Motorists traveling along Brazos bottom farmland just outside of
College Station are doing double takes over a towering 12-foot
sorghum crop.
The unorthodox-looking sorghum is the
latest study by Dr. Bill Rooney,
Texas Agricultural Experiment Station researcher, who hopes
to produce a high-tonnage variety that could soon be used for
bioenergy.
Talk of using tall sorghum to power an
automobile is no Aggie joke.
Sorghum as a source of biofuels had some
of the nation's top scientists at the Great Plains Sorghum
Conference enthusiastic about its future.
"Ag is changing," said Jeff Dahlberg,
president of the National Sorghum Producers. "We're no longer
about just feed and food. We're about fuel and bioenergy. I
think it's caught people in this country by surprise."
With talk of ethanol focusing primarily
on corn, sorghum can play a pivotal role since it can fit into
starch, sugar and cellulosic conversions, Dahlberg said.
Sorghum is just one aspect of the
Experiment Station's bioenergy initiatives. Rooney's research
has focused on improving sorghum as a bioenergy feedstock. To
that end, he has collaborated with other scientists looking into
sorghum's prospects as a bioenergy component.
"The (sorghum breeding) program in
College Station changed about four years ago," he told a group
of researchers at the conference. "On the side, we began working
on bioenergy and sweet sorghums. It's evolved into a project
that has consumed a good portion of time."
Like sugarcane, sorghum can be converted
into ethanol. The tall sorghum trials in College Station boast
superior genes from hybrid sorghums.
Specifically, Rooney is evaluating the
sorghum's sugar content.
"If we want to develop a high-sugar
hybrid, we have to have high levels of sugar on both sides of
the parent," he explained.
Using cross-pollination of selected
hybrid varieties, Rooney will soon establish a superior,
high-yielding plant variety commercially viable for biofuel
production. He's also attempting to include genetic traits that
withstand periods of drought.
The tall sorghum trials are also being
conducted in Weslaco and Lubbock. Another component of the
research is harvesting. Rooney and other scientists are
evaluating composition and yield both for animal feed and
ethanol production, he said.
"One of the things we are looking at is
how long can you leave this in the field," he said.
The Lone Star state is positioned to
help meet the challenge of producing 1 billion tons of biomass
needed to replace 30 percent of the nation's petroleum, said Dr.
Bill McCutchen, Experiment Station deputy associate director.
The state already is one of the largest biomass producers in the
nation.
"Twenty-five percent of the nation's
beef is in the Panhandle alone," he told conference attendees.
"We have a large forest industry and overall we're a major
biomass producer when you factor in the amount of crops produced
in Texas. We have the largest installed wind energy and
biodiesel capacity. Texas produces a lot of biomass, and we're
diverse."
Using plant cellulose from Texas crops,
such as sorghum, not only "has incredible potential, but also
big potential for bi-products."
"Sorghum produces more biomass than
corn, using 33 percent less water,"
McCutchen said. "Sorghum may have been
overlooked as a potential biomass product."
If modeled after the sugarcane industry,
a tall sorghum variety producing 20-plus tons to the acre
transported to a processing plant within a 40-mile radius "is
economically viable," he said.
"The sugarcane industry has been doing
this for a long time," he said.
"What we're not saying is switchgrass or
corn isn't a viable crop, but if we can grow sorghum, it's worth
giving a serious look. We believe this paradigm is happening and
will happen."
But how to incorporate these crops into
an existing portfolio of feedstock crops and other cash
commodities in Texas is a challenge that lies ahead, he said.
"One of the things we envision is we
want to be able to grow dedicated biomass crops for fuel within
a diverse system," he said.