ARPA-E's PETRO Program Plans to Create Better Biofuel Crops, Cutting Costs in Half

Tuesday, April 26, 2011 - 15:00 in Mathematics & Economics

Rapeseed, Grown for Biofuel Production Mark Walton via Wikimedia The Department of Energy's ARPA-E (Advanced Research Projects Agency--Energy) has just doled out its fourth round of funding, and $30 million is going toward the ambitious goal of trimming the cost of biofuels by 50 percent. PETRO, or Plants Engineered to Replace Oil, looks to breed or genetically modify plants that boost energy-per-acre by boosting their abilities to capture and convert solar energy. The problem with biofuels is that they can actually cost more in energy to produce than they end up yielding in BTUs, delivering a poor return (sometimes a negative return) on energy investment over the course of a given acre's life cycle. Then there's food prices that must be taken into consideration; crops like corn, when used to make ethanol, are removed from the food supply. That can cause price spikes, which tend to cause problems ranging from famine...

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