Rampage99
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Total Posts
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3161
- Joined: Feb 24, 2003
- Location: Florida
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Scientists create bacteria that excrete oil.
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Jun 18, 2008 23:36
A company called LS9 is creating nearly pump-ready oil using single-celled bacteria. They start with industrial yeast organisms or " non-pathogenic strains of E. coli," and redesign their DNA so that they produce a different kind of waste. Crude oil is not far removed, molecularly, from the fatty acids expelled by yeast or E. coli during fermentation, so a little bit of DNA alteration bypasses the fatty acids and produces " Oil 2.0." The " bugs" can be fed a variety of feedstock, from politically sensitive corn to Brazilian sugar cane to California wheat straw to Southern wood chips. The result is the same: crude oil that is almost ready to pour into your car. What' s more: the enterprise is carbon negative, putting out less CO2 than the operation requires. At the moment it takes a 1,000-liter fermentation machine one week to make a 40-gallon drum of crude. It will be a moment before they have a seamless industrial-sized operation. And there is that little concern of hundreds of billions of genetically-altered critters getting free and wreaking havoc on kids and puppies. But the promise of a steady supply of safely created $40 oil -- because even the Volt will need oil -- is not a bad thing to consider. Thanks for the tip, Brad! - Autoblog I hope this makes it big. I' m sick of hearing about the " oil crisis" which is no more than oil companies raising prices for insane profit when there is still more than enough oil to go around. If this method can be kept out of their hands and manages to grow to a large scale this will force gas prices down around the world.
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