Research

Nufarm buys project to boost plants’ oil-producing ability

Grain Central November 11, 2024

Dr Thomas Vanhercke has worked on the project for more than a decade. Photo: CSIRO

AN AUSTRALIAN-led scientific breakthrough to increase oil yield from plants will help advance the production and use of biofuels such as sustainable aviation fuel.

Developed over a decade by CSIRO scientists, the technology was acquired by Australian agricultural innovation company Nufarm.

The Biomass Oil Project was announced on Friday, with Nufarm leading a new global research partnership to further develop the technology.

Oils from plants are produced by specialised seeds and fruits, but CSIRO scientists looked at extending that to the biomass of the plant, including the leaves and stem.

CSIRO Thomas Vanhercke has been working on the project for more than a decade, and said the technology would have the potential to create an important new global energy source.

“We were inspired to develop this technology in response to the world’s need for increased production of plant oil without impacting on food security,” Dr Vanhercke said.

“With CSIRO’s existing expertise in the area and the partnership with Nufarm on the Omega-3 canola project, we started thinking about how to extend that to the challenge of developing industrial-scale feedstock oil from plants.

“We took the genetics for seed-oil production and incorporated them across a range of crops with promising success.”

Current project lead Xue-Rong Zhou said the world-leading research in boosting oil yield from plants is a major breakthrough for Australia and beyond.

“This development of new biofuels and renewable oils will support a sustainable future,” Dr Zhou said.

“We are looking forward to working with Nufarm and our global research partners to deploy the technology into high biomass energy cane and sorghum varieties and make it a reality.”

Nufarm chief executive officer Greg Hunt said the company was bringing together researchers from CSIRO, the University of Florida in the US, and the Instituto Agronomico in Brazil to take the work to the next level.

“We have assembled a consortium of world-class R&D and technical partners who bring unique experience to develop this technology,” Mr Hunt said.

“Nufarm is also working with key strategic partners to further support the technical project development and future downstream commercialisation.”

Source: CSIRO

HAVE YOUR SAY

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Your comment will not appear until it has been moderated.
Contributions that contravene our Comments Policy will not be published.

Comments

Get Grain Central's news headlines emailed to you -
FREE!