
Since then Ocean Nutrition Canada has teams up with Sustainable Development Technology Canada (SDTC) in an effort to use the super algae to create green jet fuel. Algae is already used for making biofuel around the world, but this super algae's ability to mass produce oil at 60 times the speed of normal algae has scientists buzzing about the possibilities.
They discovered the microorganism when screening through hundreds of different algaes, trying to find one which could mass produce Omega-3 fatty acids. The accidental discovery of one which can create oil instead sparked the company to grow it and stockpile the algae in cryogenic reserve.
“We were looking and we got lucky,” says Ian Lucas, executive VP of innovation and strategy at Ocean Nutrition. “The SDTC program is focused on our ability to take this and turn it into jet fuel. We’re going to demonstrate the ability to grow the algae on a large scale.”
Since then the company has also partnered up with Canada's National Research Council, military contractor Lockheed Martin, and Honeywell’s UOP LLC.

Normally it takes a lot of energy to make biofuel. Harvesting plants, converting them into ethanol... its essentially burning fields of crops just to fuel cars. Its not environmentally friendly at all. Most of the ethanol we get today in North America comes from corn. It takes a lot of energy to make it, and the idea of growing plants for fuel remains highly controversial because it makes havoc with food prices.
But algae is different. It takes CO2 out of the air and water and converts it straight into something useful. Its carbon neutral, which unlike field grown ethanol doesn't require tractors, diesel and an expensive process to convert the plants into ethanol.

Airplanes don't have the option of using electricity. Jet fuel is their only option, but making it using algae opens the potential for a green airline industry which actually recycles the CO2 its putting into the atmosphere using algae.
In the United States the Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has set the goal of producing tens of millions of gallons of algae-based oil each year at a production plant scheduled for 2013.

The U.S. Air Force and the U.S. Navy are both testing green jet fuels. The navy has committed itself to have at least 50% of its fleet operate on green fuel by 2020.
Here in Canada Bombardier Aerospace, Pratt & Whitney Canada and Honeywell’s UOP LLC have all committed themselves to an 80% reduction in conventional oil usage, planning to use green oil instead. Porter Airlines in Toronto plans to start using green jet fuel in 2012.
So the demand for green fuel is out there and growing. This super algae will play a significant role in mass producing green oil in the future.
See Also
Oil Shortages in America
Hundred Dollar Oil
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