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BIOENERGY TECHNOLOGIES OFFICE  
A wide variety of non-food biomass grown across the country can be converted into advanced hydrocarbon fuels using thermochemical  
processes. Photos (clockwise from upper left): iStock/3786400, Scott Butner/PNNL, iStock/6090867, Calvin Feik/NREL/16029  
Working with industry, academia, and the national laboratories,  
BETO has identied critical R&D barriers for specic conver-  
sion pathways. Research is needed to lower the cost, increase  
the efciency, and reduce the environmental impacts of thermo-  
Thermochemical Conversion:  
Using Heat and Catalysis to Make  
chemical conversion. R&D efforts are addressing these technical  
challenges with the goal of achieving a cost-competitive fuel  
Biofuels and Bioproducts  
The Bioenergy Technologies Office works with industry and  
other partners to develop economical pathways that use  
heat, pressure, and catalysis to convert domestic, non-food  
biomass into gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, and other products.  
price of $3 per gallon (gasoline equivalent) by 2017.  
Exploring Promising Technology  
Pathways  
Advanced biofuels are part of America’s “all-of-the-above”  
energy strategy to develop domestic energy resources and win  
the global race for clean energy technology. Developing a  
sustainable, commercial-scale U.S. bioindustry will stimulate  
the economy, create new jobs, and substantially decrease net  
BETO uses techno-economic modeling and engages key  
stakeholders to identify pathways that offer the greatest  
promise to make hydrocarbon biofuels cost competitive  
in the market.  
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greenhouse gas emissions on a life-cycle basis.  
Please visit BETO’s Technology Pathways Web page to  
access the pathways characterized to date:  
The Bioenergy Technologies Ofce (BETO) supports research  
and development (R&D) of technologies to efciently convert  
algae and diverse types of cellulosic biomass (brous, inedible  
portion of plants) into renewable fuels that are compatible with  
today’s vehicles and infrastructure. Thermochemical conver-  
sion processes apply heat, pressure, and catalysts to convert a  
broad range of biomass into renewable gasoline, diesel, jet fuels,  
chemicals, and heat and power.  
bioenergy.energy.gov/technology_pathways.html  
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Impacts on emissions depend upon the type of biomass used, cultivation practices,  
and processing.  


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