FirstScience, UK 09-18-07 Iowa State University conference examines developing bioeconomy

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FirstScience, UK
09-18-07
Iowa State University conference examines developing bioeconomy
By Iowa State University
AMES, Iowa – Venture capitalist Vinod Khosla told last year’s Biobased Industry
Outlook Conference at Iowa State University why he believes fuel blends
containing 85 percent ethanol can replace the country’s gasoline supply.
Khosla – who last year told The New York Times he’s invested “tens of millions
of dollars” in private companies developing ethanol production technologies –
ticked off several reasons: Political and special interest groups back ethanol,
there’s land to grow new energy crops, ethanol’s energy balance and emissions
are good.
And, he told the conference, “The single most important issue for me is how
many miles can you drive per acre of land.”
Today’s technologies produce about 500 gallons of ethanol per acre. In 25 years
he said production could jump to about 3,000 gallons per acre.
What’s he saying about ethanol and the bioeconomy these days"
Khosla – co-founder of Sun Microsystems and founder of Khosla Ventures in
Menlo Park, Calif. – will share his views during a keynote address at the 2007
Biobased Industry Outlook Conference, “Growing the Bioeconomy,” Nov. 5 and 6
at the Iowa State Center on the Iowa State campus. He’s scheduled to speak at
12:30 p.m., Tuesday, Nov. 6 in Hilton Coliseum.
The conference is targeted for elected officials, economic development
professionals, manufacturers of biobased products, biofuel producers, farmers,
bioprocessing engineers and venture capitalists. Presentations cover plant
sciences; feedstock production; conversion of biomass into fuels and products;
bioproducts use and energy efficiency; conservation and sustainability; and
economics and policy. Early registration for the two-day conference (including a
welcome breakfast, two lunches, receptions and materials) is $219 before Oct 1.
and $299 after. There is a student rate of $139.
Conference information is at www.bioeconomyconference.org and registration
information is at https://www.ucs.iastate.edu/mnet/bio2007/quickregister.html.
Khosla isn’t the only big name who will address the conference about the future
of the bioeconomy.
J. Craig Venter – the scientist who engaged the publicly funded Human Genome
Project in a race to map the human genome and who recently announced he had
sequenced his own genome – will address the conference at 9:15 a.m., Monday,
Nov. 5 in Hilton Coliseum.
Venter is founder and president of the non-profit J. Craig Venter Institute and a
co-founder of Synthetic Genomics, Inc., in Rockville, Md. The company is using
genomics in a variety of ways to design or engineer microbes that can efficiently
produce fuels.
“Genomics is going to do for the energy and chemical field what it did in the early
1990s for medical biotechnology,” Venter told the Washington Post in February.
Also addressing the conference are Jeff Broin, the chief executive officer for the
POET biofuel company; Phil Frederickson, the executive vice president of
planning, strategy and corporate affairs for the ConocoPhillips energy company;
Suzanne Hunt, the bioenergy project manager for the independent Worldwatch
Institute that advocates for a sustainable world; and Jeremy Tomkinson, the
executive director of the National Non-Food Crops Centre, the United Kingdom’s
national center for biorenewables.
The conference’s primary sponsors are Iowa State’s Office of Biorenewables
Programs, Iowa State’s Plant Sciences Institute, Iowa State University
Extension’s Center for Industrial Research and Service, ConocoPhillips and
Pioneer/DuPont. Last year’s conference attracted 620 people.
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