Harnessing top algae strains for bioenergy through collaboration

Source: Susan Bauer, PNNL, February 15

Wanted: Algae industry partners and academic researchers to help find the best algae strains for biofuels and bioproducts to reduce the cost of producing bioenergy from algae feedstocks. The Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and its partners in this effort are offering private and academic collaboration opportunities.

PNNL leads the DISCOVR project, which stands for Development of Integrated Screening, Cultivar Optimization and Verification.  Along with PNNL, Los Alamos National Laboratory, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, and Sandia National Laboratories comprise the DOE lab consortium sponsored by DOE’s Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy.

“The DISCOVR project employs the unique complementary capabilities of the four participating national laboratories and the outdoor testbed at the Arizona Center for Algal Technology and Innovation to identify and test high productivity microalgae strains for year-round outdoor cultivation, said PNNL’s Michael Huesemann, who leads the DISCOVR Consortium project. “The goal is to provide a framework to accelerate meeting DOE’s advanced biofuel goals with microalgae.”

“A key cost driver for algae biofuels is productivity, which is directly tied to which algae strain is chosen and how it’s cultivated,” said Taraka Dale, a scientist at LANL. “By collaborating with industry and academia, we aim to bring together the best of the best strains and cultivation strategies to rapidly boost productivity and reduce costs.”

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