Berkeley Lab scientists are exploring whether a common soil bacterium can be engineered to produce
liquid transportation fuels much more efficiently than the ways in which advanced biofuels are made today.
Not exact matches
Ultimately, this facility may be able to convert as
much as 1,000 metric tons of biomass per day into
liquid fuel; the goal is to build a commercial - scale facility that would churn out 50 million gallons (189.2 million liters) of
transportation fuels per year.
Wont help as
much on the
liquid fuels transportation front.
No doubt the same thing is happening along
much of the west coast of Canada, which is why China's sanctioning of coal to
liquid technology to produce
transportation fuel is directly significant to North Americans, and why it is so important to help China become more reliant on efficient processes and products.