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Big cellulosic ethanol plant being built in Italy
Apr. 14, 2011 – Mossi & Ghisolfi Group (M&G) recently held a groundbreaking ceremony for a 50-million litres/year (13-million gallons/year), commercial-scale cellulosic ethanol production facility in Crescentino, northwestern Italy. M&G is a partner of enzyme developer and producer Novozymes. The plant will be 10 times larger than the largest demonstration facilities in operation today and is designed to operate on a variety of cellulosic feedstocks. It is scheduled to start production in 2012.

“This plant proves cellulosic bioethanol can be produced in a sustainable manner for the environment and for the industry,” says Vittorio Ghisolfi, president of M&G Group. “But research is not stopping here. We are assessing bio-based substitutes for a range of other petrochemical products and chemical intermediates."

Cellulosic ethanol is produced from biomass, which is first broken down into a pulp. Enzymes are then added, turning cellulose in the biomass into sugar, which can be fermented into ethanol. Novozymes, the world’s largest producer of industrial enzymes, has collaborated closely with M&G for the last couple of years and will supply the enzymes for the plant. The company says that the price of the ethanol will be competitive with gasoline.

M&G’s plant in Crescentino will be self-sufficient in power. Lignin, a co-product extracted from biomass during the ethanol production process, is burned in an attached power plant that also feeds excess electricity back to the grid.