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Algae

With the promise of 100 times as much fuel per acre than traditional sources like corn and soy, algae biofuel was thought to be the answer to biofuels. Last year, the U.S. Department of Energy even gave out $24 million for research on this new technology, including $9 million to Cellana. Who is Cellana? It’s a joint venture between Shell Oil and HR Biopetroleum.

Now, however, Shell doesn’t see a commercial future in algae biofuel and has ended its partnership with HR BioPetroleum, leaving the company with no other avenues of research in this area. Shell’s official response:

In keeping with Shell’s portfolio approach to the research, development and commercialization of advanced biofuels, this decision will allow Shell to focus on other options that have shown a better fit with Shell’s biofuel portfolio and strategy.

While algae biofuel may be out, Shell has many other biofuel endeavors that it is pursuing including:

With these investments, as well as a wide range of R&D agreements at many universities throughout the world, Shell is hedging its bets on the biofuel future.

[Source: Renewable Energy World via TreeHugger]

And that’s that: Shell quits last algae biodiesel research project originally appeared on Autoblog Green on Wed, 02 Feb 2011 14:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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