Saturday, April 06, 2013
Genetically Engineering Microbes Are Back
By Henry Curtis
“At a
special open house event at the USDA Pacific Basin Agricultural Research Center
(PBARC), Gov. Neil Abercrombie today presented a $200,000 check from the state
Department of Agriculture that will go toward the Hilo center’s zero waste
biofuel and high protein feed program.
PBARC along with Florida-based BioTork Hawaii
LLC have invested more than $1 million to successfully develop an economically
sustainable zero waste conversion project producing biofuel and high protein
animal feed from unmarketable papaya. The conversion process takes 14 days to
cycle in a heterotrophic environment, meaning no sunlight is needed using
organically optimized algae/fungi developed and patented by BioTork.
The state’s $200,000 investment will assist
PBARC in moving the project to pilot scale as a prelude to commercial
production. The State of Hawaii’s Agribusiness Development Corporation (ADC)
will become a venture partner to globally export the rapid conversion
technology in association with PBARC and BioTork Hawaii LLC.”
EVOLUGATE “PRESS KIT” (2010): Several genetically modified micro-organisms have been developed to produce biofuel such as ethanol, butanol, methanol and other chemicals from biomass. Properties of those biofuel producing micro-organisms such as yield, temperature resistance, pH sensitivity, ethanol, butanol, methanol or other chemicals tolerance could be improved by selection in the Evolugator TM to reduce the final product cost. EVOLUGATE contracted with BioTork LLC the exclusive license of its proprietary continuous culture technology for every biofuel application."
BioTork, the spin-off company recently created
from Evolugate to capitalize on the Biofuels opportunity.
In 2005 the Board of
Agriculture approved a proposal by Mera Pharmaceuticals to import genetically
engineered microalgae to make pharmaceuticals. Many groups including Life of the Land testified in opposition. Worried about escaping GE
microorganisms. a group of community and environmental groups successfully fought to block the importation.
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Comments:
Doesnʻt this more or less send a message that anything can just be purchased here from the prostiliticals?
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Doesnʻt this more or less send a message that anything can just be purchased here from the prostiliticals?
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Requiring those Captcha codes at least temporarily, in the hopes that it quells the flood of comment spam I've been receiving.