Skip to Content

Slim Down for Summer with That's Fit

Brownfields growing green fuels in Michigan update

Filed under: Biodiesel, Ethanol, Manufacturing/Plants



We wrote in the beginning of September about a professor at Michigan State University, Kurt Thelen, who was working on a project that grows crops on old industrial waste sites (known as brownfields) and then using those crops to make biofuels. The benefits including the plants sucking up some of the toxins in the soil, using "waste" land and creating more biomass for fuel. In an update from DaimlerChrysler, one of Thelen's partner on the site, the crops - sunflowers, corn, soybeans and more - have been harvested and will soon be tested as biomass for biofuels. Thelen's project, located in Rose Township, was endorsed by the EPA and could (fingers crossed here) lead to growing biofuels crops on hundreds of brownfields across the country.

The Rose Township site was once filled with more than 5,000 drums of illegally dumped oils, paint sledges and solvents. DC says in a press release that, "While DaimlerChrysler wasn't responsible for all the pollution at the Rose Township site, an agreement was reached between all responsible parties and the company took over the cleanup project in 1988." The EPA calls DC, "one of the primary parties responsible at the site." The mess was created mostly in the late '60s. High time it gets cleaned up.

Related:
[Source: Chrysler Group, EPA]

Add your comments

Please keep your comments relevant to this blog entry. Email addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments.

When you enter your name and email address, you'll be sent a link to confirm your comment, and a password. To leave another comment, just use that password.

To create a live link, simply type the URL (including http://) or email address and we will make it a live link for you. You can put up to 3 URLs in your comments. Line breaks and paragraphs are automatically converted — no need to use <p> or <br /> tags.

Featured Galleries

Sponsored Links

Featured Galleries