Farm News, IA 11-16-07 Plans for new Iowa Bioeconomy Institute announced By KRISS NELSON, Farm News staff writer AMES - The Board of Regents for the State of Iowa announced on Oct. 31 plans Robert C. Brown, the Iowa Farm Bureau Director of Biorenewables Program at Iowa State.for a new Bioeconomy Institute that will be directed by The Institute is replacing Iowa State’s Office of Biorenewables Programs and will eventually be housed in a new Biorenewables Laboratory Building planned for construction on the west side of the campus. Brown said the institute’s general goals include reducing the country’s dependance on imported petroleum; developing sustainable biomass production practices that protect land and water resources; improving environmental quality by reducing the use of fossil fuels; diversifying markets for farmers’ crops and creating jobs and opportunities for rural communities where biomass crops are grown and processed. Six program areas that will be focused on include: corn and biofuels; biorenewable chemicals; thermo chemical technologies such as gasification and fast pyrolysis; harvest, storage and transportation of biomass; feedstock production and biorenewables education. “These goals will be accomplished by organizing faculty to develop technologies that convert crops and plant-based materials into biofuels and other biobased products,” said Brown. “The new Bioeconomy Institute is extremely important to Iowa State, to Iowa and to our nation,” said Iowa State President Gregory Geoffroy in a statement. “By developing technologies that depend on agricultural resources instead of imported petroleum, the institute can help improve our national security, transform rural economies and counter global climate change. This institute will also help the state remain a leader in meeting the country’s needs for renewable fuels and products.” The Office of Biorenewables Programs (OBP) is being replaced by the new Bioeconomy Institute, Brown said. The OBP managed the early years of ISU’s Bioeconomy Initiative which was started by Geoffroy in 2002. According to Brown, the new institute builds upon the past successes of the OBP in organizing faculty into interdisciplinary teams that take a systems approach to biorenewables research. “The institute formalizes these efforts by setting up an administrative team that has the time and resources to help us accomplish even more,” Brown said. “The institute, for example, will support faculty who lead major grant applications. It will also add a staff person to help prepare proposals and administer large contracts. It will add a staff person to work as a liaison with federal agencies and companies.” Brown said he hopes the Bioeconomy Institute will help faculty apply their technical expertise to problems in biorenewables by alerting them to the opportunities and teaming them with other faculty. The institute, he believes will also benefit producers and companies interested in participating in the emerging bioeconomy through production of biomass crops and their conversion to biobased products. “We think the institute will benefit the economy of Iowa by expanding economic opportunities for the people of Iowa. Widespread adoption of biofuels will also have important environmental benefits, both locally and globally,” said Brown. All of the support made possible by the new institute will help Iowa State advance the science and engineering behind the emerging bioeconomy. “The institute will build upon a fiver-year initiative at ISU that has brought us to the national prominence in the field of biofuels and bioenergy,” says the proposal for the institute. “The establishment of the institute will help assure ISU’s continued prominence in this rapidly advancing field.”