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Exxon Makes First Big Investment in Biofuels

JOHN PORRETTO   07/14/09 11:37 AM ET   AP

Alge

HOUSTON — Exxon Mobil Corp. said Tuesday it will make its first major investment in greenhouse-gas reducing biofuels in a $600 million partnership with biotech company Synthetic Genomics Inc. to develop transportation fuels from algae.

Despite record-breaking profits in recent years, the oil and gas giant has been criticized by environmental groups, members of Congress and even shareholders for not spending enough to explore alternative energy options.

One of the company's requirements was finding a biofuel source that could be produced on a large scale. It says photosynthetic algae appears to be a viable, long-term candidate. If the alliance is successful, pumping algae-based gasoline at Exxon service stations is still several years away and will mean additional, multibillion-dollar investments for mass production.

"This is not going to be easy, and there are no guarantees of success," Emil Jacobs, a vice president at Exxon Mobil Research and Engineering Co., said in an interview with The Associated Press. "But we're combining Exxon Mobil's technical and financial strength with a leader in bioscientific genomics."

Jacobs said the project involves three critical steps: identifying algae strains that can produce suitable types of oil quickly and at low costs, determining the best way to grow the algae and developing systems to harvest enough for commercial purposes.

Besides the potential for large-scale production, algae has other benefits, Jacobs said. It can be grown using land and water unsuitable for other crop and food production; it consumes carbon dioxide, the greenhouse gas blamed for climate change; and it can produce an oil with molecular structures similar to the petroleum products _ gasoline, diesel, jet fuel _ Exxon already makes.

That means the Irving, Texas-based company will be able to convert the bio-oil into fuels at its own refineries and use existing pipelines and tanker trucks to get it to consumers.

The $600 million price tag includes $300 million for Exxon's internal costs and $300 million or more to La Jolla, Calif.-based Synthetic Genomics _ if research and development milestones are successfully met.

"Even though this is a multiyear program, we both still consider it a very aggressive timetable, and it involves a lot of basic research," said J. Craig Venter, founder and CEO of the privately held company. "As a result, you don't know the answers until you've done these tests and experiments."

Algae is considered a sustainable source for second-generation biofuels, which go beyond corn-based ethanol into nonfood sources such as switchgrass and wood chips.

Royal Dutch Shell PLC said earlier this year it would scale back large investments in wind and solar in favor of next-generation biofuels. The European oil giant is working with Canadian company Iogen Corp. on a method to produce ethanol from wheat straw, and partnering with Germany-based Choren Industries to develop a synthetic biofuel from wood residue.

Another oil major, BP PLC, plans to team up with Verenium Corp. to build a $300 million cellulosic ethanol plant in Highlands County, Fla.

For Exxon Mobil, the world's largest publicly traded oil company, the biofuels investment is tiny compared with its spending to find new supplies of crude and natural gas.

CEO Rex Tillerson said earlier this year Exxon's 2009 spending on capital and exploration projects is expected to reach $29 billion, up from the $26.1 billion it spent in 2008. The company said those levels are likely to remain in the $25 billion to $30 billion range through 2013.

Exxon Mobil shares rose 25 cents to $65.95 in trading Tuesday. They've traded in a range of $56.51 to $86.47 in the past year.

___

AP Energy Writer Dirk Lammers in Sioux Falls, S.D., contributed to this report.

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HOUSTON — Exxon Mobil Corp. said Tuesday it will make its first major investment in greenhouse-gas reducing biofuels in a $600 million partnership with biotech company Synthetic Genomics Inc. to...
HOUSTON — Exxon Mobil Corp. said Tuesday it will make its first major investment in greenhouse-gas reducing biofuels in a $600 million partnership with biotech company Synthetic Genomics Inc. to...
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11:12 PM on 07/15/2009
The only hope for a sound ethanol program is to be found in the hands of the people. There are 47,500 miles of Interstate Highways just waiting to be farmed with ethanol producing biomass. These are lands owned by the citizens of the states, not the federal government. Additionally, there are 157,500 miles of electric grid lands which can be used for biomass plantings. Such a ethanol fuel program would create income for our farmers, preserve our food producing lands, and churn a great of money back into local economies. Unfortunately, the plan to do this has been blocked at every opportunity. You can see the plan at the following link:

http://www.squidoo.com/whitleyhodges7
01:28 PM on 07/15/2009
ExxonMobil will never promote FREE energy from the sun and wind. They are spending millions on lobbying congress to halt the production of energy from these free sources. Also, through news stories and marketing propaganda, they are trying to convince people that BioFuels is environmentally beneficial, etc etc.
They are lying and are distorting the truth about the harm of BioFuels. Also, since they will produce BioFuels, they will keep the consumer hostage to keep paying at the pump and at home for their fuel.
I use solar panels for 80% of my heating and electric needs. I'm also waiting to purchase a true plug-in hybrid vehicle from Aptera that gets over 200 miles per gallon and has 60 miles per charge.
Everyone should use solar panels on their homes.
Wake Up People!
Do Something!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sherwoodforest
Seeing the forest for the trees
03:18 PM on 07/14/2009
Exxon spends 100 times more money on fighting alternative energy and global climate change science, they spend money on lawyers, politicians and lobbyists and then do "psuedo-Green" advertising instead.
If you care about this; Boycott Exxon - don't buy gas at Exxon or Mobil-
http://www.exxposeexxon.com/
As the world's largest private oil company, ExxonMobil has the power to direct the energy industry and policy makers toward a cleaner, more secure energy future. Instead, it is using its wealth and power to take America backwards. WHY EXXONMOBIL?
02:30 PM on 07/14/2009
Terrible!

Use Waste!

No prime crops.

BioChar is a very good system for safely recycling dangerous wastes like sewage, plastics etc... into BioOils energy fertilizer and it's carbon negative!

This Oil companies have a role to play: Refineries. The distributed waste recycling plants will need to ship the BioOil to a refinery for final processing into high grade gasoline diesel, etc...

We Use the Land for Food, Wood, grazing 100%.
THEN we BioChar the waste

This can provide all the fuels we will ever need.
In total, the upper limit of the bio-energy potential could be over 1000 EJ per year. This is considerably more than the current global energy use of 400 EJ.
http://www.uce-uu.nl/index.php?action=1&menuId=1&type=project&id=3&
Note this article assumes growing crops for food, That's NOT what I'm Talking about, but it has the world wide potential energy numbers. Since the crops for human use will not be optimized for energy, we will take the low values of crop energy and BioChar yields.
http://terrapreta.bioenergylists.org/company list of BioChar companies.
http://www.agri-therm.com/solution.html portable bio fuel oil BioChar units.
http://www.advbiorefineryinc.ca/news/ meat rending waste BioChar.
http://terrapretapot.org/
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03:04 PM on 07/14/2009
@research, I visited the links in your post. They are very informative. I have two questions: 1) what exactly is the drawback to using algae as a biofuel? 2) what kinds of particulates and other potentially toxic materials are released during the production of BioChar fuel? Thanks.
03:25 PM on 07/14/2009
Large water use. large environmental footprint.

That depends on the system and input stream. BioChar is by far the cheapest BioFuel system, but it may not ultimately be the best, FT or TD could be cleaner:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_depolymerization

The burnt output gasses are probably as "green" as Natural gas and are captive, thus available for further processing.
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11:36 AM on 07/14/2009
It figures Big Oil would jump on the least sustainable 'alternative fuel' option. Using potential farmland for fuel is a bad idea, period. At least they're not espousing corn though. The production of corn for sugar and fuel will be our ultimate downfall if we don't stop now.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BannedNBoston
Is hemp legal yet?
11:02 AM on 07/14/2009
Its centralized energy.
I want hemp diesel from a Maine farm.
Hemp no-tiill farming.
Strongest root structure known.

Flow standards for bio-fuel are wrong.
Get a fuel line heater and heated gas tank inlet tube.
10:17 AM on 07/14/2009
plus, algae is essentually green house gas neutral, since it sucks up what is released when burned.
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06:46 AM on 07/22/2009
sorry, that's incorrect. Any ability that algae has to consume is completely negated when it's burned.