Um... The Iodine Value of camelina is 144. Even worse than soy. Nice 
for making paint, but not for biodiesel. But the US is in denial 
about soy and polymerisation so I suppose they might just as well be 
in denial about camelina and polymerisation too. Another project 
there wants to grow it along the roadsides. You're probably stuck 
with B20 with feedstocks like these.

Iodine Values
http://journeytoforever.org/biodiesel_yield.html#iodine

Oxidation and polymerisation
http://journeytoforever.org/biodiesel_bubblewash.html#oxid

Best

Keith

------

http://www.realcities.com/mld/krwashington/17286156.htm
McClatchy Washington Bureau | 05/27/2007 |
ENVIRONMENT

Researchers eye ancient plant as source of biofuel

By Les Blumenthal

McClatchy Newspapers

WASHINGTON - A plant that flourished in Europe roughly 3,500 years 
ago could become a major source of biofuel.

Researchers say that camelina, planted on millions of acres of 
marginal farmland from eastern Washington state to North Dakota, 
could help power the nation's drive for cleaner energy.

"This is the most exciting crop I have seen in my 30 some years in 
this field," said Steven Guy, a professor at the University of Idaho 
and a crop-management specialist.

Researchers in Washington state, Oregon and Idaho say the results 
from test plantings of camelina are encouraging. So far, the only 
farmers who are interested are in Montana, where more than 50,000 
acres of camelina were planted this season. But a buzz is spreading 
slowly.

The story of camelina, though, is about more than just marketing an 
ancient crop to solve some of today's problems. It stretches from a 
Puget Sound biotech firm that's working to increase camelina yields 
by up to 50 percent to Capitol Hill, where lobbyists hope to convince 
Congress to cover camelina under the federal crop-insurance program 
to reassure skittish farmers.

Camelina supporters say the plant can grow in more arid conditions, 
doesn't require extensive use of expensive fertilizers, herbicides 
and pesticides, and can produce more oil from its seeds than other 
crops such as canola, by some estimates, for half the price.

"We actually think it might be the next wonder crop," said Tom 
Todaro, the chief executive of Targeted Growth, a Seattle biotech 
firm that's working to increase camelina yields "radically." The 
company hopes to produce enough seed to plant 1 million acres of 
camelina by 2009.

About 85 percent of the feedstock used in biodiesel in the United 
States comes from soybeans. But they're grown largely in the Midwest, 
and growers in the inland Northwest and the high plains areas of 
Montana, North Dakota, Wyoming and Colorado have been searching for 
their own biodiesel crop. Much of the attention has focused on 
canola. But some researchers say camelina might be an even better bet.

"I am really excited about it," said An Hang, a Washington State 
University research agronomist.

Hang said camelina seeds were about a third the size of sesame seeds 
and contained high levels of omega 3, which is thought to reduce 
heart disease, high blood pressure and cholesterol. After the seeds 
are crushed, the leftover meal can be used in feed for cattle, 
chickens and even fish.

Known as Gold of Pleasure, Wildfox, German sesame and Siberian 
oilseed, camelina seeds were crushed to produce lamp oil as far back 
as Neolithic times. Direct cultivation declined in medieval times for 
unknown reasons. In recent years, small amounts were grown for use 
mostly in organic health products.

Concerns about global warming and the nation's dependence on foreign 
oil, however, have rekindled interest in camelina.

Don Wysocki, an Oregon State University associate professor who's 
based in Pendleton, Ore., said camelina could grow in drier 
conditions than canola and other potential biodiesel feedstocks, was 
easier to grow than canola and could be used in rotation with cereal 
crops such as wheat.

"There are challenges, but of all the crops I have worked with over 
the years this has the most promise," Wysocki said. "If we have an 
operating biofuel industry in the Northwest, this could be the 
feedstock."

Targeted Growth was founded eight years ago after a lunch Todaro had 
with a friend who worked at Seattle's Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research 
Center. The two discussed whether the drugs the center had developed 
to slow the reproduction of cancer cells could be reversed and used 
to speed up the growth of cells in plants. The answer was yes, and 
Todaro's company has been able to increase yields by 20 percent to 30 
percent in canola and soybeans.

The company also was looking for a plant that grew in marginal, arid 
lands that could be used for biodiesel feedstock. It settled on 
camelina, and is using a "hyper-accelerated breeding" program to 
increase yields. Todaro stresses that the program doesn't involve 
genetically modifying camelina cells and won't require Food and Drug 
Administration approval.

The National Biodiesel Board, a trade group that represents the 
biodiesel industry, has taken no stand on camelina.

"It is one of the newer feedstocks being examined," said Amber Thurlo 
Pearson, a board spokeswoman. "We are a feedstock-neutral 
organization."

Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., has introduced legislation to cover 
camelina under the federal crop-insurance program. Montana's other 
senator, Democrat Max Baucus, is preparing legislation that would 
allow loan deficiency payments to camelina growers, which provide a 
safety net for farmers if prices fall below a set level.

Todaro said anything that would make farmers more comfortable about 
growing camelina would be helpful.

"I'm less concerned about the technology than about convincing 
farmers to grow it," he said.

 


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