Oct 13 2009
Business leaders, politicians, and venture capitalists were on hand today as Qteros officially launched the build-out of their cellulosic ethanol pretreatment plant site in Chicopee. Located adjacent to the Westover Air Force Base, the plant will create both short and long-term green jobs, and will help stimulate the economy of Western Massachusetts. Speakers included U.S. Rep. Richard Neal, Secretary of Housing and Economic Development Gregory Bialecki, Chicopee Mayor Michael Bissonnette, and Qteros CEO Bill Frey.
Today’s event kicked off the final phase of construction that will turn the existing 16,000-square-foot structure into a state-of-the-art pilot plant at an expected cost of $3.2 million. This Qteros pretreatment plant will also have the potential to become the site for the company’s full-scale pilot and manufacturing plants, providing even more jobs and growth to the region. The plant is expected to be in small-scale production by the end of this year. In 2010, the full-scale plant—if funded—will come online. The technology is ready, Qteros said, and the company is prepared to move these projects forward.
“Qteros is grateful for all of the support that Mayor Bissonette and the City of Chicopee have provided,” said Qteros CEO Bill Frey. “We believe that this technology is transforming the way we produce fuel, and the work we are doing at this pilot plant is a critical step in scaling up our process.”
Qteros is making rapid progress toward commercialization of its unique Q Microbe™, a game-changing technology with the ability to convert virtually any form of biomass into ethanol in a single step. The Q Microbe™ works on corn stover (all the non-food portions of the corn plant), switchgrass, woody biomass, sugar cane residue, and even cellulose derived from municipal wastewater sewage sludge, among other feedstocks.
The company recently announced that it has achieved unprecedented lab results in the performance of its one-step conversion process. The Q Microbe™ can achieve outputs of 70 grams of ethanol per liter of fermentation broth, or 9 percent ethanol by volume, surpassing what is considered to be the threshold for commercial production of cellulosic ethanol, 50 grams per liter. Qteros has said this breakthrough makes its process the most economic to date.
Qteros’ technology is based on the discovery in Massachusetts of a microbe with the ability to convert virtually any cellulosic material to ethanol in a single step, far more efficiently than leading competitors. Dr. Susan Leschine, a microbiologist at UMass Amherst, discovered the “Q Microbe™” on the shores of the Quabbin Reservoir.