Tata Chemicals joins ICRISAT's Sweet Sorghum Ethanol Research Consortium
India's Tata Chemicals Limited (TCL), a leading company in the Tata group of industries joined hands today with the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) by signing a Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) for entering its Sweet Sorghum Ethanol Research Consortium (SSERC). Dr. William Dar, Director General of ICRISAT, and Homi R. Khusrokhan, Managing Director of TCL, signed the MOA in Hyderabad. It is envisaged that there is a huge global opportunity for all partners to work together to benefit millions of poor farmers by offering new market opportunities through this new venture.
The partnership will go a long way in enhancing the commercialization of sweet sorghum (Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench) for bioethanol production. Production of ethanol from sweet sorghum as a biofuel can provide additional incomes to dryland farmers and thus boost their livelihoods, including their food security. Through the ICRISAT Sweet Sorghum Ethanol Research Consortium (SSERC) the institute promotes technology for producing the biofuel through public-private partnerships.
ICRISAT is a nonprofit, non-political organization engaged in innovative agricultural research and capacity building for sustainable development with a wide array of partners across the globe. ICRISAT's mission is to help empower 600 million poor people to overcome hunger, poverty and a degraded environment in the dry tropics through better agriculture. ICRISAT belongs to the Alliance of Future Harvest Centers of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), which helped making the 'Green Revolution' a success.
ICRISAT recently developed sweet sorghum hybrids that yield more sugar and that allow poor farmers to grow both food, fuel and animal fodder. The research resulted in a cultivar that is relatively drought tolerant, needs comparatively small amounts of water and yields high amounts of easily extractable sugar that can be used as a feedstock for ethanol production. Like sugar cane, the sugars are contained in the plant's canes; for an equivalent amount of bioethanol, the new sorghums need much less water than sugarcane and are therefor suitable for dryland regions (previous post).
The sweet sorghum hybrids form the core of ICRISAT's 'Pro-Poor Biofuels Initiative' [*.pdf] which aims to join food, fiber, feed and fuel production amongst poor dryland farmers (more here and here).
Tata Chemical Limited is today a leading manufacturer of inorganic chemicals, fertilizers and food additives. The company has an annual turnover of about US$ 1.5 billion and is part of the US$ 28.8 billion Tata Group, India's foremost business conglomerate:
energy :: sustainability :: biomass :: bioenergy :: biofuels :: ethanol :: sweet sorghum :: drylands :: poverty alleviation :: rural development :: India :: ICRISAT ::
Recently TCL entered biofuels production and is setting up a plant in Nanded, Maharashtra, for the manufacture of bioethanol from sweet sorghum. Through the MOA, TCL can now avail itself of the sweet sorghum research outputs of ICRISAT. This includes supply of seeds of sweet sorghum varieties and hybrids along with technical know-how on sweet sorghum cultivation aspects.
Khusrokhan said that he was very happy TCL had joined the consortium and was impressed by the developmental work done by ICRISAT globally. Credit: The Hindu.
Picture: Dr. A. R. Palani Swamy, Managing Director of Rusni Distilleries, displaying ethanol extracted from sweet sorghum at his plant in Mohammed Shapur village in Medak district, 65 km from Hyderabad. Rusni Distilleries is one of the first to actually produce sweet sorghum ethanol in collaboration with ICRISAT.
References:
Tata Chemicals: Tata Chemicals joins ICRISAT's sweet sorghum ethanol consortium - November 21, 2007.
ICRISAT: Pro-Poor Biofuels Outlook for Asia and Africa: ICRISAT’s Perspective [*.pdf].
Biopact: ICRISAT launches pro-poor biofuels initiative in drylands - March 15, 2007
Biopact: ICRISAT's pro-poor biofuel projects provide livelihood and food security to landless farmers in India - August 13, 2007
Biopact: Sweet super sorghum - yield data for the ICRISAT hybrid - February 21, 2007
The partnership will go a long way in enhancing the commercialization of sweet sorghum (Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench) for bioethanol production. Production of ethanol from sweet sorghum as a biofuel can provide additional incomes to dryland farmers and thus boost their livelihoods, including their food security. Through the ICRISAT Sweet Sorghum Ethanol Research Consortium (SSERC) the institute promotes technology for producing the biofuel through public-private partnerships.
ICRISAT is a nonprofit, non-political organization engaged in innovative agricultural research and capacity building for sustainable development with a wide array of partners across the globe. ICRISAT's mission is to help empower 600 million poor people to overcome hunger, poverty and a degraded environment in the dry tropics through better agriculture. ICRISAT belongs to the Alliance of Future Harvest Centers of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), which helped making the 'Green Revolution' a success.
ICRISAT recently developed sweet sorghum hybrids that yield more sugar and that allow poor farmers to grow both food, fuel and animal fodder. The research resulted in a cultivar that is relatively drought tolerant, needs comparatively small amounts of water and yields high amounts of easily extractable sugar that can be used as a feedstock for ethanol production. Like sugar cane, the sugars are contained in the plant's canes; for an equivalent amount of bioethanol, the new sorghums need much less water than sugarcane and are therefor suitable for dryland regions (previous post).
The sweet sorghum hybrids form the core of ICRISAT's 'Pro-Poor Biofuels Initiative' [*.pdf] which aims to join food, fiber, feed and fuel production amongst poor dryland farmers (more here and here).
Tata Chemical Limited is today a leading manufacturer of inorganic chemicals, fertilizers and food additives. The company has an annual turnover of about US$ 1.5 billion and is part of the US$ 28.8 billion Tata Group, India's foremost business conglomerate:
energy :: sustainability :: biomass :: bioenergy :: biofuels :: ethanol :: sweet sorghum :: drylands :: poverty alleviation :: rural development :: India :: ICRISAT ::
Recently TCL entered biofuels production and is setting up a plant in Nanded, Maharashtra, for the manufacture of bioethanol from sweet sorghum. Through the MOA, TCL can now avail itself of the sweet sorghum research outputs of ICRISAT. This includes supply of seeds of sweet sorghum varieties and hybrids along with technical know-how on sweet sorghum cultivation aspects.
Khusrokhan said that he was very happy TCL had joined the consortium and was impressed by the developmental work done by ICRISAT globally. Credit: The Hindu.
Picture: Dr. A. R. Palani Swamy, Managing Director of Rusni Distilleries, displaying ethanol extracted from sweet sorghum at his plant in Mohammed Shapur village in Medak district, 65 km from Hyderabad. Rusni Distilleries is one of the first to actually produce sweet sorghum ethanol in collaboration with ICRISAT.
References:
Tata Chemicals: Tata Chemicals joins ICRISAT's sweet sorghum ethanol consortium - November 21, 2007.
ICRISAT: Pro-Poor Biofuels Outlook for Asia and Africa: ICRISAT’s Perspective [*.pdf].
Biopact: ICRISAT launches pro-poor biofuels initiative in drylands - March 15, 2007
Biopact: ICRISAT's pro-poor biofuel projects provide livelihood and food security to landless farmers in India - August 13, 2007
Biopact: Sweet super sorghum - yield data for the ICRISAT hybrid - February 21, 2007
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