Watermelons as Source of Biofuel
Filed in archive Energy, Environment and Ecology on August 25, 2009

© La Grande Farmers' MarketWatermelons that do not make it to the market may be a valuable source of alternative energy. A study has shown that the juice of reject watermelons can be fermented efficiently into biofuel.
Wayne Fish worked with a team of researchers at the USDA-Agricultural Research Service's South Central Agricultural Research Laboratory in Lane, Oklahoma, US, to evaluate the biofuel potential of juice from 'cull' watermelons - those not sold due to cosmetic imperfections, and currently ploughed back into the field. He said, "About 20% of each annual watermelon crop is left in the field because of surface blemishes or because they are misshapen. We've shown that the juice of these melons is a source of readily fermentable sugars, representing a heretofore untapped feedstock for ethanol biofuel production".
As well as using the juice for ethanol production, either directly or as a diluent for other biofuel crops, Fish suggests that it can be a source of lycopene and L-citrulline, two 'nutraeuticals' for which enough demand currently exists to make extraction economically worthwhile. After these compounds have been removed from the 'cull' juice, it can still be fermented into ethanol.
The researchers conclude, "At a production ratio of ~0.4 g ethanol/g sugar, as measured in this study, approximately 220 L/ha of ethanol would be produced from cull watermelons".
Source

© La Grande Farmers' Market
As well as using the juice for ethanol production, either directly or as a diluent for other biofuel crops, Fish suggests that it can be a source of lycopene and L-citrulline, two 'nutraeuticals' for which enough demand currently exists to make extraction economically worthwhile. After these compounds have been removed from the 'cull' juice, it can still be fermented into ethanol.
The researchers conclude, "At a production ratio of ~0.4 g ethanol/g sugar, as measured in this study, approximately 220 L/ha of ethanol would be produced from cull watermelons".
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Tags: biofuel alternative+energy source biotech watermelons watermelons+source source+biofuel
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Response from:
henky
(12/14/09 4:25pm)
As the world population is growing fast the agribusiness sector is booming. All those mouths need food and especially meat as the income level is rising in developing countries too. Agricultural land is limited so the price for agro-products will go up wich counts for corn for ethanol too. In the end I think other alternative energy sources like solar or wind energy will be cheaper than ethanol.
Response from:
melanotan
(12/16/09 1:09am)
Great...Cull watermelons is a source of lycopene and L-citrulline, that can be a biofuel... Hope this information help us to the growth of our own country...^^,
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