by Schadenfreude » Mon 19 May 2008, 23:57:32
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Cashmere', 'I')n unrelated news, I'm betting that Scarlett Johansen will replace my ex-girlfriend . . .
but I'm not holding my breath for that either.
Yeah, right. Some snarky nobody on a fucking bulletin board somewhere on the internet knows better than Airbus, Honeywell, International Aero Engines, UOP and JetBlue Airways.
I don't think Scarlett Johansen is interested in pond scum, Cashmere, you're shit out of luck.
That's OK, brain-dead snarky remarks have always been the standard knee-jerk response here at PeakOil.com to any sort of alternative energy news. You can count on it.
[url=http://oakhavenpc.org/cultivating_algae.htm]Cultivating Algae
for Liquid Fuel Production[/url]
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')list]
Under optimum growing conditions micro-algae will produce up to 4 lbs./sq. ft./year or 15,000 gallons of oil/acre/year. Micro-algae are the fastest growing photosynthesizing organisms. They can complete an entire growing cycle every few days.
One quad (1015 BTU or 7.5 billion gal.) of biodiesel could be produced on 200,000 ha of desert land (equivalent to 772 sq. mi., roughly 500,000 acres). (To produce one quad from a rapeseed crop would require 58 million acres or 90,000 sq. mi.)The outdoor race-track pond production system is the only economically feasible approach given the cost of petroleum in 1996. (One of the problems with growing algae in any kind of pond is that only in the top 1/4" or so of the water does the algae receive enough solar radiation. So the ability of a pond to grow algae is limited by its surface area, not by its volume.)Algae contains fat, carbohydrates, and protein. Some of the micro-algae contain up to 60% fat. Once the fat is 'harvested'— some 70% can be harvested by pressing—what remains becomes a good animal feed or can be processed to produce ethanol.
To me, it's no wonder that the airlines are looking into "Oilgae".