Yale study finds that organic aerosols more complicated than previously thought
Volkswagen progressing with work on quantum computing, develops traffic management system for taxi companies

Mazda backing algae biofuel research

Improving productivity and reducing costs are fundamental to the widespread future availability of algae biofuels. To that end, Mazda is providing research-accelerating technical support to both research into genome editing by Hiroshima University and the study of plant physiology by the Tokyo Institute of Technology, which is intended to lead to a breakthrough in these areas.

Mazda’s involvement is part of an ongoing industry-academia-government collaboration to promote the wide-spread adoption of biofuels from microalgae growth.

As part of its Sustainable Zoom-Zoom 2030 long-term technology development program, the company is committed to reducing its average Well-to-Wheel CO2 emissions to 50% of 2010 levels by 2030, and to 90% by 2050.

Expecting that internal combustion engines combined with some form of electrification will still account for around 95% of the vehicles it produces in 2030, and that liquid fuel will remain dominant in the automotive industry until at least 2040, Mazda considers a renewable liquid fuel essential to significant CO2 reduction.

Mazda considers the development of algae biofuel to be critical to achieving the carbon-neutrality of cars powered by the internal combustion engine.

The United States Department of Energy estimates that if algae fuel replaced all petroleum fuel in the USA, its growth would require an area equivalent to just 0.42% of the American land mass—less than one seventh of the area of corn harvest in the USA in the year 2000.

Comments

The comments to this entry are closed.