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Scientific challenges of bioethanol production in Brazil

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TLDR
This review provides special emphasis on the selection of new yeast strains, genetic breeding, and recombinant DNA technology, as applied to bioethanol production processes, as applications in Brazil.
Abstract
Bioethanol (fuel alcohol) has been produced by industrial alcoholic fermentation processes in Brazil since the beginning of the twentieth century. Currently, 432 mills and distilleries crush about 625 million tons of sugarcane per crop, producing about 27 billion liters of ethanol and 38.7 million tons of sugar. The production of bioethanol from sugarcane represents a major large-scale technology capable of producing biofuel efficiently and economically, providing viable substitutes to gasoline. The combination of immobilization of CO2 by sugarcane crops by photosynthesis into biomass together with alcoholic fermentation of this biomass has allowed production of a clean and high-quality liquid fuel that contains 93% of the original energy found in sugar. Over the last 30 years, several innovations have been introduced to Brazilian alcohol distilleries resulting in the improvement of plant efficiency and economic competitiveness. Currently, the main scientific challenges are to develop new technologies for bioethanol production from first and second generation feedstocks that exhibit positive energy balances and appropriately meet environmental sustainability criteria. This review focuses on these aspects and provides special emphasis on the selection of new yeast strains, genetic breeding, and recombinant DNA technology, as applied to bioethanol production processes.

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Bioethanol production: Feedstock and current technologies

TL;DR: In this article, the current status of ethanol production from different feedstocks and the state of technologies involved in ethanol production is discussed, and a review of the state-of-the-art technology involved in the production of ethanol from such different feedstock is presented.
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Anaerobic digestion of vinasse from sugarcane ethanol production in Brazil: Challenges and perspectives

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Strengthening and Implementing the Global Response

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Fatty acid synthesis in Escherichia coli and its applications towards the production of fatty acid based biofuels.

TL;DR: The first part of this review aims at summarizing the knowledge about fatty acid biosynthesis of E. coli and its regulation, and it provides the connection towards the production of fatty acids and related biofuels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ethanol production in Brazil: a bridge between science and industry

TL;DR: There are great research opportunities in production processes of the first-generation ethanol regarding high-value added products, cost reduction and selection of new industrial yeast strains that are more robust and customized for each distillery.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Ethanol for a Sustainable Energy Future

TL;DR: Most of the “new renewable energy sources” are still undergoing large-scale commercial development, but some technologies are already well established and fully competitive with motor gasoline and appropriate for replication in many countries.
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Green house gases emissions in the production and use of ethanol from sugarcane in Brazil: the 2005/2006 averages and a prediction for 2020.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated the energy balance and GHG emissions in the production and use of fuel ethanol from cane in Brazil for 2005/2006 (for a sample of mills processing up to 100 million tons of sugarcane per year), and for a conservative scenario proposed for 2020.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fuel ethanol after 25 years.

TL;DR: After 25 years, Brazil and North America are still the only two regions that produce large quantities of fuel ethanol, from sugar cane and maize, respectively, but only tax credits make fuel ethanol commercially viable because oil prices are at an all-time low.
Journal ArticleDOI

Yeast selection for fuel ethanol production in Brazil

TL;DR: Results suggest that the great yeast biodiversity found in distillery environments could be an important source of strains, because during yeast cell recycling, selective pressure is imposed on cells, leading to strains with higher tolerance to the stressful conditions of the industrial fermentation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bioethanol from lignocelluloses: Status and perspectives in Brazil.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the efforts of different Brazilian institutions and research groups on second generation bioethanol production, especially from sugarcane bagasse, and they show that in the coming years, ethanol yield per hectare of cane could reach 10,000 L/ha, if 50% of the produced bagasse would be converted to ethanol.
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