CSU, Boulder startup working to turn algae into fuel
Outlet:
A startup in Boulder is working with Colorado State University engineers on technology that starts with algae and ends up with eco-friendly fuel.
A startup in Boulder is working with Colorado State University engineers on technology that starts with algae and ends up with eco-friendly fuel.
Colorado State University and Solix Biofuels, Inc., a Boulder-based start-up company, are working in partnership to develop technology to mass-produce algae that create oil that can be converted into biodiesel fuel.
Their callings are different—as are the motives behind their work—but together the three Colorado State University professors are a part of academia working to combat the effects of one polarizing disease.
Colorado State University could see more than $140 million in new construction in the next five years if it can find willing backers.
Colorado State University will make an announcement on Thursday about a new partnership to develop oil from algae.
The outbreak of beetles that burrow under the bark, eventually killing the tree, might reduce wildfire risk by naturally thinning forests, according to the report released Tuesday by researchers from Colorado State University, the University of Colorado and the University …
Colorado State University and Mayo Clinic researchers will soon be working together to find new treatments for cancer and infectious diseases.
Colorado State University and Mayo Clinic researchers will soon be working together to find new treatments for cancer and infectious diseases.
Another report recently released by researchers from Colorado State University, the University of Colorado and the University of Idaho, suggests bark beetles are reducing fire risk by naturally thinning forests.
“He’s adopted a process that is very open at the front end,” said John Straayer, a political science professor at Colorado State University in Fort Collins. “These committees set up a mechanism to screen for talent and simultaneously take out …