
The
Greeley Tribune is reporting that a professor at the University of Northern Colorado has received funding for research on putting genes from a copaifera tree or so-called "
diesel tree" into algae and other non-food plants. The "diesel tree" naturally produces an
oleoresin called
copaiba that is chemically similar to diesel. In fact, it is similar enough that it can be
used in a diesel engine without any processing. Copaiba is harvested from the trees in basically the same way maple syrup is harvested from maple trees. A hectare of diesel trees yields about
12,000 liters of copaiba per year. Not a huge amount. Right now, copaiba oil sells for about
$1000 a barrel on ebay. So putting the genes for copaiba into a more productive plant might be a more economical scenario for harvesting copaiba than tapping the trees.
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