Von Philip Bethge
Genetically
modified blue and green algae could be the answer to the world's
fuel problems. Bioengineers have already developed algae that
produce ethanol, oil and even diesel -- and the only things the
organisms need are sunlight, CO2 and seawater.
Biochemist Dan Robertson's
living gas stations have the dark-green shimmer of oak leaves and
are as tiny as E. coli bacteria. Their genetic material has been
fine-tuned by human hands. When light passes through their outer
layer, they excrete droplets of fuel.
"We had to fool the organism
into doing what I wanted it to do," says Robertson, the head of
research at the US biotech firm Joule Unlimited. He proudly waves a
test tube filled with a green liquid. The businesslike biochemist
works in a plain, functional building on Life Sciences Square in
Cambridge, Massachusetts.
His laboratory is sparsely
furnished and the ceiling is crumbling. Nevertheless, something
miraculous is happening in the lab, where Robertson and his
colleagues are working on nothing less than solving the world's
energy problem. They have already created blue algae that produce
diesel fuel.
Scientists rave about a new,
green revolution. Using genetic engineering and sophisticated
breeding and selection methods, biochemists, mainly working in the
United States, are transforming blue and green algae into tiny
factories for oil, ethanol and diesel.
Betting Millions on
Algae
A green algae liquid sloshes
back and forth in culture vats and circulates through shiny
bioreactors and bulging plastic tubes. The first tests of
algae-based fuels are already being conducted in automobiles, ships
and
aircraft. Investors like the Rockefeller
family and Microsoft founder Bill Gates are betting millions on the
power of the green soup.
"Commercial production of
crude oil from algae is the most obvious and most economical
possible way to substitute petroleum," says Jason Pyle of the
California-based firm Sapphire Energy, which is already using algae
to produce crude oil.
The established oil industry
is also getting into the business. "Oils from algae hold
significant potential as economically viable, low-emission
transportation fuels and could become a critical new energy
source," says Emil Jacobs, vice president of research and
development at Exxon Mobil. The oil company is investing $600
million (€420 million) in genetic entrepreneur Craig Venter's firm
Synthetic Genomics.
The technology holds
considerable promise. Indeed, whoever manages to be the first to
sell ecologically sustainable and climate-neutral biofuel at
competitive prices will not only rake in billions, but will also
write history.
Do-it-yourself diesel barons
launched the biofuel industry decades ago when they used old
French-fry grease to fuel modest agricultural machines. Today,
hundreds of thousands of cars run on ethanol derived from grain. In
the United States, for example, more than 40 percent of gasoline
contains ethanol additive. The fuel is produced in huge fermenters
the size of blimps, by fermenting a mash of corn or rye with
yeast.
But ethanol as a biofuel has a
bad reputation. One hectare (2.47 acres) of corn produces less than
4,000 liters of ethanol a year, and 8,000 liters of water are
required to produce a liter of ethanol. Besides, crops grown for
ethanol take away valuable farmland for food production. The last
growing season marked the first time US farmers harvested more corn
for ethanol production than for use as animal feed. One of the
adverse consequences of the biofuel boom is that it is driving up
food prices.
Astonishingly
Productive
For this reason, many
environmentalists now believe that growing energy plants is the
wrong approach. Algae, on the other hand, do not require any
farmland. Sun, saltwater, a little fertilizer and carbon dioxide
are all the undemanding little organisms need to thrive. And
because they consume about as much CO2 during photosynthesis as is
later released when the oil they produce is burned, algae-based
fuels are also climate neutral.
Algae are also astonishingly
productive. A hectare of sunny desert covered with algae vats can
yield almost eight times as much biofuel per unit of biomass in a
year than corn grown for energy poses.
Sapphire is one of the
pioneers of the industry. CEO Pyle has a vision of transforming
desert areas into fertile, energy-producing land. "We have to grow
algae like rice, in shallow patties of water on thousands of
hectares," he says. This, he says, is the only way to produce
algae-based oil in large quantities and at competitive
prices.
Sapphire expects one barrel of
its green petroleum to cost between $70 and $100 in the future,
which is significantly cheaper than petroleum. However, as with
grain production, this requires the use of high-performance
varieties. According to Pyle, his company has optimized the yield,
resistance to disease and "harvest capability" of the green algae
it uses. Sapphire's engineers are already testing their green
miracle algae at a small plant in New Mexico. Together with
Monsanto, which produces agricultural chemicals, and industrial gas
company Linde, the algae makers plan to explore commercial
opportunities at a 120-hectare site soon.
'We Simply Have to
Build It'
But the Sapphire algae can
only be a beginning, because they merely enrich the oil internally.
To obtain the oil, the algae must be harvested and the oil
extracted in a costly and complex process.
To overcome this obstacle,
other scientists are developing algae that don't even have to be
harvested. Instead, they essentially ooze the fuel of the future.
Evolution has not yielded anything that produces biofuel from CO2
on a large scale, explains biologist Venter, "which is why we
simply have to build it."
The first of these miracle
organisms can already be admired in the Joule laboratory. The
bioengineers' tools include culture mediums, incubators and, most
importantly, databases containing the DNA sequences of thousands of
microorganisms. Robertson and his team search the databases for
promising gene fragments, which they then isolate and inject into
the genetic material of blue algae.
'You Could Put Our
Product in Your Car'
Dozens of varieties of the microorganisms,
also known as cyanobacteria, bob up and down in bulbous beakers at
Joule. A green brew fills small photobioreactors, which are used to
test the blue algae under various environmental conditions. "Here
we simulate for example the day-and-night rhythm of Texas," says
Robinson, explaining one of the experiments. The company has a
pilot plant in Texas.
The program is as complex as
it is costly. Nevertheless, success appears to be proving the
genetic engineers right. The microbiologists at Joule have created
blue algae strains that pump so-called alkanes outward through
their membranes. Alkanes are energy-rich hydrocarbons contained in
diesel fuel. "You have to persuade the cell that it stops growing
and makes the product of interest and does it continuously,"
Robinson explains. In contrast to ethanol, the end product is not a
low-quality fuel, but a highly pure product that contains no sulfur
or benzene. "You could put our product in your car," says
Robinson.
The laboratory algae are now
doing their work in high-tech bioreactors, where carbon dioxide is
constantly bubbling through shimmering green panels that look like
solar collectors. Robertson's ultimate goal is to derive about
140,000 liters of biofuel a year from one hectare of land -- a
yield 40 times as high as with corn grown for ethanol. Joule has
bought about 500 hectares of desert land in New Mexico to build a
first commercial plant.
Large Amounts of CO2
Required
But will the laboratory
creations really work as well in open fields as they do in the lab?
Calculations show that some algae plants will likely consume more
fertilizer and energy per hectare than grain crops. And the carbon
dioxide in the air won't be enough to feed the microalgae.
Scientists estimate that a commercial algae fuel plant would
require about 10,000 cubic meters of CO2 a day. Whether and how
large amounts of the gas could be derived from the exhaust gases of
large coal power plants, for example, and then brought to the algae
farms, remains unclear.
The farms could also require
enormous tracts of land. In a recent article in the
journal Science, researchers at Wageningen University
in the Netherlands calculated that, in theory, an area the size of
Portugal would have to be filled with algae pools to satisfy
Europe's current fuel needs. A "leap in microalgae technology" is
needed to at least triple productivity, say
experts.
Pyle and Robertson are
convinced that this increase is possible. They insist that algae
technology can be used to meet a significant portion of our energy
requirements in the future. "There is certainly enough non-arable
land with enough solar radiation and enough CO2 and water sourcing
in the world," says Robertson. Another important advantage, he
adds, is that algae-based fuel could easily be pumped into the oil
industry's existing pipelines and refineries, and that cars and
aircraft would not have to be modified to accommodate the
biofuel.
But even the pioneers admit
that the switch to algae-based fuel will likely take a while
longer. Sometimes completely mundane things still stand in the way
of the green revolution.
The algae growers at Sapphire,
for example, face competition from little 10-legged creatures.
"Shrimp think algae are good food," says CEO Pyle. "If you don't
pay attention, you will ultimately have a shrimp
farm."
Translated from the German
by Christopher Sultan