Remove Idaho Remove Renewable Remove Universal Remove Waste
article thumbnail

ARPA-E awarding $39M to 16 projects to grow the domestic critical minerals supply chain

Green Car Congress

The selected projects, led by universities, national laboratories, and the private sector aim to develop commercially scalable technologies that will enable greater domestic supplies of copper, nickel, lithium, cobalt, rare earth elements, and other critical elements. Columbia University. Harvard University.

Supplies 345
article thumbnail

USDA awards $5.6M to 220 biofuel producers

Green Car Congress

These awards include: The National Biodiesel Board and Regents of the University of Idaho received $768,000 and $192,000 respectively, through the Biodiesel Fuel Education Program. South Dakota State University (SDSU) received $2.3 a producer of biodiesel from waste vegetable oil, received $8,655. produced 6.9

article thumbnail

DOE to award $35M to 24 projects to support early-stage, innovative technologies and solutions in advanced manufacturing

Green Car Congress

These projects were selected under an Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) Advanced Manufacturing Office funding opportunity, focused on advanced materials, advanced processes, and modeling and analysis tools for materials and manufacturing. Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois. Colorado State University.

article thumbnail

2016 Billion Ton Report shows US could sustainably produce at least 1B tons biomass by 2040 for bioeconomy

Green Car Congress

New to the 2016 report is novel assessments of potential biomass supplies from algae, from new energy crops (miscanthus, energy cane, eucalyptus), and from municipal solid waste. These renewable resources include agricultural, forestry, and algal biomass, as well as waste. billion tons under a high-yield scenario.

2016 150
article thumbnail

DOE to award up to $13M to four advanced biofuels projects

Green Car Congress

Hydrocarbon-based biofuels made from non-food feedstocks, waste materials, and algae can directly replace gasoline and other fuels. DOE is continuing to pursue the development of these renewable biofuels, with the goal of producing cost-competitive drop-in biofuels at $3 per gallon by 2017. University of Oklahoma (up to $4 million).

Oklahoma 199
article thumbnail

DOE researchers develop energy-efficient, cost-effective process to extract rare earth elements from scrapped magnets

Green Car Congress

It’s an improvement over traditional processes, which require facilities with a large footprint, high capital and operating costs and a large amount of waste generated. Extracting desirable elements without co-extracting undesirable ones means less waste is created that will need downstream treatment and disposal. —Ramesh Bhave.

Energy 220
article thumbnail

DOE and USDA Select Projects for More Than $24M in Biomass Research and Development Grants

Green Car Congress

Selected projects are aimed at increasing the availability of alternative fuels and biobased products that are produced from a diverse group of renewable sources of biomass. University of Minnesota (St. Funding is provided through USDA’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) and DOE’s Biomass Program. USDA Awards.

Grant 199