Contact Information
Mary RosenthalInterim Executive Director Phone: 763.458.0068 General ABO Email: info@algalbiomass.org ABO Website: webmaster@algalbiomass.org
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Mailing AddressAlgal Biomass Organization 125 St. Paul Street United States |
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Mr. John WilliamsMedia Contact for the Algal Biomass Organization Scoville Public Relations (206) 625-0075 (Office) --- (206) 660-5503 (Cell) |
Wilson SonsiniGoodrich & RosatiGeneral Counsel to the ABO Andrew Braff abraff@algalbiomass.org 701 Fifth Avenue, Suite 5100 Seattle, WA 98104-7036 |
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Board of Directors |
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Mr. Darrin MorganCO-CHAIRPERSON Algal Biomass Organization The Boeing Company Seattle, Washington |
Mr. Billy GloverCO-CHAIRPERSON Algal Biomass Organization The Boeing Company Seattle, Washington |
Mr. Thomas ByrneABO SECRETARY Byrne & Company, Ltd. |
Mr. Mark Allen, P.E.A2BE Carbon Capture, LLC |
Dr. John BenemannBenemann Associates (925) 352-3352 |
Dr. Keith CookseyMontana State University |
Dr. Greg MitchellScripps Institution of Oceanography |
Dr. Ira "Ike" LevineUniversity of Southern Maine Lewiston, Maine |
Dr. Philip PienkosNational Renewable Energy Labs |
Mr. John PierceWilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, P.S. Seattle, Washington |
Dr. Margaret McCormickTargeted Growth, Inc. Seattle, Washington |
Ms. Elizabeth WillettMars Symbioscience Gaithersburg, Maryland
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Algae in the News
Research Collaboration Opportunity
The Department of Energy, Office of the Biomass Programs (OBP) intends to issue two Recovery Act Funding Opportunity Announcements (FOAs) to address research and development efforts related to intermediate ethanol blends and advanced biofuels, specifically including $50 million for a consortium to accelerate the demonstration of algal biofuels through a competitive solicitation. DOE expects to publish both FOAs in the summer of 2009. More
Go Green: Algae Could Be Next Hot Biofuel
WASHINGTON, DC — A 75-gallon tank of goo that in the course of a week or so changed color from lime green to almost black was one of the stars of last summer's Farnborough International Air Show in England. As airlines ordered hundreds of planes worth billions of dollars at the world's largest air show, the tank, or bioreactor, was a near-perfect breeding ground for what could become the fuel of the future: the lowly algae. More