The algae solution
GREEN CITY: The San Francisco Bay may soon host a dramatic new environmental project

The San Francisco Bay may soon host a dramatic new environmental project that backers say could solve three problems at once: clean wastewater, remove carbon from the atmosphere, and produce biodiesel fuel. Yet it's gotten remarkably little attention.

"For the most part, people are just ignoring me," says Jonathan Trent, a researcher at NASA Ames Research Center at Moffett Field, who is one of the driving forces behind the project.

The new technology Trent and his colleagues have created is called OMEGA (Off-shore Membrane Enclosures for Growing Algae). The idea is to grow large colonies of freshwater algae in what amounts to large plastic bags floating in the bay.

Wastewater from local sewage plants and carbon sequestered from power plants would provide food for the algae, which then produce oxygen and freshwater along with an oil that can be refined into fuel.

The OMEGAs are giant semi-permeable membranes; the design allows freshwater in but keeps saltwater out.

Using algae for biofuel isn't new — there are a number of algae farms on land. But they require large amounts of real estate and fresh water and enough electricity to keep the water moving.

A D V E R T I S E M E N T


In this case, light from the sun provides the energy, and the motion of the waves stirs the algae around.

Trent is looking at ways to collect the freshwater that gets released by the OMEGAs — potentially another major breakthrough for a state desperately short of water.

Trent has shopped his project all over the world and many countries have showed interest, but he believes San Francisco is the perfect fit. "The people of San Francisco really have an enlightened attitude and are aware that something needs to be done to fix the problems we've created," he told us. "It's a great place to demonstrate to the world that this is a feasible technology."

The OMEGA project still faces political hurdles. Trent recently survived an internal audit. And U.S. Rep. Bart Gordon (D-Tenn.) has been critical of federal spending for biofuel projects.

But the scientist isn't discouraged. "Actually I'm glad we have been audited," he said. "I've been able to get attention and show that not only does our system not use water, it actually produces clean water."

On July 29 the project received approval for an $800,000 grant from the California Energy Commission. According to Trent, the approval for the grant was ready for approval months earlier, but Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger wanted to put it on hold because of the budget crisis.

The CEC grant is coming just in time. A previous grant, from Google, was due to run out at the end of September. "We're optimistic that if people see that the CEC has invested, maybe others will want to invest," Trent said. "But we need more than just financial resources — we need brain power as well. The next step is to find engineers to really make this a workable option."

Trent would like to get a working model up and running within the next 18 months and hopes to see a full-scale operation in place in five years.

San Francisco may be the first city to host OMEGA. San Francisco Public Utilities Commission staffers have met with Trent and are cautiously optimistic. "Although it is just at the preliminary stages of discussion, it doesn't dampen our excitement about the project," ...

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( 4 comments | Comment on this article )
brookse on Tuesday, August 4, 2009 at 11:18 PM
You have got to be kidding...

You are actually asking readers to believe that covering the bay with giant plastic bags, filled with sewage and genetically engineered algae (yes - genetically engineered - just do a good web search on algae biodiesel and you'll discover this little inconvenient reality); bags which also separate salt from the baywater leaving it unnaturally saline and therefore deadly to wildlife; bags which of course will end up leaking their toxic genetically engineered soup into the bay; you are seriously asking us to believe that this is actually a good thing...

Readers, for the straight story about the incredible screwed-up-ness of the recent biofuel craze and how it is drastically messing up our planet even more quickly than global warming, go to the Biofuel Watch web site at: [link]

Eric Brooks

San Francisco Green Party Sustainability Working Group
benjah on Wednesday, August 5, 2009 at 06:22 PM
Eric,

You jump to a lot of conclusions.

Skepticism is healthy. But what makes you think that these NASA scientists haven't considered potential environmental risks? Leakage and pollution are potential concerns but in no way are they guarantees, especially with good design and engineering.

Also, you generalize when you say that all biofuels are bad. Growing soy and palm oil on former virgin rainforest -- THAT'S bad. Growing algae in giant desert facilities that burn up water and energy -- THAT'S bad.

But if the exponential-growth rate of algae can be harnessed in a low-cost, low-energy carbon-neutral process like OMEGA, what's not to love?
brookse on Thursday, August 6, 2009 at 11:39 AM
So let me get this straight Ben.

Even if by some amazing miracle there are no leaks of sewage and incredibly dangerous genetically engineered algae; you think it is a good idea to cover up large swaths of bay habitat, blocking the sun from properly reaching that habitat; blocking natural surface activity with the atmosphere; blocking living creatures from interacting with the surface; and fundamentally undermining the saline balance in the bay; all so that we can make fuel to unnecessarily run buses vans and trucks on diesel that (though somewhat cleaner) will still pollute the city's air; when we could instead switch our entire fleet over to electric transportation so that we don't need to burn any diesel at all.

You think that's good...

I'd be willing to bet that your name is Ben Jordan and you are on the City's Biodiesel Taskforce.

That taskforce is outrageously made up of a bunch of people who have a direct financial interest in the selling of biodiesel fuel, and who are so eager to promote biodiesel sales that they are pushing for allowing an environmentally criminal corporation, Darling International, to build a facility in the Bayview Hunters Point which will make biodiesel out of toxic animal parts from the incredibly environmentally destructive factory farm agriculture industry, thereby making that industry more profitable and likely to dangerously expand - a situation that will -increase- green house gas emissions, especially when you consider the alarming reality that Darling is planning on building plants like this all over the world.

To get a taste of Darling's blatantly criminal record of destroying the environment, go to [link]

Eric Brooks

San Francisco Green Party
brookse on Thursday, August 6, 2009 at 11:56 AM
So let me get this straight Ben.

Even if by some amazing miracle there are no leaks of sewage and incredibly dangerous genetically engineered algae; you think it is a good idea to cover up large swaths of bay habitat, blocking the sun from properly reaching that habitat; blocking natural surface activity with the atmosphere; blocking living creatures from interacting with the surface; and fundamentally undermining the saline balance in the bay; all so that we can make fuel to unnecessarily run buses vans and trucks on diesel that (though somewhat cleaner) will still pollute the city's air; when we could instead switch our entire fleet over to electric transportation so that we don't need to burn any diesel at all.

You think that's good...

I'd be willing to bet that your name is Ben Jordan and you are on the City's Biodiesel Taskforce.

That taskforce is outrageously made up of a bunch of people who have a direct financial interest in the selling of biodiesel fuel, and who are so eager to promote biodiesel sales that they are pushing for allowing an environmentally criminal corporation, Darling International, to build a facility in the Bayview Hunters Point which will make biodiesel out of toxic animal parts from the incredibly environmentally destructive factory farm agriculture industry, thereby making that industry more profitable and likely to dangerously expand - a situation that will -increase- green house gas emissions, especially when you consider the alarming reality that Darling is planning on building plants like this all over the world.

To get a taste of Darling's blatantly criminal record of destroying the environment, go to [link]

Eric Brooks

San Francisco Green Party

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