Hawaii Sugar to be Used for Jet Fuel
isc | Apr 12, 2010
Hawaii’s last sugar plantation could start producing jet fuel for the Navy, reports the Associated Press.
Federal agencies have announced they would spend millions of dollars to study producing advanced biofuels from sugarcane grown at Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar’s fields on Maui.
The Office of Naval Research is budgeting $2 million annually for the project through 2015, with a focus on producing diesel and jet fuel from sugar.
The Department of Energy is spending $2 million a year to have the University of Hawaii study energy crop development and energy conversion technologies.
HC&S General Manager Chris Benjamin says his company will be a “working laboratory” to test the potential of biofuel production.
“This federal funding represents a vote of confidence in Hawaii and in the future of HC&S,” Benjamin said in a news release. “It is a significant step toward our goal of transforming HC&S into a large-scale energy farm, playing a key role in securing Hawaii’s energy future.”
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