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US-based Greenwood Resources licenses ORNL invention to boost biofuel yield

GreenWood Resources, a global timberland investment and asset management company based in Oregon, has licensed an Oak Ridge National Laboratory technology based on the discovery of a gene in poplar (Populus trichocarpa) that makes it easier to convert poplar trees into biofuels.

GreenWood plans to commercialise the technology to select and breed better varieties of poplar with less lignin content, which simplifies the conversion process and ultimately lowers the overall costs of biofuel production.

Oak Ridge National Laboratory is an US multi-programme science and technology national laboratory managed for the United States Department of Energy.

Led by Wellington Muchero, a team from the Department of Energy’s ORNL, the University of Tennessee and West Virginia University identified a gene linked to the synthesis of lignin, a key component of plant cell walls that provides sturdiness but hinders the production of biofuels.

Growing poplar trees with less lignin would provide easier access to the plant sugars that are converted into renewable fuels.

The team’s research showed the gene could reduce lignin content by up to 50% and increase ethanol yield by up to 250% on biomass that was not chemically or mechanically pre-treated.

“We began with field studies, looking at poplar trees growing in their natural environment as well as experimental field sites in the Pacific Northwest region, and found naturally occurring genetic mutations that caused the most lignin reduction in these trees,” ORNL’s Muchero said.

The research team determined that plants carrying a variant of the lignin-producing gene showed an increase in sugar release of up to 280 percent, which resulted in the 250%  increase in ethanol yield.

“What sets this discovery apart from similar studies is that this technology represents a 25 to 50% reduction in lignin content with a single gene, and the plants are still healthy, which is quite remarkable,” said Thomas Zacharia, deputy director for science and technology at ORNL.

 Previous research in poplar and other biofuels crops has typically shown between 5 and 10% reductions, often resulting in plants that performed poorly in field tests.

GreenWood has licensed the genetic technology developed by the ORNL-based BioEnergy Science Center. They will continue to partner with ORNL as they conduct field studies over the next few years to validate the benefits of this novel plant system in GreenWood’s commercial varieties. The technology could also create commercial opportunities in the pulp and paper industry.

“Incorporating this technology into GreenWood’s poplar breeding program will lead to a new, superior class of bioenergy plantation varieties with which biorefineries can produce transportation fuels at a reduced cost, owing to significant savings during the pre-treatment and enzymatic hydrolysis stages,” said Brian Stanton, GreenWood’s chief science officer.

“This technology will accelerate GreenWood’s efforts to improve biomass chemical composition that is important in helping move the United States toward energy independence.”

Along with Muchero, co-inventors of the technology include ORNL’s Jin-Gui Chen, Lee E. Gunter, Sara Jawdy, Anthony C. Bryan and Gerald A. Tuskan; Stephen P. DiFazio, WVU, and Hao-Bo Guo, UT.

This research was funded by BESC, a US Department of Energy Bioenergy Research Center supported by the DOE Office of Science, and the technology matured under ORNL’s Technology Innovation Program.





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