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The Boston
Sunday Globe - December 28, 2008
At
Mascoma, wood and grass fuel the future
The Boston
Sunday Globe
Termite gut and elephant
stomach enzymes are among the ingredients researchers at the Boston-based
biofuel company Mascoma Corp. are using to come up with a quicker, cheaper
way to brew an environmentally friendly alternative to gasoline. Chief
executive Bruce A. Jamerson recently sat down with Globe reporter Erin
Ailworth, prior to a tour of a Mascoma lab in New Hampshire, to talk about
the company's work.
Mascoma's researchers
are attempting to make ethanol from "nonfood biomass." What
exactly does that mean?
It's nonfood plant material in two categories: woods and grasses. That's
pretty much it. Now grasses include things like sugar cane, or we can
use waste sugar cane, which is called bagasse. So that's after you squeeze
the sugar and molasses out of it. It also includes things like cornstalks
- once you remove the ears you have cornstalks and leaves. It includes
other agricultural waste, like wheat straw after you remove the wheat.
It includes prairie grasses.
And what do you
do with all that stuff?
If you take a piece of paper and you tear it and look at the edges, those
tiny fibers, those are cellulose. And so, essentially, what our process
does is we take living organisms that will essentially go into a container
of cellulose material and they'll biologically snip those cellulose chains
into small pieces and they become sugars. And sugar is a source of energy,
so that sugar can be fermented into ethanol or alcohol. It can also be
converted into gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, bioplastics. Think about animals
- like a cow or a horse - that eat grass. And how do they obtain energy
from that? Well, the enzymes from their stomachs will convert the cellulose
in the plant material into sugar, and that's the source of energy for
them. And we are just doing it a bit differently: We do it in a factory
with steel and stainless steel and pipes. And they're doing it, you know,
the way Mother Nature has provided.
When
will drivers be able to fill up with Mascoma-produced fuel?
That'll
be several years away. Our first commercial plant will be in Upper Michigan,
and that doesn't come onstream until 2011.
How much will this
fuel cost, compared with gas?
It will be similar, although I believe that over time our product will
be cheaper to produce than a gallon of gasoline. Governor Deval Patrick
in July came to our office and signed a bill that says if a gas station
sells a gallon of gas with cellulosic ethanol in it, it is exempt from
the 23.5-cent gas tax. So, everything else being equal, that gallon should
be 23.5 cents cheaper to a consumer.
What are some of
the challenges to weaning ourselves off gasoline in favor of biofuel?
Today you've got the pipelines, you've got the refineries, you've got
the distribution station, you've got the gas pumps - all that have been
designed for gasoline and its chemical properties. For example, where
are the refineries? On the coast. Why? Because crude comes in by ship
from overseas. So, in our business, where's the biomass? It's not on the
coast. It's going to be in the northern forests for wood, it will be in
the Great Plains for grasses, it'll be in the Gulf for sugar cane, etc.
It will be in different locations [than gasoline production]. So if you
say, let's make our product and ship it out of the [existing] refineries
and the pipelines, it's in the wrong location. So it will take some time
to build that [biofuel infrastructure].
Mascoma recently
partnered with General Motors. Why?
I have a goal: I'd like to be driving some vehicles by the end of the
year with our product. And we want to work with them on optimizing car
engines for cellulosic fuels.
Demand for gasoline
has been dropping as people worry about the environment and look to biofuels
as one solution for climate-change issues. What are some of the other
reasons that biofuel has become such a hot topic?
It is very hard to refute photographs of shrinking glaciers. So I think
what happened is the tangible evidence of global climate change is becoming
overwhelming. Plus, we basically had a doubling of oil prices from a year
ago, and so it has hit people's pocketbooks. Plus, you have this global
political instability with energy security - I mean, 80 percent of the
crude oil today is owned by countries, not companies, and a lot of those
countries don't get along with us or we don't get along with them. However
it is, that's not good. So it's climate worries, it's cost, and it's secure
energy. And all of those things have finally come together, and people
are finally getting it.
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