GM invests in ethanol production...from garbage

GM invests in ethanol production...from garbage


December 31st, 1969 Those of us that grew up with the Back to the Future series of movies generally feel a little short-changed when it comes to the innovations promised and not delivered. But GM's doing its best to remedy that by teaming up with Coskata, Inc., a company that has found a way to turn garbage into ethanol. Looks like that Mr. Fusion garbage-powered generator isn't so far-fetched after all! And the best part: it turns out it's cost-effective, too. Growing bacteria on trash sounds simple enough, although its surely more complex a process than it seems. The result is ethanol made from scrap tires, wood chips, foam, rubber - anything you'd find in your local garbage dump - that costs about half what corn ethanol costs to produce in the U.S. That could translate into prices at the pump as low as $2 per gallon (€0.77/L) - a serious savings over both corn ethanol and petroleum-derived fuels. The fuel is not just cheaper, either - it's higher quality, so it burns cleaner, and the process is more efficient and environmentally friendly than corn ethanol production. Coskata's process requires less than one gallon of water to produce a gallon of ethanol, whereas corn ethanol production requires 3-4 gallons of water. A pilot program will be operational by the end of 2008, with a plan for production to scale up to 100 million gallons annually by 2011.
GM invests in ethanol production...from garbage

GM invests in ethanol production...from garbage

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Those of us that grew up with the Back to the Future series of movies generally feel a little short-changed when it comes to the innovations promised and not delivered. But GM's doing its best to remedy that by teaming up with Coskata, Inc., a company that has found a way to turn garbage into ethanol. Looks like that Mr. Fusion garbage-powered generator isn't so far-fetched after all! And the best part: it turns out it's cost-effective, too.

Growing bacteria on trash sounds simple enough, although its surely more complex a process than it seems. The result is ethanol made from scrap tires, wood chips, foam, rubber - anything you'd find in your local garbage dump - that costs about half what corn ethanol costs to produce in the U.S. That could translate into prices at the pump as low as $2 per gallon (€0.77/L) - a serious savings over both corn ethanol and petroleum-derived fuels.

The fuel is not just cheaper, either - it's higher quality, so it burns cleaner, and the process is more efficient and environmentally friendly than corn ethanol production. Coskata's process requires less than one gallon of water to produce a gallon of ethanol, whereas corn ethanol production requires 3-4 gallons of water.

A pilot program will be operational by the end of 2008, with a plan for production to scale up to 100 million gallons annually by 2011.

Comments (1 total)

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  1. Wow.

    Sound too good to be true, let's hope it pans out!

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