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FilAm scientist says carabao fluid
greatly aids bioethanol production


By JOJO DE GUZMAN

SCIENCE CITY OF MUÑOZ, Nueva Ecija - For the conversion of rice stubble and straw to ethanol as an alternative to crude oil-based fuels, lowly Philippine carabao might yet play an important role for the its commercial production.

Dr. Fiorello Abenes, a professor emeritus of animal and veterinary sciences at CalPoly Pomona University in California and who recently gave a lecture at the Institute of Graduate Studies at the Central Luzon State University here, said "The carabao is a paradigm in converting lignocellulose to ethanol and provides the model, just like a 'mother liquor' in the conversion process."

The Filipino-American scientist said the carabao "has rumen fluid whose organisms can help transform rice stubble and straw and other biomass into bioethanol".

Bioethanol is a light alcohol produced by fermenting sugarcane, corn, cassava and nipa. It is one of the types of biofuel mandated for mixture with diesel and gasoline under the Biofuels Act.

The theoretical basis for this was validated by experiments conducted at the Philippine Carabao Center (PCC) here.

"The experiments confirmed the ability of the model to produce ethanol using rumen microorganisms as first stage fermenters, followed by yeasts in the final fermenting stage," he said.

Abenes graduated with the degree of agricultural education, cum laude, from the CLSU in 1969. He was among the first Filipinos staying abroad who responded to the government's Balik-Scientist program in 1975.

He obtained his doctoral degree in animal science at the University of Connecticut in 1975, where he worked for many years as regional swine specialist in Alberta, Canada and at the Dairy Training and Research Institute of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations before moving to CalPoly Pomona University.

He retired at 55 years old in that university in 2005 and is now engaged in various private enterprises in the United States.

In his lecture he said "we can extract the rumen fluid from carabao and multiply them many times for commercial production of ethanol from biomass". Abenes said the carabao is a model for a way to convert lignocellulose to ethanol. Lignocellulose is the most common molecule on earth and is found in all plants.

Converting this molecule to alcohol using purified enzymes, chemical and physical hydrolysis (or chemical breakdown) is too expensive under Philippine conditions, Abenes said.

"The carabao is known for its ability to subsist on low quality forage, including rice stubble and straw. This ability is conferred upon this animal by the rumen that digests cellulose and hemicellulose, turning them into methane and volatile fatty acids (VFAs)," Abenes said.

Abenes said the methane is expelled when the carabao belches while the VFAs are parceled between the host animal and the microorganisms. "The host animal uses the VFAs as a source of energy. The microorganisms use them to support its life functions by synthesizing glucose," he said.

Abenes said the feasibility of the method has been validated in experiments conducted with PCC scientist Perla Florendo and because of the promising results of the experiment they submitted a paper to a national science and technology contest in energy research and development.

He said the rumen fluid can turn lignocellulose into fermentable carbohydrates and the fermentable carbohydrates can be turned into alcohol using common yeast.

"We have no illusion about winning any prize due to limited scope of the project but its submission at least documents that the first research in this area was conducted at PCC and CLSU," Abenes added.

He said preliminary calculations based on theoretical models have indicated that as much as 117 liters of alcohol can be distilled from 1,000 kg of biomass materials.

Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago, author of the Biofuels Act, sought more government oversight powers over biofuel development, saying it could adversely affect the country's ability to produce its own food.

She said biofuel production, being land-based, will eventually compete with food.

Abenes said the carabao model for production of ethanol could be an alternative as it uses rice straw and other biomass.

He cited the experience of Brazil, the oft-cited model for a thriving ethanol industry, which cannot be replicated in this country. According to Abenes, Brazil has a vast tract of land for sugarcane production.

There are less than 25 persons per square kilometer of land in Brazil compared to the Philippines' 300 persons per square kilometer. Brazil, the fifth largest country in the world, has a land area of 8,511,965 square kilometers. The Philippines' land area is 300,439 square kilometers.

Abenes explained that the commercial production of ethanol using the carabao model can involve residents of rural areas. They can be part of the factory assembly line by performing the tasks involved in the digestion process (in bioreactor containers) of the biomass material with the use of the rumen fluid that will be supplied to them.

The alcohol from the "bacterial beer" collected from the participating rural residents can be further refined through a solar distiller, he said.

The distiller is now being designed by engineers also from CLSU, he said.

Abenes also said residents who will be involved in this project can have added income, making the project a boost to countryside development.

 


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