A Colorado company will break ground early next year on an algae farm that is intended to produce thousands of gallons of substitutes for gasoline and diesel at a rate per acre far higher than current biofuel projects.
Solix Biofuels, of Fort Collins, said on Monday that it had raised $15.5 million in capital and would begin with a five-acre plot to produce “biocrude.’’ That will in turn be shipped to an oil refinery in place of crude oil, according to Douglas R. Henston, the company chief executive.
Read more (The success of the biodiesel fuel industry relies heavily on
biodiesel testing, not only at the production level but at the consumer level, where degraded fuel may cause engine failures.
Fleet Biodiesel's family of inexpensive
biodiesel test kits is just a click away on the internet)