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EPOBIO Press Release
for UK mainstream press - English
23 November 2006

296 Kb Microsoft Word .doc | PDF Icon58 Kb PDF

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Plant potential in the pipeline

What have you done so far today; made a cup of tea, driven to work, sent an e-mail or text?

Each of those activities is dependent on oil, from fuel for transport to the plastic parts of your kettle, car, keyboard and mobile. Development of our high-impact consumer lifestyles is accelerating even as fossil fuel supplies are dwindling and the impact of their use on the environment becomes ever more apparent.

But plants, rather than fossil fuels can provide our future energy, fuel and everyday products and today an international group of scientists will reveal how. The EPOBIO project, led by CNAP, a research centre at the University of York , is releasing its first series of reports on the endless possibilities of plants.

The renewable revolution

EPOBIO Director Professor Dianna Bowles said “Two key threats to society are our dependence on finite fossil fuels and climate change. Plants have the potential to provide us with everything now made using petroleum. In this way, we can create a sustainable society for the future and address immediate concerns such as rising energy costs, security of supply and our impact on the environment.”

Plants offer a sustainable tool to achieve the renewable revolution. They are ‘green factories’ using energy from sunlight to make biofuel, bioplastics and a range of other products cheaply and in large quantities. The EPOBIO reports present detailed analyses of how plant products and plants themselves can be used to replace products made using oil.

Key issues highlighted in the reports are:

The need for alternative sources of natural rubber:

The potential of using plants as an energy supply:

The potential of producing lubricants from plants:

The EPOBIO project involves a partnership between experts in plant science, environmental impact assessment, economic analysis and social expectations and combines these strengths to identify the plant-based products which offer greatest benefit to society within the next 10-15 years.

Editor Notes

  1. Full versions of the reports and executive summaries are available to download from from this website along with further supporting information and images.

    PDF IconPlant Cell Walls flagship report: Cell Wall Saccharification
    532 Kb PDF

    PDF IconBiopolymers flagship report: Alternative Sources of Natural Rubber
    1279 Kb PDF

    PDF IconPlant Oils flagship report: Production of Wax Esters in Crambe
    492 Kb PDF

  2. Click here for Spokespeople and contact details for press information.

  3. EPOBIO stands for "Realising the Economic POtential of sustainable resources - BIOproducts from Non-Food Crops".

    EPOBIO is an international project to realise the economic potential of plant-derived raw materials and establish the priorities for bioscience research in order to deliver bio-based products for the market place in 10-15 years. The EPOBIO project involves a consortium of 12 European and US partners and is led by the Centre for Novel Agricultural Products at the University of York, UK. The project is funded as part of the European Commission’s Sixth Framework Programme, receiving just under £1million, with co-operation from the United States Department of Agriculture.

  4. CNAP, the Centre for Novel Agricultural Products, is a research centre in the Department of Biology at the University of York and was established through a benefaction from the Garfield Weston Foundation and funding from UK Government. The University of York was awarded a Queen’s Anniversary Prize for Higher and Further Education in 2006 for its work in CNAP. The aim of CNAP’s research is to realise the potential of plant- and microbial-based renewable resources through gene discovery to make products needed by society. CNAP research in plant and microbial sciences is supported by the UK Research Councils, particularly the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), as well as the DTI and DEFRA, and funding from European and US organisations.

  5. For general enquires about EPOBIO, please contact:

    Dr Louisa Wright
    Tel: +44 (0)1904 328802
    Mobile: +44 (0)7795 315036
    Email: lw15@york.ac.uk

    For general enquiries about the University of York, please contact:

    David Garner, University of York Communications Office
    Tel: +44 (0)1904 432153

© Copyright 2006, CNAP    Policy Statements     
Updated 27 February, 2008 by CPL Press - web@epobio.net

 

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