Celunol Awarded Department of Energy Grant for Cellulosic Ethanol Process Technology
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.
March 28, 2007
Celunol Corp., a leader in the development of
cellulosic ethanol, announced today that it has been awarded up
to $5.3 million by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) for a research
program aimed at developing further improvements to the company's
cellulosic ethanol fermentation process technology.
"This award is a validation of the substantial progress we
have made to date in developing highly effective processes for the
production of cellulosic ethanol," stated Carlos Riva, chief
executive officer of Celunol Corp. "This grant will help to
support important initiatives for the continued development of Celunol's
process technologies. With our pending merger with Diversa, we are
creating a world-class team with what we believe are the broadest
capabilities in the industry to effectively address the cost-effective
production of cellulosic ethanol."
The work to be performed
under this grant will be focused on enhancements to two organisms
that are central to Celunol's existing cellulose-to-ethanol
process. These include a strain of the Klebsiella oxytoca bacterium
and a strain of the Escherichia coli bacterium that were developed
by Dr. Lonnie Ingram and his coworkers at the University of Florida
who were the first in the world to develop genetically engineered
bacteria capable of converting all sugar types found in plant
cell walls into fuel ethanol. Ingram's organisms produce ethanol
from
a variety of different types of biomass. Celunol holds the exclusive
rights to use and license the engineered bacteria for the production
of fuel ethanol. Research performed under the DOE's grant is to
be conducted by a team led by Celunol and will include members
from Diversa Corporation; Professor Lonnie Ingram at the University
of
Florida; Professor Gregory Stephanopoulos at Massachusetts Institute
of Technology; and Genomatica, Inc.
According to the Department
of Energy, projects were selected for the funding based on organisms'
capacity to convert lignocellulosic
biomass to ethanol in process-relevant conditions that would be
economical in the commercial market. Additionally, the organisms
must be able to survive a wide range of environmental conditions
and remain stable from adverse mutation. Selectees must have the
ability to produce at commercial scale in the future and have
a sound business strategy to market the organisms.
Celunol expects
that enhancements to the fermentation organisms used in the company's
process will be applied in its recently-upgraded
pilot plant located in Jennings, Louisiana, in a 1.4 million gallon
per year demonstration plant now in construction at the same site,
and in commercial-scale facilities it expects to construct in
the future.
On February 12, 2007, Celunol and Diversa (NASDAQ:DVSA)
entered into a merger agreement with Celunol Corp. pursuant to
which a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Diversa will merge with and into Celunol, with Celunol
as the surviving corporation, becoming a wholly-owned subsidiary
of Diversa. The proposed merger transaction is subject to customary
closing conditions, including receipt of certain regulatory approvals
and the approval of the stockholders of Diversa and Celunol. For
more information about Diversa, please visit www.diversa.com.
About Celunol
Celunol Corp., headquartered in Cambridge,
Massachusetts, is moving rapidly to commercialize its proprietary
technology for producing
ethanol from a wide array of cellulosic biomass feedstocks including
sugarcane bagasse, agricultural waste, wood products and dedicated
energy crops. Celunol holds exclusive rights to employ key technology
developed at the University of Florida in the early 1990s for the
production of fuel ethanol. The company aspires to develop and build
a portfolio of cellulosic ethanol and other biomass facilities in
the U.S. and abroad. Celunol has recently completed upgrades to
its pilot-scale cellulosic ethanol plant in Jennings, Louisiana,
which is one of the first such facilities in the nation. The company
is currently constructing a demonstration-scale cellulosic ethanol
facility at the same site with a design production capacity of 1.4
million gallons per year. Celunol has also licensed its technology
to Marubeni Corporation and Tsukishima Kikai Co., LTD for facilities
built in Japan and certain other Asian countries. Pursuant to this
license the company's process technology has been incorporated into
Bioethanol Japan's 1.4 million liters-per-year cellulosic ethanol
plant in Osaka, Japan - the world's first commercial scale plant
to produce cellulosic ethanol from wood construction waste. For
more information on Celunol, visit www.celunol.com.
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