Biofuel may be produced from roadside weed
Researchers from Nevada think they may be able to produce diesel fuel from gumweed. Nevada scientists believe that curlycup gumweed, a common roadside weed that grows across much of Nevada’s high desert, may be ideal for producing biofuel. More specifically, the researchers think that they are close to producing diesel fuel and may even one day be able to produce jet fuel from the plant, reported the Associated Press. Very little water is needed to grow gumweed. Back in the 1980’s, a University of Nevada researcher and mining engineer, Darrell Lemaire, secured a Department of Energy grant for…
Researchers from Nevada think they may be able to produce diesel fuel from gumweed.
Nevada scientists believe that curlycup gumweed, a common roadside weed that grows across much of Nevada’s high desert, may be ideal for producing biofuel. More specifically, the researchers think that they are close to producing diesel fuel and may even one day be able to produce jet fuel from the plant, reported the Associated Press.Very little water is needed to grow gumweed.
Back in the 1980’s, a University of Nevada researcher and mining engineer, Darrell Lemaire, secured a Department of Energy grant for gumweed research, one of the first grants awarded to study the possibility of transforming plants into biofuels. Lemaire approached Glenn Miller, an environmental sciences professor at the University of Nevada, Reno’s (UNR) College of Agriculture, Biotechnology and Natural Resources. He convinced Miller to conduct research in his lab. For about a decade, the two scientists have been growing gumweed on the UNR campus. Their project grew from the idea that biofuels should not be in competition with food crops in Kansas or Nebraska.
Due to the fact that gumweed doesn’t need much water, this makes it ideal for the dry desert conditions of Nevada. Miller said that it could be grown in places like Nevada where crops like corn or soybeans wouldn’t be grown.