Biofuel from Canal Algae to Power Venice by 2011

It’s plentiful, it’s homegrown, and it could help clean up the environment while powering our cities. The idea of transforming algae into a fuel is a reality. Nowadays there are numerous implementations of algae into the renewable energy market.

“Sargassum muticum” and “Undaria pinnatifida” are the names of two kinds of algae brought by the ships coming from Japan and the Sargassi sea. The algea grows over the seaport of Venice, causing problems for gondolas and ferry boats. But today it could be turned into a resource.

Italy recently announced a 200 million euro eco-friendly project to harvest the prolific seaweed that lines Venice’s canals and transform it into emissions-free energy. The idea is to set up a power plant fuelled by algae, the first facility of its kind in Italy. The plant, to be built in collaboration with renewable energy services company Enalg, will be operative in two years and will produce 40 megawatts of electricity, equivalent to half of the energy required by the entire city centre of Venice.

The algae will be cultivated in laboratories and put in plastic cylinders where water, carbon dioxide, and sunshine can trigger photosynthesis. The resulting biomass will be treated further to produce a fuel to turn turbines. The carbon dioxide produced in the process will be fed back to the algae, resulting in zero emissions from the plant. “Venice could represent the beginning of a global revolution of energy and renewable resources. Our goals are to achieve the energetic self-sufficiency for the seaport and to reduce CO2 emissions, including those one produced by the docked ships”, says the president of the seaport of Venice Authority, Paolo Costa.

The idea sounds good and seems to open great possibilities for zero emission energy production; Venice could represent the first step of a real innovative evolution even if there are still some doubts about the huge amount of money required for this project and the authorization needed to built the plant.

For more information about biomass energy, see also Solena Group.

Image credit: Kevin via Flickr under a Creative Commons license.

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29 Comments

  1. I don’t understand one thing though.

    Why cultivate new algae in laboratories?

    Can’t we use the algae that is currently found in the venetian water?

  2. Good point. The headline says they will harvest it from the sea, the article says they will grow it in test tubes. This is why I don’t read newspapers. On the internet you can always point out errors in a comment field, which tends to make authors try to do a better job next time. Read “The Prospects for Algae Biodiesel Dim” on the R-squared blog if you are interested in some reality to go with your entertainment.

    http://robertrapier.wordpress.com/2009/03/10/the-prospects-for-algal-biodiesel-dim/

  3. But Venice is still sinking.

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  5. Venice will have sunk by the time they get it up an running! There are millions of different kinds of algae - keeping the most efficient ones pure and growing is hard. dont expect this to last no harm in trying and given the amount of emissions required to built it - why not spend it on efficienies instead.

  6. [...] basic idea is to use two kinds of algae including – Sargassum Muticum and Undaria Pinnafitida, which [...]

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