Arizona Public Radio | Your Source for NPR News
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
KNAU 88.7 is operating on impaired low power. APS has shut off power to our tower atop Mormon Mountain to service another radio station's meter. APS estimates full power will be restored around midnight Sunday evening/Monday morning.

KNAG 90.3 FM Grand Canyon is back on-air. Our engineers have repaired transmitter equipment on the ground but suspect the tower-mounted antenna may have sustained damage & are working to locate the problem; further repairs to come... Thanks so very much to our dedicated listeners in the region for their patience & support!

KNAU Arizona Public Radio is integrating new audio software into both news and classical services. We thank you for your patience and support through the transition.

Earth Notes - Algae & Biofuel

http://stream.publicbroadcasting.net/production/mp3/knau/local-knau-684640.mp3

Flagstaff, AZ – Earth Notes: Algae & Biofuel

The slogan going green is everywhere these days. In the energy production business, it may be taking on a new meaning. Some power companies are looking at green algae to clean up emissions and produce biofuel at the same time.

Algae are among the Earth's simplest and most plentiful plants. Arizona Public Service has been working with a Massachusetts firm, GreenFuel Technologies, on a process that grows algae by feeding them the carbon dioxide produced by power-plant emissions. Once the algae are harvested, their oils and starches can be turned into ethanol and biodiesel.

The process has worked in tests conducted at an APS power plant near Phoenix. Now APS and GreenFuel are trying it at the Four Corners power plant near Farmington, New Mexico. Engineers have managed to produce certified biodiesel there, though not yet at a commercial scale.

As with all energy projects, cost is key. This new method of producing fuel is likely to work at a large scale only if the biofuel can match the present price of conventional diesel. Still, algae farms wouldn't take up nearly as much land as do corn and soybeans, the current leading biofuel crops. And they help to clean up power-plant emissions. But water is needed in the production process, which may be a problem in the arid Southwest.

Fossil-fuel emissions, and climate change, are difficult issues. But it just may be that nature's very simple power plants will help people solve a very complicated problem.

-Rose Hauk