required R&D is 
successful, a very BIG IF (but that is true of all R&D). But it is 
worthwhile trying, as we must try all plausible options. But we must 
also reject those that, as pointed out in this posting, violate first 
principles and have other major up-front failings.

7. I was the Principal Investigator and main author of the U.S. DOE 
Aquatic Species Program (ASP) Close-Out Report [RR: You can download 
this 328 page PDF, which I have actually read, here], and thus am 
rather familiar with it. The report was published by NREL with their 
own introduction that paints a perhaps somewhat too-positive picture 
in light of the actual data and results. Thus it should be used with 
some caution. This report was meant to just summarize the work done 
by the ASP, which spent about $100 million, (in today's dollars) over 
about a decade and a half.

8. Microalgae biofuels generally, and algae biodiesel production 
specifically, is still a long-term R&D goal (likely about 10 years), 
that will require at least as much funding as the ASP, if not more, 
and success is, as for any R&D effort, rather uncertain.

9. Some near term applications can be considered, in wastewater 
treatment specifically (but, wait, do not rush to your nearest algae 
wastewater treatment ponds - there are thousands of these around, but 
they are mostly very small and their algae have little or no oil, at 
least the way that we operate those systems at present. Making oil 
from algae grown on wastewaters also still requires significant R&D).

10. There are now scores of venture-financed companies, university 
research groups, government labs, garage start-ups, GFT licensees, 
web sites, and on and on claiming that they have, can, may and/or 
will produce algae biodiesel, at low cost, high productivity, soon, 
etc. None are based on data, experience, reality or even a correct 
reading of the literature.

11. I am not aware of any work in this field done by Prof. Briggs at 
U. New Hampshire, outside from an old website that quotes the Aquatic 
Species Program Close Out Report. There is no basis for the 
projections he makes for very high biodiesel production rates.

12. Even if R&D proves successful and we can actually produce algae 
biofuels (maybe even biodiesel) economically (whatever the economics 
may be a decade or so from now), even then, I am sorry to say that 
due to resource (land, water, etc.) limitations, algae will not 
replace all our (or their) oil wells, cannot solve our entire global 
warming problem, or make me rich quick, at least not honestly. But 
maybe this technology could be developed in the next few years so 
that in the future it can make a contribution to our energy supplies, 
our environment and human welfare.

We will in the future need all such technologies and must in the 
present study and develop all those that appear at least on their 
face plausible. But we also must reject those, as in the present 
case, that are based on absurd claims (such as in this case of 
productivity) and bizarre contraptions (e.g. closed photobioreactors).

There are no silver bullets, no winner-take-all technologies, no 
technological fixes, the solution to our energy and environment 
crisis can only come from, in order, 'demand' management, efficiency 
improvements, and new energy supplies, to which, maybe, algae 
processes can contribute.

I hope that this posting helps persuade GFT, and all others in this 
"business", to CEASE AND DESIST from the absurd and totally bizarre 
claims they are making. PLEASE!!

Cheers.

John R. Benemann, Ph.D.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

American Scientist Article Excerpt

The full article is:

Grow Your Own?
http://www.americanscientist.org/template/AssetDetail/assetid/53356

The excerpt to which Dr. Benemann referred:

The people now working on these and several similar commercial 
ventures are clearly eager to make growing algae a going business in 
this country. Yet it's not hard to find experts who view such 
prospects as dim indeed. John R. Benemann, a private consultant in 
Walnut Creek, California, manages the International Network on 
Biofixation of CO2 and Greenhouse Gas Abatement with Microalgae for 
the International Energy Agency. He helped author the final report of 
the Aquatic Species Program and has decades of experience in this 
field. "Growing algae is cheap," he says, but "certainly not as cheap 
as growing palm oil." And he is particularly skeptical about attempts 
to make algal production more economical by using enclosed 
bioreactors (rather than open ponds, as were used for the Aquatic 
Species Program). He points out that Japan spent hundreds of millions 
of dollars on such research, which never went anywhere. Asked to 
comment about why there is so much effort in that direction now, he 
responds, "It's bizarre; it's totally absurd."

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