ABO Blog

Green Revolution 2.0 – 2015 Food & Fuel for the 21st Century Symposium

The world is in need of another agricultural revolution — the Green Revolution 2.0 — which will provide stress tolerant food crops to feed our growing populations, and advanced biofuels to power our continued economic growth and human innovation. This symposium will feature top researchers from around the world presenting the latest research in genetics, synthetic biology, bioinformatics, economics, and bio-manufacturing of algae and plant-based biomass to propel the Green Revolution 2.0 forward.

General Registration Fee $200

Organizer: Food & Fuel for the 21st Century and California Center for Algae Biotechnology – Travis Johnson, 858 534-6383,tlj002@ucsd.edu

Website: www.regonline.com/ff212015

Graduate-Level Marine Algae Course – Summer 2015

Spend Summer 2015 on the San Juan Islands with nearly 625 species of marine macroalgae!

The University of Washington’s Friday Harbor Laboratories is offering a graduate-level course titled Marine Algae.

The Marine Algae course will consist of extensive field work that will be enhanced by lectures as well as laboratory instruction in the observation and interpretation of morphological and anatomical traits that define species and/or higher taxonomic groups.

Students will acquire practical experience in specimen collection, preservation, and databasing, light microscopy, DNA isolation, amplification and sequencing, and computational approaches to phylogeny reconstruction. The use of combined approaches will be emphasized to answer basic questions; individual and group projects will use morphological, ecological and molecular data to assess the diversity of algal populations and interpret that diversity in its ecological context.

Learn more about labs, application deadlines, tuition and funding opportunities here. Funding is also available through the PSA’s Hannah Croasdale Fellowships .

Instructors: Tom Mumford, Marine Agronomics LLC, tmumford@uw.edu, and Brian Wysor, Roger Williams University, bwysor@rwu.edu

Submit your application before February 1, 2015!

 

 

Be the Life of the Party with Algae

It’s that time of year again where you find yourself at parties and gatherings of friends, family, co-workers and, well, total strangers. Looking for the perfect way to not only be the life of the party, but also help move the algae industry forward?

Here are a few key talking points that will enable you to dazzle the crowd.

These cups we’re drinking from are recyclable. You know what else we should recycle? Carbon dioxide! 

The CO2 from power generation can be captured and used to grow algae that can be transformed into valuable fuels, foods and chemicals. This approach to combating climate change not only removes greenhouse gases from the atmosphere, it also displaces petroleum fuels. A barrel of algae oil is one more barrel of crude we can leave underground.

Don’t forget to remind your audience that the value of algae-based food, fuel and feeds can also be a source of revenue, which is not at all the case for greenhouse gas disposal options such as sequestration.

Don’t let the headlines fool you — low oil prices won’t hold back the algae industry.

First, few think that low oil prices will last for very long. In fact, now is the time to double down on biofuel technologies that can be the foundation of an energy supply that can insulate us from the volatility of crude prices.

Algae-based biofuels can be made here at home, can be grown on non-agricultural lands, and don’t need freshwater supplies that are dwindling all over the world.

Besides, what’s the result of more investment in oil drilling? We usually just get more access to more expensive oil. Thanks to biotechnology and American innovation, renewable fuel prices get lower every year.

Forget food vs. fuel — how about food AND fuel?

Technologies that use algae to make Omega-3 oils, astaxanthin, plastics and in water treatment services are proving their value as business models.

If anything, low gas prices could ignite consumer confidence and push up demand for sustainable products made from algae.

Perhaps the largest effect of non-fuel applications will be felt in the oceans. Algae fish feeds can reduce pressures on stocks needed to supply aquaculture operations that will become increasingly common as the world adapts to feed a growing population.

And for improved health algal Omega-3 oils are already on the market. This product is incredibly important, and deriving it from algae will save vital fisheries that are otherwise headed for depletion.

Big algae opportunity the Gulf & Southwest

As the cold sets in be sure to remind people that recent research from Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and Sapphire Energy has identified the most promising locations in America for commercial algae production, and the South is a big winner.

An analysis of climate, infrastructure availability of agriculture inputs found impressive potentials for cultivating algae along the Gulf of Mexico, especially on the Florida peninsula.

While algae can be commercially grown nationwide (check out the great success of BioProcess Algae), the research indicated that the southern coast of Texas, Louisiana and southern Arkansas are particularly attractive.

Turns out spring break students aren’t the only ones who love the sunshine.

And if you really want to impress your guests, mix up some algae cocktails. You can make a blue-green drink (recipe here) or one with actual algae (recipe here).

So make your final toast to a future where algae plays a role in smarter energy security, a stronger economy and a sustainable planet.

 

Happy Holidays!

Qualitas Health Launches First Algal Omega-3 Products

Algae are poised to make a big impact in a $3 billion health market–Omega-3 oils. Demand for Omega-3 oils–which are usually sourced from dwindling ocean-based fisheries–is skyrocketing, and the industry is scrambling for new and sustainable ways to make a product that can help improve human health worldwide. 

Algae may quickly fill the gap in supply. Qualitas Health, a company that has been scaling up its own research breakthroughs to commercial scale, announced last month the launch of the first consumer products based upon Almega PL, the company’s premium algal omega-3 oil.

Earlier this year Qualitas Health and Valicor Renewables announced a strategic partnership to accelerate the launch of high-EPA Omega-3 oil from algae, and it’s great to see such rapid progress.

Qualitas’ Almega PL offers vegetarian, EPA-rich, polar lipid-structured omega-3 oils that are easy to digest and readily incorporate into tissues where they can have the maximum impact on health. The oil is derived from non-GMO algae that are cultivated using natural sunlight, brackish water, non-arable land and low-energy processes. The process is sustainable, and does not impact marine ecosystems that are increasingly exploited to the point of permanent damage.

The availability of algae-derived Omega-3 oils is a significant milestone for algae technology development. A few years ago these products were just an idea based on what we knew of algae’s potential. With some smart research, productive partnerships and a valuable product, Qualitas Health is moving the entire algae industry forward.

Qualitas’ press release has more information about the recent announcement, and a video produced by Omega-3 Insights gives a first-hand look at how the company grows algae for processing into this important health supplement.

A number of scientific and regulatory organizations recommend people get about 250-500mg of Omega-3s per day, so if you are going to supplement be sure to use an algae-derived product!

ABO Welcomes Gas Technology Institute

We are thrilled to announce the Algae Biomass Organization’s newest corporate member – Gas Technology Institute (GTI)!

GTI joins the growing ranks of companies and organizations that are working with ABO to develop algae into a source of sustainable chemicals, fuels, food, and feed applications, as well as for high-value applications such as nutraceuticals, pharmaceuticals and cosmetics, among others.

Read more about GTI in ABO’s press release.