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One step closer to the biosynthesis of renewable propane

Researchers at The University of Manchester have, by editing the genome of an algae enzyme, figured out how to produce propane, a relatively clean fuel. Propane is easily stored and transported, and there is already a market for it, so a renewable form of it would be not only promising economically but also good for the environment.

The pressure is on to reduce the environmental impact of transport fuels, particularly after the climate change agreement in Paris. With that in mind, researchers from the University of Manchester and Imperial College have made significant advances in the search to develop a way of making renewable propane gas (C3H8) through bioengineering.

The team, led by Professor Nigel Scrutton, director of the Manchester Institute of Biotechnology, and Dr Patrik Jones from Imperial College London, have developed a new metabolic pathway for the biosynthesis of propane gas by genetically engineering an enzyme found in algae. In nature, enzymes are proteins that act as catalysts and help complex reactions occur, such as digestion and photosynthesis, often breaking down large molecules into smaller ones.

Editing genomes and breaking chains
 

There is no natural way to make small-chain hydrocarbon propane, so the team first had to identify an enzyme that was capable of working with large hydrocarbon molecules, and then edit its genome. They used an enzyme found in algal cyanobacteria that researchers have previously employed to catalyse a reaction in order to form butanol (C4H9OH). It was then genetically engineered to make it capable of carrying out a reaction to convert a natural cell substrate into propane gas, instead of butanol.

In other words, an enzyme that was not naturally equipped to change hydrocarbon chains into propane gas was genetically modified to do so. The team's method was published in the journal Biotechnology of Biofuels.

"We take a natural enzyme, we re-engineer it to do a different type of chemistry with a different small molecule specificity," explains Scrutton. "Having done that, we can then use that in something we call metabolic engineering to make an artificial pathway that then converts that into propane gas."

Propane is sourced from petrochemicals that come from conventional oil reserves, so in its traditional form it isn't renewable and burning it gives off CO2. The team's new biosynthesis pathway uses biomass or waste feedstocks, which could come from plants or waste streams from other industrial processes. This means that precious reserves don't need to be depleted and less CO2 is released into the atmosphere.

"If you're depleting a feedstock to feed these bacteria, you can replenish that feedstock through natural photosynthesis," says Scrutton. "If it's a plant based feedstock you harvest that, you feed the bacteria on it, you re-grow your crop and fix carbon dioxide for the atmosphere as part of the photosynthetic process. It's more of a closed loop."

Facing up to the challenges
 

The team was challenged when trying to figure out how to actually re-engineer the enzyme in the first place. 

"We have ways of studying [enzyme] structures, but it's just by looking at the structure. You can't then easily understand how to change the structure to give it a different function," Scrutton says. "This is something that biochemists have been trying to do, and structural biology has been trying to do for many, many years. It's a bit of a black art."

"Structural biology is a bit of a black art."

Now they have genetically altered the enzyme successfully, there are new challenges, such as having to optimise the process. As with any reaction, the team wants to make the most product from as little resources as possible. Scrutton says that the method can make significant amounts of propane, but for commercial exploitation they are currently working on an optimisation cycle.

Another challenge for the pathway is to make it compatible with a whole range of different feedstocks which are widely available and cheap. Ideally, the feedstocks will be effectively zero cost if they are waste or leftover products from agriculture or biofuel plants.

"In different countries all the different requirements for the type of feedstock depend very much on the local economies and availability of the feedstocks," adds Scrutton. "So it's an ongoing process of optimisation, and adapting the organisms to work in different types of environments."

The ambition is to have a modular approach that will be tailored for different applications and demands, so that strains can be used in several ways.

A cleaner alternative

Since the climate agreement talks in Paris, the EU now has a requirement of using at least 10% biofuel in transport fuel, and carbon emissions need to be down 80% by 2050. In ambient conditions, propane is a clean burning gas, meaning it produces less toxic emissions, and so is an attractive option in terms of reducing pollution. When it is used as a transport fuel in cars, propane produces greenhouse gas emissions up to 20% lower than the usual unleaded gasoline. On combustion, diesel fuel emits 11.9kg of CO2 per gallon and petrol 10.6kg, compared with just 7.0kg per gallon of propane.

"Propane is a clean gas so, and having a more renewable, sustainable way of making it will contribute to all these agendas," says Scrutton. "The beauty of it is that because you can separate it easily by liquefaction from a biological organism, it's very easy to process."

"You can separate propane easily by liquefaction from a biological organism."

Propane is what is known as a dropping fuel, as existing global markets and infrastructure are already in place in a wide range of applications from heating to transport fuel. It just needs to drop into the existing infrastructure. It can also be transported as a compressed liquid, meaning it is easy to store and distribute.

While the search is on to find a commercially usable and renewable substitute to petroleum-based fuels, the team see propane as an attractive alternative.
This method of propane biosynthesis being made from what the researchers hope will eventually be a wide range of feedstocks, is an important step in phasing out fossil fuels.


Thrifty Direct 
The Thrifty Propane Customer Rewards Program gives Thrifty Propane customers a 10%* Discount over Thrifty Direct's lowest Amazon/Internet prices for the top quality name brand propane products and appliances you want as of the publishing date. Thrifty Propane customer will ALWAYS get the lowest prices at the Thrifty Direct store. 
In fact, like Thrifty Propane's guarantee to beat anyone's price for propane by $0.10 per gallon, we will beat anyone's prices on the products we sell at Thrifty Direct.** As a Thrifty Propane customer you also receive FREE SHIPPING at the Thrifty Direct store.
As a Thrifty Propane customer you are enrolled in a rewards program that gives you money to spend only at the Thrifty Direct store by rewarding you for every gallon you purchase at Thrifty Propane. For every gallon of propane you purchase starting 10/15/2014, you will add $0.03 to your Thrifty Direct Dollars account to spend only at the Thrifty Direct store. With our NEW REWARDS PROGRAM you get more value from your heating dollar.

 * Prices and programs subject to change ** Must be the same product ** Find the exact Year,Make and Model with the same features and we will match the price with Free Shipping! See complete disclaimer below (How You Can Use Your Thrifty Direct Dollars). 

           How You Can Use Your Thrifty Direct Dollars:
  • Earn $0.03 per gallon in Thrifty Direct Dollars for every gallon purchased after 10-15-2014.

  • You can use Thrifty Direct dollars only at the Thrifty Direct Store.

  • Every product falls into at least one product category, Residential, Commercial, Industrial, or Agricultural.

  • As a Thrifty Propane customer your propane purchase falls into one of the same four categories, Residential, Commercial, Industrial or Agricultural.

  • You will be able to purchase products in the same use category as your customer category: i.e. Commercial customers can only apply their Thrifty Direct Dollars to commercial products. Agricultural customers can only apply their Thrifty Direct Dollars to agricultural products. 

Tank Schedule Notice
WE CANNOT GIVE YOU A FIRM SET DATE. We can only deliver your tank on a BEST EFFORTS basis. The date we set your new tank depends on the weather, because the ground can be too wet and soft to set the tank, the availability of our crane trucks, the status of our tank supply, which is limited by the shear weight and size of the tanks. These tanks can weigh in excess of 2,000 pounds. Each crane truck can set only two tanks per day. Crane trucks may experience mechanical issues requiring repairs.
Purchasing a pre-buy of propane is not necessary when you purchase a tank, you can obtain propane at any time and from any supplier.

DO remember that if at any time between order and installation, you can request a full refund and we will immediately refund your full purchase price.
DO call for a delivery once your tank is installed, to provide time to ensure that your in-house system is operating properly as well as check for any smell of gas
DON'T send your old tank back until you we have set your tank in your yard, it is fully operational and filled.. NEVER be without a tank.
DON'T take a day off from work: we can install the tank on your property and then Thrifty Propane can turn the tank on after testing when you are home.
 
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CONTACT THRIFTY PROPANE:

HOURS OF OPERATION :MON-FRI 7AM-730PM SAT 9AM -5PM

MAIN LINE 800-879-3152

BILLING DEPARTMENT:  EXT. 301

TANK SCHEDULING OR REPAIR: EXT. 715