Commercializing Bioenergy Discoveries

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    Commercializing Bioenergy Discoveries

    October 2007
    
     The Texas A&M University 
    System today announced it has formed a joint venture company with a 
    Pennsylvania-based venture capital firm to help turn promising energy and 
    agricultural research into marketable products. 
    The new venture company, AgFuture Energy LLC, is half owned by the A&M 
    System, and the other half is owned by New Hope Partners, a business 
    development, capitalization and advisory company based in Philadelphia. 
    New Hope specializes in value-added, agricultural and renewable energy 
    based start-up ventures. 
    Bud Cary, a partner in New Hope Partners, will serve as managing director 
    of AgFuture Energy. 
    "The sheer number and extent of the opportunities are enormous," Cary 
    said. "The value of the research taking place at Texas A&M University and 
    the global reach and reputation of the entire A&M System already are 
    generating a wealth of new ideas and potential partners to commercialize 
    existing and developing technologies." 
    One of the largest systems of higher education in the nation, the A&M 
    System encompasses nine universities, seven state research agencies and a 
    health science center. The A&M System educates more than 101,000 students 
    and externally funded research brings in $600 million every year. 
    "This new venture represents another example of the A&M System’s 
    commitment to finding new ways to meet the energy needs of our state, 
    nation and world by developing strategic partnerships," said A&M System 
    Chancellor Michael McKinney. 
    "Already we are at the forefront of helping develop clean, renewable 
    bioenergy through our new BioEnergy Alliance. The alliance brings together 
    the vast resources and intellectual capital of our two premier research 
    agencies in agriculture and engineering, the Texas Agricultural Experiment 
    Station and the Texas Engineering Experiment Station." 
    AgFuture Energy initially will focus on technologies supporting the 
    bioenergy industry. 
    Among the first projects the company will pursue is partnering with the 
    Rio Grande Valley Sugar Growers Association to build a facility that can 
    convert crops like sorghum into cellulosic ethanol. 
    Cellulosic ethanol production currently exists at the pilot and commercial 
    demonstration scale, and research is still needed to unlock the sugars and 
    make them available for ethanol production. 
    According to U.S. Department of Energy studies, one of the benefits of 
    cellulosic ethanol is that it reduces greenhouse gas emissions by 85 
    percent over reformulated gasoline. 
    By contrast, corn ethanol, which most frequently uses natural gas to 
    provide energy for the production process, reduces greenhouse gas 
    emissions by 18 to 29 percent compared to gasoline. 
    The establishment of a company like AgFuture Energy creates a new model 
    for universities and university systems in partnering with the private 
    sector, said Guy Diedrich, vice chancellor for technology 
    commercialization for the A&M System. 
    "We are engaging with New Hope Partners, a firm with extensive expertise 
    in the complexities of forming specialized start-up companies. Through 
    this public-private partnership, AgFuture Energy, we will be able to 
    accelerate the entire research and development process and commercialize a 
    number of technologies," said Diedrich. 
    "Additionally," he said, "we will work with A&M System researchers in 
    earlier stages of their work, encouraging them to develop technologies 
    that have commercialization potential to more directly address the needs 
    of our society and create jobs for Texans." 
    







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