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News Release

ENVIRONMENTAL AND ENERGY STUDY INSTITUTE
122 C Street, NW, Suite 630 Washington, D.C., 20001  202-628-1400  www.eesi.org  
 
Carol Werner, Executive Director

For Immediate Release                                                     For More Information Contact:
August 27, 2007                                                                     Jetta Wong  (202) 662-18
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Department of Energy to Make Available up to $33.8 Million to Support Commercial Production of Cellulosic Biofuels

On August 28, 2007, the Department of Energy announced that they will provide up to $33.8 million, for FY08-11, to support research and development of enzyme commercialization, specifically of “hydrolytic enzymes or enzyme system preparations that can effectively saccharify pretreated lignocellulosics to produce fermentable sugars under process relevant conditions”. Efforts should focus on production of biofuel from non-food materials and agricultural waste.

Letters of intent are due September 10, 2007, and completed applications are due October 30, 2007.   Applications for this Funding Opportunity Announcement must be accessed, completed, and submitted through Grants.gov at http://www.grants.gov to be considered for award.

DOE Press Release

DOE Solicitation

PDF of this Release

NEWS MEDIA CONTACT:                                                            FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Julie Ruggiero, (202) 586-4940                                                         Monday, August 27, 2007
                                                                       
Department of Energy to Make Available up to $33.8 Million to Support Commercial Production of Cellulosic Biofuels

WASHINGTON, DC – The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today announced a Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) that will make available up to $33.8 million to support the development of commercially viable enzymes - a key step to enabling bio-based production of clean, renewable biofuels such as cellulosic ethanol.  As part of the President’s Twenty in Ten Plan, DOE is pursuing a long-term strategy to support increased availability and cost-effective use of renewable and alternative fuels.  Twenty in Ten seeks to displace 20 percent of U.S. gasoline usage by 2017 through diversification of clean energy sources and increased vehicle efficiency.

“These enzyme projects will serve as catalysts to the commercial-scale viability of cellulosic ethanol, a clean source of energy to help meet President Bush’s goal of reducing our reliance on oil,” DOE Assistant Secretary Andy Karsner said.  “Ethanol from new feed stocks will not only give America more efficient fuel options to help transform our transportation sector, but increasing its use will help reduce greenhouse gas emissions.”   

With a minimum 50 percent industry cost-share, this funding will total nearly $68 million to further enzyme commercialization efforts.  By harnessing the power of enzymes, which are responsible for many of the biochemical processes in nature, biorefineries can more efficiently use cellulosic (non-food) feedstocks for biofuels production.  This funding aims to further reduce costs of enzyme system preparations in process-relevant conditions.  Since 2000, DOE enzyme development advancements have yielded thirty-fold cost reductions mainly on enzyme production.

This biofuels effort focuses on production from non-food materials and agricultural waste – such as corn stover, switchgrass, and prairie grass. 

This FOA focuses specifically on systems to hydrolyze and saccharify cellulosic biomass feedstocks.  Saccharification enables the biorefining process by breaking down pretreated cellulosic material into more simple sugars, allowing them to be further processed through fermentation and ultimately turned into biofuels such as ethanol.  Enzymes developed under this FOA must prove durable and effective in process-relevant conditions. 

Letters of intent are due September 10, 2007, and completed applications are due October 30, 2007.  To view the complete FOA, visit: DOE Site. Projects are expected to begin in Fiscal Year 2008 and continue through Fiscal Year 2011.  Funding is subject to Congressional appropriations.

For more information on President Bush’s Twenty in Ten Plan, visit: http://www.whitehouse.gov/stateoftheunion/2007/initiatives/energy.html.

-DOE-

If you have questions, please email or call Jetta Wong at jwong@eesi.org or (202) 662-1885.  

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The Environmental and Energy Study Institute (EESI) is a non-profit organization that works at the nexus of policy and innovation to promote environmentally sustainable societies.  EESI was founded in 1984 by a bipartisan group of Congressional Members dedicated to finding environmental and energy solutions.  EESI provides credible, timely information and innovative policy ideas through coalition building, media outreach, publications, briefings, workshops and task forces on the issues of energy efficiency and renewable energy, transportation, smart growth, agriculture and global climate change.  Carol Werner leads the EESI team as executive director.

 
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