US DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY AWARDS METABOLIX, INC. $7.4
MILLION TO EXPAND THE DEVELOPMENT OF BIO-BASED PLASTICS PRODUCTION IN
PLANTS
PRESS RELEASE
October 2001
News media Contact: Date: October 2, 2001
James Barber, President and CEO
Metabolix, Inc., 303 Third St.
Cambridge, MA 02142
617-583-1700; fax: 617-583-1768
info@metabolix.com
US Department of Energy Awards Metabolix, Inc.$ 7.4 Million to Expand
the Development of Bio-based Plastics Production in Plants
Cambridge, MA Sept. 30 - Metabolix, Inc. is the recipient of an award
totaling more than $7.4 million from the U.S. Department of Energy to
continue the companys pioneering efforts to produce polyhydroxyalkanoate
(Mirel) biopolymers directly in plants. The goal of the 5-year program
is to produce Mirel plastics and derived chemicals directly in switchgrass,
while providing biomass for alternative energy generation. Direct production
of Mirels in plants will yield economics competitive with those of existing
large-volume petrochemical polymers. Program success will establish
an economically and environmentally sustainable basis for a substantial
portion of the worlds plastics and chemicals with corresponding
reductions in greenhouse gases and a reduction in the nations
reliance on oil. Metabolix will cost-share the $14.8 million budget
with DOE. The project will bring Metabolix together with academic and
government partners across the United States.
The award, one of the largest of 11 projects announced by Secretary
of Energy Spencer Abraham, is part of the DOEs competitive Agriculture
Industries of the Future (IOF) program operated by its Office of Industrial
Technologies, aimed at promoting promising technologies for achieving
a more sustainable basis for the energy, plastics, and chemicals industries.
The Biomass Biorefinery Project is part of the National Energy Plans
initiative to foster increased development of bioproducts and bioenergy
through agriculture. The project will help to develop the technology
for producing chemicals, plastics, materials, and other products, using
the ability of plants to fix carbon from the atmosphere.
"The Biomass Biorefinery program at Metabolix directly supports
the Plant/Crop-Based Renewable Resources 2020 Vision and Roadmap",
said Mark Paster, DOE Team Lead for the Agriculture IOF effort. "Achieving
success with this project will help provide the opportunity to reach
a fivefold increase in renewable resource use for biobased chemicals
and materials by 2020, and will set the stage for a further ramp-up
in use of sustainable resources beyond 2020."
"This DOE award will significantly accelerate the development of
plants with economically recoverable yields of Mirel biopolymers,"
said Dr. Oliver Peoples, Metabolixs Chief Scientific Officer and
Vice President, Research and Development. "The low costs achievable
with plant-crop production of Mirels will allow polymers, materials, and
chemicals derived from them to serve as realistic, cost-effective, sustainable
alternatives to many of the largest volume plastics and chemicals now
made by the petrochemical industry."
Founded in 1992, Metabolix, Inc. uses sophisticated biotechnology to
produce environmentally-friendly performance plastics and specialty
chemicals from renewable resources. The company is a world leader in
applying the advanced tools of metabolic engineering and molecular biology
to create efficient production of biopolymers in microbial systems via
fermentation and, ultimately, directly in non-food plant crops. The
companys first generation polymers will be introduced into specialty
markets later this year. In May 2001, the company acquired the assets
of Biopol from Monsanto, supplementing Metabolixs already
strong intellectual property position and opening several markets to
rapid development.
For
further information, contact:
J. Barber
Metabolix, Inc.
info@metabolix.com
(617) 492-0505
SOURCE Metabolix 05/16/2001