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    Which technologies are likely to enable us to meet

    longer-term sustainable biofuels targets for

    transport?By GenetiFuel (Howard Siow, Dr Desmond Lun, Lawrence Auffray)

    August 2011

    Government mandates and energy independence is driving the rapid commercialisation of

    sustainable biofuel technologies. This paper looks at which of the current technologies is

    likely to meet the sustainability, energy independence, total cost and scale requirements to

    replace fossil fuels.

    Energy from the combustion offossil fuels is the largest source of air pollution

    and greenhouse gases. These environmental implications of fossil fuels have

    generated political pressure to diversify fuel sources. Among the alternatives to

    fossil energy are renewable (including biofuels) and nuclear energy. While the

    high capital intensity of power generation means that changes in the fuel mix

    occur only very gradually, the proportion of power generation using modern

    renewable technologies is projected to grow rapidly from 1% in 2005 to 6% in

    2030, including biofuels (source: OECD). Toughening climate change policies are

    likely to accelerate.i

    The Market for Liquid FuelAccording the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) 2009 Fact Book, the world consumes 84 million

    barrels of fossil fuels (BBL) per day, or 13.3bn litres of oil per day. Of this, USA consumes 18.7M

    BBL/day, Europe consumes 13.6M BBL/day, and China consumes 8.2M BBL/day

    ii

    . By 2030,global oil consumption is expected to increase by more than 20% to over 100 million BBL per day iii.

    0

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    30

    China India EU USA

    2030

    2020

    2010

    2002

    Source: Algae 2020 Study, Emerging Markets Online Consulting Services, IAE, EIA forecasts

    Global Crude Oil Demand Forecast to 2030Millions Barrels per Day

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    Governments are determined to develop alternatives to fossil fuels. Instability in oil producing

    countries has increased oil supply and price uncertainty, and local inflation. Voters are increasingly

    looking towards governments sustainability credentials.

    A 2010 study by McKinsey found that government mandates are the key drivers towards

    production of new biofuels.

    0

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    1990 2000 2005 2010 2015 1020 2025 2030

    BrzailIndia

    Russia

    China

    Source: Energy Information Administration, Goldman Sachs Global Markets Institute

    Chinas energy consumption projected to exceed 20% of worldconsumption, thus outpacing the rest of the BRICs % of World, Per dollar of GDP

    Other

    Need for

    sustainable fuels

    Development of

    affordable fuels

    Improved

    energey security

    Mandate

    Regulatory

    Source: Oberman R, Sustainable Biofuels Growth: Hurdles and Outcomes (2010)

    Top Drivers for Biofuels GrowthPercent

    31%20%

    19%19%

    11%

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    In the USA, federal law requires that 36 billion gallons (equivalent of 136 billion litres/year, 2.74

    million BBL/day, about 10% of their oil consumption) of renewable biofuels be consumed annually

    by 2022, and that no more than 15 billion gallons of that be from corn ethanol.

    Region Key biofuels and clean energy policy drivers

    Brazil 1) Ethanol: National Alcohol Program (PROALCOOL) requiring aminimum of 25% anhydrous ethanol. In practice, most vehicles inBrazil are now flex-fuel capable for up to an 85% blend of ethanol(E85) and some can run on E100.

    2) Diesel: Mandated minimum 5% biodiesel blend.

    European Union 1) Diesel: Directive for Renewable Energy (DRE), establishing anEU-wide binding target of 10% of transport energy from renewablesources by 2020, with implementation handled by Member States.

    2) Jet fuel: Proposal that all flights to Europe - not just flightsassociated with European carriers - be required to comply withEuropean cap and trade regulations beginning in 2012.

    United States 1) Blendstock: Volumetric excise tax credit (VEETC) - "Blenders'Credit" currently set at $0.45 per gallon for ethanol and $0.60 pergallon for advanced alcohols

    2) All biofuels: RFS2 mandate for 36 billion gallons of biofuels for

    0

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    30

    35

    40

    '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '12 '14 '16 '18 '20 '22

    Corn ethanol Advanced biofuels

    Source: Energy Information Administration; 2009 Ethanol Industry Outlookhttp://blog.oregonlive.com/environment_impact/2009/06/mandate.jpg

    Ethanol and Advanced Biofuel Mandate in USAFederal law requires that 36 billion gallons of renewable biofuels be consumed annually by 2022and that no more than 15 billion gallons of that be from corn ethanol.Federal mandated totals (Billions gallons)

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    road transportation by 2022, with associated RINS ranging in valuebased on the type of biofuel and market conditions.

    3) California's legislature codified the state's renewable portfoliostandard, which calls for 33% of electricity to come fromrenewables by 2020. There has also been discussion aboutincreasing the RPS to 40%.

    China Under its 12th Five Year Plan, China increased its solar installedcapacity targets to 10GW by 2015 and 20GW in 2020, withdiscussions about a potential 50GW target by 2020. The country'snuclear plans are being re-examined, but further development willlikely proceed.

    Germany Germany suspended production at 7 nuclear plants, representingabout 25% of its nuclear capacity. Germany also targets 80% ofpower from renewable sources by 2050.

    India Solar installed capacity target moved to 67GW from 20GW by

    2020.

    Italy Increased solar installed capacity target from 8GW to 23GW by2016.

    Japan Reducing nuclear's share of the overall generation mix andincreasing solar subsidies to accelerate installations ahead ofsummer 2011.

    Increases in consumption and these government mandates for biofuels has driven significant

    investment into biotechnology, including techniques that can helpiv: Increase biomass yield/ha while reducing the needs for production inputs;

    Improve crop quality (higher biofuel yields);

    Contribute to also grow energy crops in areas with marginal conditions;

    Develop efficient micro-organisms and enzymes to convert the (hemi)cellulose to sugars,

    which can then be fermented into biofuel; and

    Convert agricultural waste into biofuels.

    These techniques cannot be scaled up economically or without jeopardising food security.

    Yanosek and Victor argue that the rush to meet the collective 2020 targets are only developing

    short-term solutionsv that may not actually drive us towards the ultimate objective of supporting asustainable replacement to fossil fuels. For example:

    Arable farming land and feedstock being used to produce fuel crops like sugar cane, corn

    and wheat.

    Subsistence farmers in Africa being displaced to plant poisonous Jatropha plants.

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    Current BioFuel TechnologiesThere are generally 2 types of biofuel production:

    1. Biofuel generated from farmed crops. Sugarcane (Brazil), Corn (USA and China) or

    Wheat (Europe) crops are harvested and the sugars are converted to ethanol in a chemical

    process. The cost is as low as 23c/litre in Brazil. The future is to scale and lower costs by

    making the process more efficient and by using cheaper biomass materials or developingtechnology to extract sugars from cellulosic feedstock (switchgrass) that can grow in less

    arable land.

    This technology is currently cost competitive with fossil fuels and can scale up to a

    maximum of 50% of current fossil fuel capacity. It is, however, highly sensitive to the price

    of raw materials (crops) and has to compete for arable farmland.

    The goal of crop-based biofuels is to be able to economically produce biofuel from

    cellulosic feedstock like switchgrass plants that can be cultivated on low-quality non-farm

    land, and thus not compete with arable farmland. The risk with this technology is thepotential environmental issues of farming large areas of this previously uncultivated land,

    and the significant scientific challenge to economically utilize cellulosic feedstock.

    2. Biofuel generated from Algae. Algae is cultivated in open ponds or photobioreactors

    (PBS), harvested and refined into biofuels. Algae seems an idealistic futuristic concept,

    where some organisms are placed in waste water or sea water, multiplies and grows and

    consumes sunlight, CO2 (potentially next to a coal power station), nutrients and generates

    an energy dense biofuel. But we are a long way off from it being commercial without

    significant subsides. The lowest current cost is $2.37/litre in open ponds, and $6.30/litre in

    PBS. The future is to scale and lower costs by reducing the capital and operating costs ofrunning PBS and using synthetic biology to do almost all the processing and refining inside

    the algae organism.

    Although this technology is not currently cost competitive with fossil fuels and in its relative

    infant stages (few commercial scale projects), algal biofuel has the potential for significant

    scale and does not compete with arable farmland if technological hurdles can be

    overcome.

    The challenge of algae-based biofuel production is to be able to economically harvest the

    algae mass from the ponds or bioreactors, and economically extract the oil from the algae.

    Synthetic biologyvi aims to create algal-based organisms that can efficiently consume

    sunlight and carbon dioxide and convert it directly into high quality biofuels or even jet fuel

    without the need for expensive refining and processing. This technology has already been

    proven to work by GenetiFuel with biologically similar E. colibacteria, which does not

    naturally produce biofuel.

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    Biofuel generated from farmed cropsSome studies have shown that scaling up ethanol produced from farmed crops in Brazil have the

    ability to replace 50% of fossil fuels vii.

    Source: Brunner G, Niton Capital, Biofuels and Sustainability (2009)

    There is enough land for biofuels but 80% lies in the South

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    Ethanol made from refined farming crops can be produced from Brazil sugar cane for as little as

    23c/litre. McKinsey researchviii suggests that by 2020, the cost of producing a litre of ethanol in

    Brazil, shipping that litre to Western Europe, paying all relevant tariffs and taxes, and delivering it

    to the consumer will be roughly $0.73far less than todays prevailing price of $1.60 for a litre of

    gasoline in the European Union:

    Wheat/corn

    Sugarcane

    Agricultural

    residues

    Energy crops

    Forestry

    Total

    Source: FAPRI, FAOSTAT, Riese J, McKinsey, Beyond the Hype Perspectives on Growth inthe Biofuels Industry (2007)

    Enough biofeedstock to replace 50% of fuelIncremental Feedstock Potential 2020 (Millions tons)

    200800

    1,000900

    9003.900

    Enough for 360 billion gallons

    Brazil(sugarcane)

    USA (corn)

    EU (wheat)

    China (corn)

    Raw materials Conversion

    Source: National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), SRI, McKinsey analysis

    Crop-based Ethanol Production CostUS$ per liter (2007)

    0.18 0.05

    0.48

    0.25 0.13 0.390.34 0.18 0.52

    0.23

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    Biofuels from farmed crops is scaling up quickly with

    downstream consequencesAt current food price and crude oil price levels, farm land used to produce crop-based biofuels is

    set to increase rapidly. Emerging technologies will probably make it possible to produce ethanol or

    other drop in fuels more cheaply with cellulose derived from other feedstocks, such as

    switchgrass (which can grow in a broader range of habitats, including relatively inhospitable ones).

    These technologies will require significant scientific breakthrough before becoming commercially

    viable within the next 10-20 years. Biofuels from residues from other agricultural crops may be

    cost effective at producing 5-10% of fuel requirements. For example, in China it may be possible

    to produce ethanol from rice straw at a cost of about $0.16 a litre. ix

    Source: Centro de Estudos Avancados em Economia Aplicada (CEPEA), University of Sao Paulo, FNP, National Renewable EnergyLaboratory (NREL), McKinsey analysis

    Cost to produce 1 litre of ethanol in Brazil and export to WesternEurope (2020)US$ per litre

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    As the cost of oil increases and to meet government mandates, there is an increased drive on

    production of biofuel crops. However in scaling up from 71.5 million litres/day to potentially 13

    billion litres per day (183 times increase in production to replace fossil fuels), the potential impact

    on the land and environment to achieve such large increases in crops in South America and

    Africax has to be questioned. This intensive farming is driving the use of arable farming land or

    rainforests in some of the worlds poorest nations to produce oil for the worlds richest nations.

    The key challenges with crop-based biofuel are:1. Competition for food-based agriculture for arable farmland, including political challenges

    around food prices and water security/shortages

    xi

    2. Competition for feedstock from a growing list of market entrants.

    3. Increasing feedstock costs and feedstock price volatility. According to the World Bank, the

    cost of maize (up 84 percent), sugar (up 62 percent), wheat (up 55 percent) and soybean

    oil (up 47 percent) have now risen to near record highs from mid-2010 to mid-2011. xii

    4. Technology to extract cellulosic feedstock is still in infancy, and is a very difficult scientific

    problem. It is predicted to be solved by 2020, but like nuclear fision (power from water), it

    is still a large unknown.

    5. Government mandates for non-crop based biofuels

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    Biofuel generated from AlgaeAlgae at first take is an ideal organism for creating feedstocks to manufacture biofuel. Algae:

    Blooms when exposed to sunlight, carbon dioxide, and some basic inexpensive nutrients

    Grows almost anywhere, even on sewage or salt water, and does not require fertile land or

    food crops

    Minimizes competition with conventional agriculture Can capture/recycle stationary emissions of carbon dioxide, wastewater and excess heat

    from power stations and other heavy polluting industries, and provide carbon creditsxiii

    Compatible with integrated production of fuels and co-products within biorefineriesxiv

    Can produce other higher value products (Singh and Gu, 2010) and jet fuels

    It has high area productivity and one of the fastest growing plants in the world. The

    sugarcane plant, which flourishes only in tropical climates like those of Brazil, produces

    6,000 liters of ethanol per hectare, compared with only 3,500 liters from corn.xv

    Corn

    Soybean

    Peanut

    Canola

    Rapeseed

    Jatropha

    Karanji (Pongamia pinnata)

    Cconut

    Oil palm

    Microalgae (70% oil by wt.)

    Microalgae (30% oil by wt.)

    Source: Chisti

    Typical oil yields from the various biomass sources in ascending orderOil yield (litres/hectare)

    1724461,0591,1901,1901,8922,5902,6895,950

    136,90058,700

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    Algae has significant technological challengesThe biggest challenge of algal-based biofuels is cost and complexities in scaling up. Algae biofuel

    producers are working towards finding an algal strain with a high-lipid content, fast growing, easy

    to harvest, and reduction in very high extraction and processing costs. Because of these

    significant challenges, few large scale commercial projects existxvi.

    Current R&D challenges with Algal Biofuels technology arexvii:

    1. Feedstock

    Algal Biology: strain selection and genetic manipulation for "best" breeds

    Algal Cultivation: evaluate cultivation technologies (open, closed, hybrid, coastal,

    photobioreactor, heterotrophic, mixotrophic) for cost, scalability and environmental

    impactxviii

    Harvesting and Dewatering: Evaluate cost and sustainability of approaches

    (sedimentation, flocculation, dissolved air floatation, filtration, centrifugation, mechanized

    seaweed harvesting)

    2. Conversion

    Extraction and Fractionation (eg. sonication, selective extraction): minimise waste and

    energy to achieve high yield of desired intermediates; preserve co-products

    Fuel Conversion (eg. thermochemical conversion, anaerobic digestion): improve

    efficiency, redice contaminants and emissions

    Co-products (high value chemicals and materials, like bioplastics, animal feed, biogas,

    fertilizers, industrial enzymes): improve extraction and recovery

    3. Infrastructure

    Distribution and Utilization: Establishing supply chain and meeting regulatory

    classification requirements Resources and siting: Integrate production systems with wastewater treatment, CO2

    and land resource requirements

    Algae-based biofuels is waiting for a disruptive technology to overcome these technological issues

    and significantly improve the economics.

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    The next generation of Algae biofuel technologyTo overcome these challenges, the future of Algae-based biofuels is to create a completely new

    algae organism, using synthetic biology that can directly produce and secrete finished biofuels and

    high value products. Synthetic biology allows organisms to be genetically engineered on a large

    scale to fundamentally modify their behaviour. As opposed to traditional genetic engineering,

    which typically involves modifying single genes to improve traits, synthetic biology usesengineering principles to modify whole systems of genes, allowing fundamental changes in

    function. Synthetic biology is made possible by rapid advancements in genomic technologies for

    sequencing and synthesizing DNA that are revolutionizing biology and biological engineering.

    The aim of synthetic biology for biofuel production is to manufacture an organism capable of

    harnessing solar energy to convert carbon dioxide to fuels such as biodiesel, biogasoline, and

    biojet fuel at maximum efficiency and of secreting the fuel into the organisms growth media so that

    it can be easily skimmed from the bioreactor. This would eliminate the major costs associated with

    algae harvesting and extraction, and also refining the algal oil into finished products. The only

    major process cost would be the cost of running photobioreactors to grow the organism. Though

    the technology still requires significant development, it is the most viable candidate for producing

    biofuel in a way that is scalable, sustainable, and cost competitive to fossil fuels.

    Genetifuel is taking a rational design approach to synthetic biology that uses computer modelling

    to identify how organisms need to be modified for biofuel production. We have proven our

    approach on engineering the bacterium E. colito efficiently produce fatty acids, which are close

    chemical relatives of biodiesel, biogasoline, and biojet fuel. E. coliconverts sugars to fatty acids,

    which Is not ultimately scalable because the sugars need to be obtained from food crops.

    Genetifuel is now working on applying our rational design approach to a strain of blue-green algae,

    allowing direct, high-efficiency conversion of carbon dioxide to fatty acids using solar energy.

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    The goal of synthetic biology algae is to achieve large scale biofuels with low capital costs that can

    produce biofuel below the cost of mining and refining fossil fuel-based petrol. However an

    important advantage of synthetic biology Algae is that the algae-based organisms can also

    produce a number of other amino fatty acid based products very cost effectively. Companies such

    as Amyris has taken advantage of this to profitably make products at up to $4 per litre.

    Algae 2020 study has reported the estimated costs to produce algae oils and algae biodiesel

    today between $9 and $25 per gallon in ponds, and $15$40 in photobioreactors (PBRs). Sincealgae production systems are a complex composite of several sub-sets of systems (i.e. production,

    harvesting, extraction, drying systems), reducing the number of steps in algae biofuels production

    is essential to providing easier, better, and lower cost systems.

    A crucial economic challenge for algae producers is to discover low cost oil extraction and

    harvesting methods. With the advent of cheaper photobioreactors (PBRs), these costs are likely to

    come down significantly in the next few years. In the present scenario, reducing these costs is

    critical to algae biofuel companies for its successful commercial implementation. Extraction

    systems with estimates up to $15 per gallon of oil produced depending on the extraction method

    can be less than cost-effective. For example, Origin Oil has developed a technology to combine

    harvesting and extraction systems into a single process that is designed to reduce system

    complexity and costs for algae producers. Another example is to employ a method that uses algae

    cells as mini-processors and refineries in a process referred to as milking the algae that will

    consume CO2 and excrete hydrocarbon fuels directly.

    Source: Goldman Sachs Research

    Higher value products that can be manufactured from synthetic biology AlgaeMarket size (billions, log scale)

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    One company, Algae to Energy, uses a patented system from Missing Link Technology that can

    extract algae oil from 0.08 up to $0.29 per gallon (depending on the species used) compared to

    other algae extraction methods ranging from $2 a gallon up to $12 per gallon.

    Another example is a harvesting technology from Algae Venture Systems that costs less than

    $0.30 per gallon of oil harvested compared to traditional centrifuge technologies which can cost up

    to $1 or more per gallon. Cost reductions in algae production systems are essential for algaeproducers to establish economically sustainable and profitable enterprises.

    Examples of this include Arizona States bluegreen algae that excrete a kerosene type of jet fuel

    and Algenols bluegreen algae that excrete ethanol fuel directly. There are also a few species of

    algae that will naturally excrete oils from the cells. By milking the algae, these algal micro-

    refineries help to bypass the harvesting, extraction and refining systems all together by excreting

    forms of biofuels directly from the cells. These methods have the capability to significantly reduce

    production costs, and help to simplify complex processes for emerging algae producers and

    customers of

    new algae biofuels production systems.

    Finally the co-production of some more valuable fraction and their marketing is also important for

    the success. Even with algae species with up to 50% oil content, the additional 50% of the

    biomass remains. This biomass fraction contains valuable proteins for livestock, poultry and fish

    feed additives valued from $800 up to $2500 per tonne.xix

    ConclusionSome groups have claimed that current crop-based biofuels technologies not only can be

    produced for less than fossil-fuel based fuel, but can also be scaled up to supply perhaps 50% of

    global oil demands. These economics means government mandates for biofuels are likely to

    continue to drive the conversion of food crops to oil crops. Given forecasted severe global food

    and water shortages and already worrying signs about the displacement of food crops to produce

    more profitable oil crops, the trend is moving towards biofuel sources such as microalgae, which

    are not crop based.

    Microalgae still faces significant scale and production cost constraints. Despite aggressive claims

    to be able to scale up and achieve costs of between US$0.50 to US$1.00 per litre, the algae

    biofuel industry is still perhaps 10 years and many hundreds of millions of dollars of research awayfrom achieving its scale and cost objectives.

    Companies like GenetiFuel are trying to solve these significant issues by engineering new algae-

    based organisms that can organically produce finished biofuel or oil products. While these

    technologies appear to be able to achieve cost and scale requirements, there are still scalability

    issues that will need to be solved over a 5 year time period.

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    Authors

    GenetiFuel

    GenetiFuel is in the process of raising US$3.5m for building a pilot of its biofuels using synthetic

    biology.

    Lawrence Auffray

    CEO, GenetiFuel

    [email protected]

    Ph. +61 401 164 860 (Australia)

    Lawrence has over 20 years business experience primarily in the energy sector ranging from

    commercial & financial advisory, business management, project management,

    consulting/strategy, regulatory, policy, risk business planning and operations.

    He is a member of the Infrastructure Partnership Australia Energy and Sustainability TaskforceAs an Engineer and recognised leader in the sector has advised many clients in moving to a low

    carbon economy

    Dr Desmond Lun

    Chief Scientist, GenetiFuel

    Desmond started research at MIT in 2002 (10 years of research experience) and is a recognized

    expert in complex systems engineering and synthetic biology.

    He is currently Associate Professor, Department of Computer Science and Center forComputational and Integrative Biology, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

    He received his PhD in electrical engineering and computer science from the Massachusetts

    Institute of Technology (MIT) and did postdoctoral training in genetics at Harvard Medical School.

    Desmond has published 15 peer-reviewed journal papers.

    Howard Siow

    Strategy, GenetiFuel

    Howard has 7 years management consulting experience in the Energy & Utilities sector with

    PriceWaterhouseCoopers, Accenture, AGL, Energex, Energy Australia and TXU (TRUenergy / SP

    Ausnet).

    His experience includes large energy reform, energy business model review, process and

    technology change and sales & marketing.

    Howard has experience in managing and growing successful startup companies.

    iGoldman Sachs, Clean Energy Report (2011)

    ii

    CIA World Fact Book (2009), https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2174rank.htmliiiAlgae 2020 Study, Emerging Markets Online Consulting Services, IAE, EIA Forecasts

    ivCarrez D, European Association for Bioindustries, Biofuels in Europe (2007)

    vVictor D, Yanosek K, The Crises in Clean Energy (2011) (http://www.foreignaffairs.com/print/67876)

    viVictor D, Yanosek K, The Crises in Clean Energy (2011) (http://www.foreignaffairs.com/print/67876)

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    vii

    Riese J, McKinsey, Beyond the Hype Perspectives on Growth in the Biofuels Industry (2007)viii

    Assis V, McKinsey Quarterly: Positioning Brazil for biofuels success (2007),

    https://www.mckinseyquarterly.com/Food_Agriculture/Strategy_Analysis/Positioning_Brazil_for_biofuels_success_1

    950ix

    Assis V, McKinsey Quarterly: Positioning Brazil for biofuels success (2007),

    https://www.mckinseyquarterly.com/Food_Agriculture/Strategy_Analysis/Positioning_Brazil_for_biofuels_success_1

    950x

    FAPRI, FAOSTAT, expert interviews, McKinsey analysisxihttps://reader009.{domain}/reader009/html5/0514/5af988363152d/5af9883dcab9e.jpg

    xiiThe World Bank, Near Record High Food Prices Keep Poorest People on the Edge (August 2011),

    http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/NEWS/0,,contentMDK:22982095~pagePK:34370~piPK:34424~theSiteP

    K:4607,00.htmlxiii

    US Department of Energy, National Algal Biofuels Technology Roadmap (2010)xiv

    US Department of Energy, National Algal Biofuels Technology Roadmap (2010)xv

    Assis V, McKinsey Quarterly: Positioning Brazil for biofuels success (2007),

    https://www.mckinseyquarterly.com/Food_Agriculture/Strategy_Analysis/Positioning_Brazil_for_biofuels_success_1

    950xvi

    Ribeiro L, Innovative Biofuel Technologies: Microalgae Analysis (2011)xvii

    US Department of Energy, National Algal Biofuels Technology Roadmap (2010)xviii

    US Department of Energy, National Algal Biofuels Technology Roadmap (2010)xixSingh J, Gu S, Commercialization potential of microalgae for biofuels production (2010)