Algenol Partners With Lee County as Commission Votes to Approve Incentive Funding for Florida-Based Biofuels and Green Chemistry
03 Février 2010 - 4:28PM
PR Newswire (US)
Lee County Facility to Bring Economic Diversity and Jobs to Florida
BONITA SPRINGS, Fla., Feb. 3 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Algenol
Biofuels Inc. today announced that the company has reached an
agreement with the Lee County Board of Commissioners to support the
opening of a new 43,000 square foot facility in Lee County,
bringing economic diversity and jobs to the area launching in the
first quarter of 2010. The $10 million grant is an investment that
can bring numerous opportunities in the burgeoning biofuels
industry to the region as Algenol continues the development and
expansion of its unique Direct to Ethanol® process to produce
low-cost ethanol and green chemicals from algae, sunlight,
saltwater, and carbon dioxide. "We are very pleased the Lee County
Commission is making it possible for Algenol, a Bonita
Springs-based company, to significantly expand its local presence
and continue our work to lessen our dependence on foreign oil,
develop a solution for carbon pollution related issues, while
bringing jobs to the area. We are very proud to be partners with
Lee County and we are thankful for the extraordinary efforts of
Commission Chairperson Tammy Hall, Commissioner Ray Judah, and
Commissioner Bob Janes," said Paul Woods, CEO and founder of
Algenol Biofuels. Commissioner Hall said, "We have an opportunity
with this partnership to diversify the economic environment in Lee
County. It will create expansion of research and development at
Florida Gulf Coast University as well as create an opportunity for
catalyst companies engaging in research to join Algenol, which
translates to higher wage jobs and career opportunities not
currently found in Lee County." "Our partnership with Algenol is an
investment in American ingenuity and innovation," said Commissioner
Ray Judah. "We are excited to welcome a Bio Technology company of
this caliber to our community," says Jim Moore, Director of the
Fort Myers Regional Partnership, Lee County's Economic Development
Office. "This is a sector we hope to continue to expand in the near
future." The facility will house Algenol's advanced biology and
engineering laboratories, operations and 40 acres of land that will
hold the company's unique photobioreactors - the containers that
generate the ethanol from algae, saltwater and carbon dioxide. In
addition to producing low-cost ethanol, Algenol is beginning to
work on related projects, such as using its ethanol and other green
chemicals as a replacement for petroleum in plastic building
blocks. This new facet of the business will also be housed at the
Lee County facility. The steps the Lee County Commission has taken
to bring Algenol to the area echo the key findings in a recent
report issued by Florida Gulf Coast University's Lutgert College of
Business through their Regional Economic Research Institute. The
report centered on the best ways to overcome the impact of the
economic crisis and resulting recession is to create jobs and
diversify regional economies by providing economic assistance that
support business recruitment, retention and expansion of businesses
and entrepreneurial assistance to high tech and green tech
companies in the region. The opening of the Algenol facility in Lee
County addresses all three proposed areas that will reinvigorate
the local economy. In addition to bringing jobs to the area,
Algenol plans to immediately form partnerships with local
universities, including Florida Gulf Coast University and the
University of Florida, to assist in establishing programs for
students interested in pursuing careers in the green chemistry and
biofuels industries, as well as to pursue the study of and
solutions for red tides in Florida waters. Algenol Biofuels, Inc.
is a privately owned company founded in 2006. It recently made a
series of announcements including the award of a $25 million grant
from the Department of Energy as part of the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act, to build a facility in Freeport, Tex. in concert
with its partner on the project, The Dow Chemical Company
(NYSE:DOW). Algenol also announced a partnership with The Linde
Group to develop CO(2) capture and management technologies to
increase biofuel production from algae. Algenol today possesses the
most advanced third generation biofuel technology in the United
States. Algenol makes low cost ethanol directly from CO(2) and
seawater using hybrid algae in sealed, clear plastic
photobioreactors through its unique, patented Direct to Ethanol®
technology -- all powered by the sun. Algenol's research and
development efforts have culminated in a process that produces over
6,000 gallons of ethanol per acre per year, compared to corn at
400. This process achieves an energy balance of more than 5 to 1
and a life cycle carbon footprint that is merely 20 percent of
petroleum (an 80 percent reduction from petroleum). For more
information about Algenol Biofuels, please visit
http://www.algenolbiofuels.com/. DATASOURCE: Algenol Biofuels, Inc.
CONTACT: Lawrence Pacheco, +1-202) 346-8855, Jennifer Wood,
+1-202-346-8810 Web Site: http://www.algenolbiofuels.com/
Copyright