tonic
The place where good lives - good news, good style, and good deeds... more about us
Positively good.

news / projects

us / world / business / social responsibility/ technology / science / entertainment / life & style / travel

Baby, You Can Drive My Algae-Powered Car

By Sebastian Clayton | Thursday, October 23, 2008 1:20 PM ET

Print Email
Share:

Comments (1)

Announced today in the U.K. is the world's largest publicly-funded project to produce transport fuels from algae. The U.K.'s Carbon Trust today announced a project to make algae biofuels a commercial reality by 2020. The hope is that up to £26M will be spent on developing the technology and infrastructure so that a large percentage of fuel used will be algae biofuels (and not fossil fuels).

Mark Williamson, Innovations Director at the Carbon Trust, said, "We must find a cost-effective and sustainable alternative to oil for our cars and planes if we are to deliver the deep cuts in carbon emissions necessary to tackle climate change. Algae could provide a significant part of the answer and represents a multibillion-pound opportunity."

With transportation accounting for 25 percent of carbon emissions in the U.K., scientists will conduct research to find the best oil-producing algae to be used to make alternative fuels. Once found, these fuels could then be produced and grown in large amounts to ensure a better source of fuel and help to reduce the U.K.'s carbon emissions in line with the recent announcement by Ed Miliband, the new energy and climate change secretary.

The Carbon Trust forecasts that algae-based biofuels could replace more than 70 billion litres of fossil fuels used every year around the world in road transport and aviation by 2030, equivalent to 12 percent of annual global jet fuel consumption, or 6 percent of road transport diesel. In carbon terms, this equates to an annual saving of more than 160m tonnes of CO2 globally with a market value of more than £15bn.

As already brought to your attention by Dan, this will not only greatly help the environment but also help create many new jobs around the world too. Lets hope the scientists get to grips with algae and help make this a reality. Beep beep'm beep beep, yeah.

Sebastian Clayton is our London correspondent and will report on all things Irish, English and international for the Tonic News.  His weekly feature will appear every Thursday right here. He has worked for Tonic since the

Print Email
Share:

Comments (1)

Comments (1)

Erika

238 days ago

Whoa!!! Come on! What about the oceans? Are we really wanting to mess with that not-so-small ecosystem? Are they talking about harvesting the algae that's already there or creating it in some lab? I sense a new cartel coming up.

Report this

Sign up now for the Daily Tonic! We ship a dose of goodness right to your inbox every day.

connect with tonic

RSS

Twitter

Facebook

YouTube

good you've done

  • Helped Project Angel Food prepare and deliver nutritious meals to men, women and children affected by HIV/AIDS, cancer and other life-threatening illnesses.
    Donated one year of Tonic Mailstopper to Project Angel Food for fundraising auction.
  • You helped Tonic plant 1,498 trees in North America, Central America, Africa and Asia.
    Tonic contributed to Sustainable Harvest International, American Forests and Trees for the Future.
  • Sent musical instruments to the U.S. Gulf Coast
    Donated $425 to Music Rising

...more good things