Renewable energy for American industry is at
the root of a major Midwest research center funded by the
largest federal grant exclusively for research endeavors in
Michigan State University’s history, it was announced today.
MSU will partner with the University of
Wisconsin-Madison in establishing the Great Lakes Bioenergy
Research Center (GLBRC), one of three new U.S. Department of
Energy Bioenergy Research Centers (BRC). The center, based
in Madison, will be funded with $125 million over five
years. MSU will use approximately $50 million for basic
science research aimed at solving some of the most complex
problems in converting natural materials to energy.
Ken Keegstra, MSU University Distinguished
Professor of plant biology and of biochemistry and molecular
biology, will be the executive director of the center,
splitting his time between East Lansing and Madison.
Keegstra and Tim Donohue, UW-Madison professor of
bacteriology, led the initiative to bring the center to the
Great Lakes region.
Some 100 jobs are expected to be created in
Michigan, including MSU faculty, postgraduate students,
technicians and support staff.
“This is a proud day for MSU and the state of
Michigan -- and a dramatic step toward an economy powered by
strategic partnerships among states, research universities
and industry,” said MSU President Lou Anna K. Simon. “MSU’s
Office of Biobased Technologies and our preeminent
scientists are dedicated to addressing problems and
opportunities of today, but, more importantly, of the
future.”
“This is a great partnership that uses
Michigan State’s comprehensive and powerful plant sciences
to shape a green future in renewable resources,” said Steve
Pueppke, director of MSU’s Office of Biobased Technologies.
“This matches some of the world’s best plant science with
industry needs. The work will create momentum; these
activities bring on more activities. This is how things
start to happen.”
The three DOE BRCs were announced today at
the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. They are
established and operated to accelerate basic research on the
development of cellulosic ethanol and other biofuels. The
other two DOE BRCs are in Oak Ridge, Tenn., led by the Oak
Ridge National Laboratory, and near Berkeley, Calif., led by
the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
“These
centers will provide the transformational science needed for
bioenergy breakthroughs to advance President Bush’s goal of
making cellulosic ethanol cost competitive with gasoline by
2012 and assist in reducing America’s gasoline consumption
by 20 percent in 10 years,” said Secretary of Energy Samuel
W. Bodman.
“The
collaborations of academic, corporate and national
laboratory researchers represented by these centers are
truly impressive, and I am very encouraged by the potential
they hold for advancing America’s energy security.”
Research at the DOE GLBRC will be done by a
dream team of scientists from Wisconsin; Michigan State;
Lucigen, a Madison-area biotechnology company; the Pacific
Northwest and Oak Ridge National Laboratories; and the
University of Florida, among others.
The research focus: breeding new varieties of
bioenergy plants, developing new processing techniques and
agents from microbes for breaking down cellulose, improving
the microbial and chemical processes that convert biomass to
energy products, providing an environmental and economic
framework for sustaining the biomass-to-fuel pipeline and
integrating new technologies
--
including genomics and
new computational methods --
into bioenergy research.
Keegstra’s expertise is in plant cell wall
biology -- a crucial area in making biofuels. He has
extensive management and scientific experience, having
served for 14 years as director of the DOE-funded Plant
Research Laboratory at MSU and as faculty member in the
botany department at UW-Madison for 15 years.
He said the two universities' complementary
expertise -- from agriculture sciences to microbiology to
chemical engineering -- combined with knowledge from the
rest of the partners forms a team designed for progress and
action.
“If we're going to start using plants in
significant ways beyond food, there are a lot of issues that
come into play that we need to figure out,” Keegstra said.
“Sustainability, competition for food, environmental issues
--
our universities already have a head start in studying these
from many angles. There is tremendous compatibility between
UW-Madison and MSU, and we have assembled with others a
strong and dynamic partnership.”
Wisconsin, Michigan and the Great Lakes
region will be a hub for research efforts aimed at clearing
the technological bottlenecks that prevent plant biomass
from being used efficiently as a source of energy. The DOE
estimates the United States will need to process 1 billion
tons of biomass per year as a source of renewable energy to
meet the goal set by Bush.
"In the last 100 years we've gone through a
significant fraction of the oil it took hundreds of millions
of years to create," said Donohue, "so we have to come up
with some new strategies."
Michigan State brings:
-
Some
of the world’s most renowned plant scientists. MSU
professors are leading three of the center's five
research focus areas.
-
Strong
links between plant and agriculture sciences and the
agriculture industry as part of its land-grant
tradition, made stronger with its Michigan Agricultural
Experiment Station.
-
Twenty
years of research at the national Long-Term Ecological
Research site (LTER) at Kellogg Biological Station, the
only LTER site in the nation that focuses on
agriculture.
-
Connectivity with and proximity to the auto industry.
The GLBRC plans to craft research projects to solve key
problems identified by the industry.
-
The
Office of Biobased Technologies which identifies and
supports research opportunities, forges public-private
sector partnerships and supports research.
-
The
Michigan Agricultural Experiment Station with its strong
links to the state’s agriculture industry.
"This announcement combines two of the most
critical components of our plan to revitalize the state's
economy -- a thriving higher education community and growth
in alternative energy research and development right here in
Michigan," said Gov. Jennifer M. Granholm. "This new
partnership puts Michigan State University at the forefront
of making the nation independent of foreign oil while
creating jobs and encouraging further alternative energy
investment in Michigan."
“This center is a great achievement for MSU
researchers,” said Ian Gray, vice president for research and
graduate studies. “Linking the wealth of talent at MSU in
plant-related activities with the strengths of researchers
at the University of Wisconsin is a dream partnership. With
the additional support from the other universities and
institutions involved in the project, this center will have
a significant impact on agriculture and manufacturing
throughout the Great Lakes region and beyond.”
“This initiative aligns vast natural
resources, agricultural might and MSU’s strong tradition of
integrating science, university expertise and industry,”
said MSU Provost Kim Wilcox. “The university’s long and
productive tradition in plant and agricultural sciences is
embodied in the intellectual capital our faculty bring to
this partnership.”
Michigan State University has been advancing
knowledge and transforming lives through innovative
teaching, research and outreach for more than 150 years. MSU
is known internationally as a major public university with
global reach and extraordinary impact. Its 17
degree-granting colleges attract scholars worldwide who are
interested in combining education with practical problem
solving.
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