May 4, 2024
Global Renewable News

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Minority Serving Institutions to Receive $1 Million for Bioenergy Research

December 19, 2022

Three projects have been selected for funding under a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Bioenergy Technologies Office (BETO) interagency agreement with the Minority Serving Institution STEM Research & Development Consortium (MSRDC). DOE has leveraged the partnership to reduce barriers to entry for Minority Serving Institutions (MSIs) and increase research partnerships.

MSRDC is a nonprofit member group of over 70 MSIs formed under a cooperative agreement by the U.S. Army in 2014. The consortium facilitates basic, applied, and advanced research awards from federal agencies through a limited competition contracting vehicle. Through its partnership with MSRDC, BETO has broadened its pool of participants and funded non-traditional, emerging, and historically underfunded investigators from MSIs at $1 million in Fiscal Year 2022.

Projects under this solicitation focus on three areas:

  • Advanced Algal Systems: Development of strategies and technologies to produce high quality algae for cost-effective biofuels, intermediary products, and bioproducts.
  • Advanced Terrestrial Waste Feedstock Technologies: Development of strategies and technologies to convert municipal solid waste and other potential waste resources into low-carbon biofuels and bioproducts.
  • Accelerating Catalyst Development for Biofuel Production: Within the Chemical Catalysis for Bioenergy Consortium, this topic focuses on high-impact technology development for catalytic conversion technologies with emphasis on liquid transportation fuels, such as sustainable aviation fuel, diesel, and marine fuels, their co-products, or intermediaries.

The three projects selected for awards are:

  • North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University: For developing a biofiltration-microalgae symbiotic system that can improve microalgal production in wastewater.
  • Florida A&M University: For producing hydrochar from food that can be used as a stable, consistent feedstock for biofuel production or biomass power.
  • University of New Mexico: For developing a novel catalytic approach for upgrading biomass derived ethanol to sustainable aviation fuel in order to show how novel single atom catalysts can be leveraged to overcome catalyst deactivation challenges.

Read more about the projects here.

For more information

U.S. Department of Energy
1000 Independence Ave. SW
Washington District of Columbia
États-Unis 20585
www.energy.gov


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