Researchers are working to resolve an emerging "food versus fuel" rivalry: they are investigating how to most effectively utilize residual field crop material for industrial production of bio-ethanol.
A new technique to monitor contamination in bioethanol production could increase revenue by more than $1.6 billion USD and reduce CO2 emissions by 2 million tons. In the fight against global warming, ...
To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. Preview this article 1 min Rayonier plans to use its ...
Japan is looking to the Philippines as a potential partner in developing new bioethanol sources as Tokyo ramps up research collaboration on sugarcane technologies and low-carbon fuel production.