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Cellulosic-ethanol feedstocks
From these beakers to your gas tank. A few years ago, the idea of cellulosic ethanol--making liquid fuel from wood, grasses, and agriculture residue--was a foreign concept to most. Now many consumers, industrialists, and policy makers consider making cellulosic ethanol on a commercial scale one of the most important technical challenges for society.
Mascoma is one company in the race with what it hopes is a breakthrough in cellulosic ethanol through biotechnology.
General Motors invested in the company earlier this year and on Friday named its director of global energy systems R&D to Mascoma's board. On Friday, Mascoma also
The feedstocks, from left to right, are corn stover (stalks and leaves), hardwood chips, switchgrass, and paper sludge (what's leftover from paper processing).
September 22, 2008 12:00 PM PDT
Photo by: Martin LaMonica/CNET Networks
| Caption by: Martin LaMonica
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