Quantcast





RSS
April 24, 2009 | Jim Lane | Comments 8

Louisiana’s Aquatic Energy moving from pilot to demo stage with algae-to-energy; 2500 gallons per acre achieved without external CO2

The Aquatic Energy pilot facility in Louisiana

The Aquatic Energy pilot facility in Louisiana

In Louisiana, Aquatic Energy unveiled significant progress in its pilot algae-to-energy project in the Lake Charles-Lafayette corridor of the state. The company is now preparing to expand from a “couple of acre” pilot in Lake Charles, to an 30-acre demonstration project that will feature the company’s 1-acre open-pond system that is yielding 2500 gallons per acre without using an external CO2 source.

CEO David Johnston said that the company is able to support its yields with more than 70 percent of its CO2 coming from ambient CO2 in the atmosphere, with the remainder generated from the natural gas burned in the last stage of the algae drying process. The company said it is generating 32-34 tons per acre of algae biomass for the animal feed market, with a goal of 40 tons of meal per acre in the proposed expansion.

Algae paste from the Aquatic Energy pilot

Algae paste from the Aquatic Energy pilot

The company said it has funds identified to take it through the demonstration phase, but expects to raise $32 million for a 617-acre commercial-scale expansion, which will generate 1.5 Mgy in algal fuel and 24,500 tons of algae meal.

Johnston said that the 617 (250 hectare) acre size is the minimum scale necessary for a stand-alone operation. The company projects that it will reach 5000 hectares in production by 2016.

Johnston, a veteran of the Maryland biodiesel business, said he selected Louisiana because its rainfall exceeded its evaporation rate, giving him access to free water, plus the wide availability of lands formerly used in rice cultivation, which has the clay soil base, low cost and zoning and infrastructure for aquaculture.

Aquatic Energy pilot plant during construction phase

Aquatic Energy pilot plant during construction phase

“Water is the biggest factor,” he commented on the site selection process for open ponds. Interestingly, the use of clay soils allows the venture to proceed without using fixed structures or plastic liners on its ponds. Algae-to-energy pioneer John Benemann has commented on the impracticality of plastic liners, with cheap liners requiring too much repair and expensive liners making open-pond projects economically unfeasible.

Johnston also commented that he had looked at several alternative states that had extensive salt-water resources, but that no state environmental agency had seriously entertained permitting a project that would have the potential to leach extensive amounts of salt water into the soil.

Aquatic Energy's downloadable presentation
Aquatic Energy’s downloadable presentation

A presentation on Aquatic Energy is downloadable here.

Free Subscription to the Daily Biofuels Digest e-newsletter


bdnl091008Subscribe FREE to the world's most-widely read biofuels daily. Enter your email in the box below,
or click here to subscribe:

Related Stories


  • Algae Movers and Shakers: Aquatic Energy
  • Low-cost leader Aquatic Energy first came to wider attention this spring when unveiling details of its demo stage project as well as sharing data from its first-gen efforts with an open-pod algal biom...
  • Hot Topics: The latest on algae-to-energy
  • Here are some of the most popular latest stories on algae-to-energy that have run in Biofuels Digest: Profile of Aquatic Energy:  In Louisiana, Aquatic Energy unveiled significant progress in its ...
  • New Mexico center goes to demo stage with algae biofuel projct
  • In New Mexico, the Center of Excellence for Hazardous Materials Management has upgraded its Algae Biofuels Project from pilot scale to the commercial demonstration level. The project is located at the...
  • Algae-based biodiesel myths and realities report published
  • Renewable Energy Access published a report on algae-based biodiesel myths and realities for the biofuel stock that can produce up to 10,000 gallons of oil per acre. Soy, by contrast, has a biodiesel y...
  • SunEco claims 200-260K per acre algae yields for polyclonal, deep light system
  • In California, Automotive Industries is reporting on SunEco Energy, which announced a project to build out a 1320 acre-feet open pond algae system and produce 45 Mgy algae-based crude oil as soon as 2...
  • Australia’s MBD Energy signs three agreements for algal fuel trials
  • In Australia, MBD Energy said that it will introduce algae-based carbon capture with a 2.5 acre pilot plant at the Loy Yang-A coal-fired power plant in Victoria, and announced that it had signed agree...

    Hot Topics


    The Hottest 50 Companies in Bioenergy
    Latest algae-to-energy news
    Latest jatropha news
    Latest Waste-to-energy news

    Entry Information