Advanced Biofuels Becoming Reality with Novozymes’ New Enzyme Technology

Feb 22, 2012 6:00 AM ET

(3BL Media / theCSRfeed) Copenhagen, Denmark – February 22, 2012 – Moving advanced biofuels along the path to full-scale commercialization – and the world toward a more affordable clean fuel for our cars, buses, and trucks – Novozymes today unveiled its latest innovation, Novozymes Cellic® CTec3. The enzyme enables cost-efficient conversion of biomass to ethanol and performs 1.5 times better than Novozymes’ previous market-leading product, Cellic CTec2. Using Cellic CTec3, biofuel producers need only one-fifth of the enzyme dose compared to competing enzymes. Cellic CTec3 allows the cost of producing ethanol from biomass to approach the level of corn ethanol and gasoline.

“The first plants start commercial production of advanced biofuels this year,” says Novozymes’ CEO Steen Riisgaard. “Novozymes has signed supply deals with a number of the leading players in this field, and we’re thrilled to supply the enzymes that will enable an advanced biofuels industry and contribute to job creation, economic growth, and energy security. With our new product, Cellic CTec3, and the first plants starting commercial production, this is a huge step forward in the transition from an oil-based economy to a bio-based economy. We will continue to develop more efficient enzymes to further reduce the total cost of producing advanced biofuels.”   Novozymes’ partners to start commercial production this year Among the first-movers are M&G and Fiberight. Both companies will use Cellic CTec3 in their operations and are set to begin production this year.   “With Cellic CTec3 Novozymes again demonstrates its unique ability to deliver timely innovation, which we are using to build the world’s largest advanced biofuel plant. We’re confident that we will continue to realize process improvements together far into the future,” says Guido Ghisolfi, Vice President of M&G Group, which is scheduled to open a facility in Crescentino, Italy, producing 13 million gallons of ethanol per year from wheat straw, energy crops, and other locally available feedstocks.   “Novozymes helped us show the world that it really is possible to turn municipal solid waste into valuable biofuel. Novozymes is a partner that truly believes there are no limits to innovation,” says Craig Stuart-Paul, CEO of Fiberight. Fiberight will open a small-scale plant in Lawrenceville, Virginia, this year, and a plant producing 6 million gallons per year in Blairstown, Iowa, in 2013. Both plants will convert municipal solid waste into biofuel.   Five times less Advanced biofuels are produced from cellulose in biomass such as wheat straw, corn stalks, household waste, or energy crops such as switchgrass. The biomass is first broken down into a pulp. Enzymes are then added, turning the pulp into sugar that can be fermented into fuels, feed, and chemicals.   Highly effective, it takes only 50 kg of Cellic CTec3 to make 1 ton of ethanol from biomass. By comparison, it requires at least 250 kg of a competing enzyme product to make the same amount of ethanol.   Biofuels boost the economy and create jobs Global production capacity of ethanol from cellulose is estimated to reach about 15 million gallons in 2012 and 250 million gallons in 2014. A recent study by Bloomberg New Energy Finance estimates that the advanced biofuels industry has the potential to create millions of jobs, economic growth, and energy security worldwide.   Looking at the US alone, the study shows that using less than 20% of the available agricultural residues the US could produce more than 18 billion gallons of ethanol every year, replacing 16% of its gasoline consumption by 2030. This would create 1.4 million jobs and reduce CO2 emissions from gasoline-based transportation by 11%. The numbers would be even higher if biomass from forestry residues, household waste, and energy crops were included.   The Renewable Fuel Standard, a legislative mandate on the use of renewable fuels in the US, targets production of 16 billion gallons of cellulosic biofuels by 2022.   Join Novozymes tomorrow at the National Ethanol Conference
Novozymes’ Executive Vice President Peder Holk Nielsen will discuss Cellic CTec3 tomorrow, Thursday February 23, at a breakfast briefing for industry and media at the National Ethanol Conference in Orlando, Florida. The briefing takes place in the Sun 2/3 room from 7 to 8 a.m. EST (1–2 p.m. CET).

See where the first large-scale advanced biofuel plants are being built.

    About Novozymes Novozymes is the world leader in bioinnovation. Together with customers across a broad array of industries, we create tomorrow’s industrial biosolutions, improving our customers' business and the use of our planet's resources.   With over 700 products used in 130 countries, Novozymes’ bioinnovations improve industrial performance and safeguard the world’s resources by offering superior and sustainable solutions for tomorrow’s ever-changing marketplace. Read more at www.novozymes.com.