Search Site   
Current News Stories
Ohio farm offers a different spin on animal-themed yoga
Lebanon home to nation’s largest horse-drawn carriage parade
Ohio man finds career in grape growing, distillery ownership
Land atlas or plat books may make great Christmas presents
Soil management meeting helps take confusion out of sampling
ICGA VP Tyler Everett participates in President Trump’s roundtable
Mexican farmers protest water law
New moon on Saturday; Winter Solstice occurs Sunday morning
Greater Peoria Farm Show seminars included market outlook
FFA Foundation executive receives Silver Stevie Award
Tikkun Farm teaches locals how to live off the land
   
News Articles
Search News  
   
Turning farming biomass to jet fuel
 
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — The University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture has landed a $250,000 federal grant to study the possible use of certain farming biomass in the production of jet fuel.
The institute says the Federal Aviation Administration grant will fuel a one-year study that looks into the use of pennycress, soybean, canola, carinata and camelina and softwood logging residues.
The study is expected to involve airports around Nashville; Memphis; Chattanooga; Birmingham, Alabama; and Atlanta, Georgia.
The institute says the pace of commercializing sustainable aviation fuels that reduce greenhouse gas emissions needs to be accelerated.
Researchers additionally will create projections of job creation, economic activity, labor income, farmer revenue and state and local taxes generated from the possible use of biomass to fuel airplanes.
Washington State University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Purdue University and Pennsylvania State University will collaborate on portions of the research.
12/8/2020