Shortfall should drive the price of cellulosic biofuel to nearly $3 per gallon and give fledgling producers some breathing room.
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Paladin Capital Group and others to invest more than $1 billion into Brazilian ethanol and energy.
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The biobutanol startup forges ahead despite powerful headwinds.
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Major U.S. oil pipeline operator Kinder Morgan is set to begin shipping ethanol. Biodiesel on tap next.
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Arizona startup to license its algae-to-biodiesel technology to Chinese company, build massive farm.
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Backed by climate fears, government mandates, and venture capital, U.S. ethanol production will rapidly rise in coming years—but will there be any place for car owners to buy it?
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Report says half of cars sold in the U.S. by the No. 1 auto maker will run on ethanol.
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Italian luxury sports carmaker unveils concept car that can run on ethanol, reflecting its engineering expertise from Formula One racing and growing demand for alternative fuel vehicles in the United States.
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The carmaker will partner with a little-known startup to accelerate the rollout of next-generation biofuels.
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Khosla-funded startup’s Georgia plant a test ground for cellulosic ethanol.
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Startup plans to produce ethanol from cheese industry waste.
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DOE plans to invest in six cellulosic ethanol plants.
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Concept cars at the International North American Auto Show in Detroit offer a glimpse at next-generation vehicle technology.
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Concept cars at the International North American Auto Show in Detroit offer a glimpse at next-generation vehicle technology.
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Company reports that in a year it has cranked up U.S. ethanol production by 700 million gallons.
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Year in Review: 2006 saw milestones for solar and wind power, as well as clean steps for cars.
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Drug startup switches focus to biofuels.
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Richard Stallman’s free software, Vinod Khosla’s ethanol, Nokia’s music phone, Microsoft’s ads, Yahoo’s forced vacations, Honda’s diesel engines, and Google’s Berkeley lectures topped the week.
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By the end of 2007, U.S. freeways may be a little greener, thanks to a car that can run on 100 percent pure ethanol.
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Companies find ways to break down cellulose―and costs―more effectively.
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