ABO Secures Unprecedented $136 Million For Algae and Related Projects — Deadlines Approaching

ABO’s ongoing work in Washington, DC, to educate Congress and federal agencies on the importance of robust algae research, development and demonstration has resulted in the release of an unprecedented series of funding opportunities for algae. Deadlines for letters of intent are fast approaching.
 
Four major algae funding opportunities totaling up to $136 million are now open for applications. The requests for applications (RFAs) come from three different offices across multiple federal agencies and represent the largest wave of potential algae funding in a decade. But hurry, letters of intent for these opportunities are due as soon as May 30.
 
This funding is the direct result of ABO’s work in Washington. This work would not be possible without your support of ABO and the Algae Biomass Summit.
 
 
 

Available Opportunities:

 
BioEnergy Engineering for Products Synthesis (up to $28 million): This multi-topic FOA from BETO seeks to develop highly efficient conversion processes for improving the affordability of fuels and products from biomass and waste streams. Awards for between $1 million and $2.5 million each. Letters of intent are due by May 30, 2018. Full applications are due by June 27, 2018.
 
Efficient Carbon Utilization in Algal Systems (up to $15 million): This research funding opportunity from BETO seeks proposals in two areas to improve the cost-competitiveness of algae-based biofuels and bioproducts. Awards for between $1.5 million and $2.5 million each to industry- and academia-led consortia. Letters of intent are due by May 30, 2018. Full applications are due by June 27, 2018. 
 
 
Novel Methods for Making Products from Carbon Dioxide or Coal (up to $13 million): This FOA from the DOE’s Office of Fossil Energy seeks to develop novel, marketable products using carbon dioxide or coal as a feedstock. Projects are sought for technologies that show: a positive life-cycle analysis; the potential to generate a marketable product; and significant advantages when compared to traditional products. Application closing date is June 25, 2018.
 
Agriculture and Food Research Initiative – Sustainable Agricultural Systems (up to $80 million): This RFA seeks from the USDA seeks approaches that will improve the supply of abundant, affordable, safe, nutritious, and accessible food, while providing sustainable opportunities for expansing of the bioeconomy through novel animal, crop, and forest products and supporting technologies. Letters of intent are due by June 27, 2018. Full applications are due by October 10, 2018.

Algae Biomass Organization Welcomes Four New Silver-Level Members Operating in Markets for Nutrition, Water Treatment and Power Generation

WASHINGTON, DC (May 24, 2018) The Algae Biomass Organization (ABO), the trade association for the algae industry, today announced AstaReal, Inc., Gross-Wen Technologies, the Orlando Utilities Commission, and SUEZ Water Technologies & Solutions as its newest Silver-level members. The four leaders in algae technology and product innovation join the growing ranks of companies and organizations that are working with ABO to develop algae into a sustainable source of countless products and services.

“We are seeing a greater diversity of applications for algae cultivation than ever before,” said Matt Carr, executive director of the Algae Biomass Organization. “We look forward to working with these four companies to build even bigger markets for the products and services that can be made more efficient, more sustainable and more effective with advanced algae technologies.”

AstaReal Inc, part of a world-wide AstaReal group located in Seattle, Washington is one of the leading producers of natural astaxanthin, a biomolecule critical to human and animal health. AstaReal is regarded as a pioneer in algae cultivation and in the early 1990’s became the first company in the world to commercially produce natural astaxanthin from microalgae. The company has invested heavily in clinical science and operates microalgae production facilities around the world including in the United States and Europe.

Iowa based Gross-Wen Technologies was founded in 2013 by Dr. Martin Gross and Dr. Zhiyou Wen to solve one of the world’s largest problems: water quality. Based on a technology developed at Iowa State University, the Gross-Wen approach harnesses a proprietary revolving algal biofilm system to cost-effectively recover nitrogen and phosphorus from wastewater. The carbon-negative process also produces algae biomass which can be sold as a slow releases fertilizer.

The Orlando Utilities Commission (OUC) is a municipal utility that provides water and electric services to the City of Orlando, Florida and parts of the surrounding area. In partnership with the U.S. Department of Energy, MicroBio Engineering, Inc., and other ABO members, OUC is working to demonstrate how algae cultivation can be used to capture carbon emissions from coal power production at its Stanton Energy Center.

About the Algae Biomass Organization

The Algae Biomass Organization (ABO) is a 501 c(6) non-profit whose mission is to promote the development of viable commercial markets for renewable and sustainable commodities derived from algae. Its membership is comprised of people, companies, and organizations across the value chain. More information about ABO, including its leadership, membership, costs, benefits, and members and their affiliations, is available at the website: www.algaebiomass.org.

ABO Internships Available for Summer and Fall of 2018

Students – Are you interested in doing more for your industry while completing your degree? Help define the algae sector of today and shape the industry of tomorrow as an Algae Biomass Organization volunteer virtual intern. 

Internships of 8-12 weeks are available and are completely online. Interns serve a vital role by assisting ABO with industry and policy research, social media and communications. Interns leave their experience with a new understanding of the interconnections between research, industry, government and policy, along with exciting new insights and connections. 

Intern positions available for summer and fall of 2018

Individuals interested in the ABO volunteer virtual internship program should send a brief cover letter and CV or resume to Barb Scheevel, bscheevel@algaebiomass.org.

Algae Is on A Roll in Congress

At the beginning of 2018 nobody would have expected that the algae industry was about to go on a roll in Congress.  The Trump administration proposed big cuts in bioenergy research across the board, and Congress was looking at huge tax cuts that would need to be funded.

Yet all the angst in the bioeconomy community obscured at least one surprising trend: The nascent algae industry had built up surprising support from all quarters, and it was about to go into action.

The first hint started with the two-year budget bill signed by President Trump in February that included new carbon capture initiatives, followed by bipartisan support for a bill to codify algae cultivation into American agriculture, which, in turn, set the table for an appropriations bill that allocated millions for algae R&D, including some increases over last year.

Spurred on by members of Congress interested in supporting algae operations in their own districts, a new breed of savvy tech entrepreneurs, and the members of the Algae Biomass Organization, the United States is still part of the global race to develop algae technologies that can deliver solutions for everything from food production to low-carbon energy.

Here’s how the supporters of algae put their imprint on policy in the first few months of 2018:

A Big Tax Credit for Carbon Capture and Use

The February spending deal was a last-minute effort to avoid a government shutdown, and when it came together one of the winners was the algae industry’s long-time interests in carbon capture and use. The agreement included a provision to establish a $35 per ton tax incentive for carbon captured and recycled from power plants or industrial facilities using algae or other biologically-based CCU systems. 

Known as the Section 45Q Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) tax credit, this incentive to capture and reuse greenhouse gases was previously only available to geologic storage and enhanced oil recovery projects.

CCU supporters not only got their new applications to qualify, they also saw the rate increase from $10/ton to $35/ton, and extended it for 12 years.

And in a nod to the future, Congress allowed air capture facilities to qualify, meaning that even the most aspirational plans to suck CO2 directly out of the air now have policy support in the United States.

Expanding the universe of carbon dioxide sources that could qualify for the 45Q tax credit had support from both Republicans and Democrats, with early sponsorship coming from Sens. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.), John Barrasso (R-Wyo.), Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) and Heidi Heitkamp (D-N.D.), as well as the entire Congressional Algae Caucus.

And, as usual, Algae Biomass Organization members from red and blue states formed much of the grass-roots support from across the ideological spectrum.

The Algae Agriculture Act Brings Algae into the Mainstream

Any high-tech industry of similar size would have been considered the 45Q credit a victory of the year. For algae supporters, it was only the beginning of a plan to position algae for success in the future, and in the near-term.

Less than two months later a group in the House introduced the Algae Agriculture Act, a bill that would lay the first groundwork for algae cultivation to become a mainstay of American farming.

With sights set on the upcoming Farm Bill, the Algae Agriculture Act would push the U.S. Department of Agriculture to support algae much as it does other crops. Among the goals:

Prioritize algae R&D for agriculture: The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s core R&D funding program, the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, would see its priorities updated to include algae and its applications in agriculture. The same would apply to the Foundation for Food and Agriculture, which supports innovative science in food and agriculture challenges.. Additionally, a USDA Algae Research Program proposed by Rep. Neal Dunn (R-FL-2) would boost R&D for algae cultivation in ecosystem support, nutrient management, soil heath, rural manufacturing and on-farm applications.

Bring carbon revenue to rural areas: The bill would give rural electric cooperatives explicit eligibility for (CUU) projects that grow algae, introducing a new revenue source for farm communities in nearly every state.

Crop disaster assistance for algae: The USDA would be directed to begin planning for a program that could insulate algae cultivation from natural disasters — much like any other crop – to help algae farmers attract more investment and make expansion plans. 

Like the 45Q credit, the Algae Agriculture Act also enjoys support from a broad political spectrum. Introduced by Democrat Scott Peters (CA-52), the bill has so far attracted sponsorship from Andy Biggs (R-AZ-5), Derek Kilmer (D-WA-6),Darin LaHood (R-IL-18), Michelle Lujan Grisham (D-NM-1), and Matt Cartwright (D-PA-17).

Unlike the 45Q credit, the Algae Agriculture Act isn’t yet law, and we’ll be watching closely how it changes as Farm Bill discussions continue.

Millions More for Research

The Algae Agriculture Act would put algae on course to make its mark on the American farming economy, but algae’s supporters in Congress and members of the ABO were also working to give the industry a boost in the near term.

Just days after the Algae Agriculture Act was introduced, a new spending bill was passed that directed millions of dollars into algae research and commercial development, with the first jolt of funding expected to come as early as this summer.

Specifically, the bill directs:

  • $30 million for algae R&D to come from the Department of Energy’s Biotechnology Office
  • $12 million for carbon use and reuse technology development within the DOE’s Office of Fossil Energy. Remarkably, this is a 20% increase over last year.

A new CCU tax credit and a long-term plan to bring algae into the agricultural mainstream would be feathers in the cap for any corner of the vast bioenergy sector, but to also score an immediate funding increase demonstrates that the advocates for algae have a plan. They are making it happen by winning support from members of Congress of all stripes who see algae’s potential to provide jobs, economic value, as well as food and energy security.

What’s Next? More Algae, Everywhere

It is clear that algae is going to have an interesting year. One question that everybody is asking: who will be in a position to take advantage?

One clear theme in all of these policies is that they are largely product-neutral. Some of the DOE support does target biofuels, but the policy language acknowledges that the same technologies will be useful in developing algae co-products in food, nutrition, materials, water treatment and dozens of other markets.

The CCU credits incent algae production for almost any use, and the Algae Agriculture Act supports every market for algae biomass, and even on-farm services that algae can provide.

The success of the product-neutral policy approach is already bearing fruit. Recently there has been an explosion of algae applications on the market, many of them made possible by the technologies developed with the same policy strategy we are seeing take shape in 2018. Except, this time, the policy support is even more wide-ranging.

As a result, we can expect advanced algae cultivation to continue its expansion. Algae biomass is going to become more available than ever before, and that means even more product applications.

It’s clear that as new spending enters the R&D pipeline, and as the new Farm Bill comes together, any company in the business of food, nutritional products, animal feed, energy and countless other products would be wise to open a corporate division on algae.

After all, despite some stiff headwinds, this crop of the future continues to win supporters on its march into the mainstream.

 

$78 Million Announced for Bioenergy Research Funding–Algae Included!

This month the Department of Energy announced two funding opportunities of interest to ABO members that will support early-stage bioenergy research and development under the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy’s Bioenergy Technologies Office:

  • BioEnergy Engineering for Products Synthesis (up to $28 million): This multi-topic FOA seeks to develop highly efficient conversion processes for improving the affordability of fuels and products from biomass and waste streams.  BETO anticipates funding 14-28 awards for between $1 million and $2.5 million each.  Letters of intent are due by May 30, 2018.  Full applications are due by June 27, 2018. The FOA seeks early-stage research proposals that cover several topics pertaining to conversion processes: 
    • Innovative catalysts for thermochemical processing
    • New biological approaches for higher conversion efficiency
    • Novel bio-based products that outperform conventional materials (e.g., plastics, polymers, etc.)
    • Conversion of wet organic wastes to biofuels, bioproducts, and biopower
    • Conversion of carbon dioxide (CO2) to make fuels and products
    • New processes to break down lignin and synthesize higher value biofuels and bioproducts
  • Efficient Carbon Utilization in Algal Systems (up to $15 million): This research funding opportunity seeks proposals in two areas to improve the cost-competitiveness of algae-based biofuels and bioproducts. BETO anticipates funding 6-10 awards for between $1.5 million and $2.5 million each to industry- and academia-led consortia. Letters of intent are due by May 30, 2018. Full applications are due by June 27, 2018. Topic areas include: 
    • Increase the productivity of algae by improving uptake and conversion of waste CO2emissions, such as from a power plant or industrial facility
    • Develop new, affordable technologies to capture CO2 directly from ambient air to enhance algal growth

Learn more about these opportunities, and others, at the BETO Funding Opportunities web page.