ARS News Service
Agricultural Research Service, USDA
Jan Suszkiw, (301) 504-1630,
jsuszkiw@ars.usda.gov
February 28, 2005
The Agricultural Research
Service (ARS) is hosting a two-day conference here to foster
United States-European collaborative research that will develop
biobased products and fuels from plants. ARS is the U.S.
Department of Agriculture's chief in-house scientific research
agency.
Forty to 50 scientific representatives from government, industry
and academia are participating in the conference at the George
Washington Carver Center in Beltsville, Md. The conference will
include presentations and group discussions on collaborative
research among U.S. and European scientists, especially those in
the fields of molecular biology and plant genomics.
"Biobased products are fuels, industrial oils, lubricants,
plastics and other materials that are made from plant or animal
resources rather than petrochemicals," noted Judy St. John, an
ARS deputy administrator and member of the U.S.-European
Commission (EC) Task Force on Biotechnology Research, which is
sponsoring the conference March 1-2.
Biobased products have the potential to create new market
opportunities for farmers while easing society's reliance on
petroleum.
"Plants, however, offer some challenges that must be overcome in
order to improve their usefulness as a sustainable alternative
to petroleum feedstocks," said St. John. "These challenges are
of such a scope that it is unlikely that one laboratory, or even
one country's scientific community, will easily overcome them
alone."
St. John will be joined as a discussion leader at the conference
by Christian Patermann and Laurent Bochereau, Director and Head
of Unit, respectively, for EC's Biotechnology, Agriculture and
Food Research.
Other speakers include scientists currently engaged in biobased
research, members of academia, and industry representatives from
both the United States and Europe. Diana Bowles of the
University of York, United Kingdom, and Sarah Hake of ARS' Plant
Gene Expression Center, Albany, Calif., are among the first
speakers. On March 1, they will discuss the importance of
examining the composition and organization of plant cell walls.
That area of research is deemed critical to an approach called
"biorefining," which seeks to tap solar energy produced in
plants by photosynthesis.
According to St. John, the plant cell wall research is one of
two flagship projects that the U.S.-EC task force has chosen as
a model for cooperation. The other flagship project involves
research to better exploit oilseed crops as sources of
long-chain hydrocarbons, which can be used as petroleum-like
feedstocks to make industrial oils and other biobased products.
Breakout sessions are also being held so that conference members
can discuss the potential hurdles and outcomes to achieving
these flagship projects, as well as to identify other flagship
projects on which U.S. and European scientists can collaborate.
"Ultimately," St. John said, "the objective is to improve the
economic viability of biobased products for consumers, to offer
economic benefits to growers and rural communities, to reduce
our dependence on petroleum and to safeguard the environment."
Additional information about the meeting can be found on the
World Wide Web at:
http://www.pw.usda.gov/wrrcpagedoc/euus/index.htm |