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by Ryan C. Christiansen
Web exclusive posted March 2, 2009, at 10:38 a.m. CST on www.ethanolproducer.com
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Assistant Research Professor Javed Iqbal is
conducting field trials with Jerusalem artichoke plants.
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The Institute for Sustainable and Renewable Resources, in Danville,
Va., is studying the potential to use the Jerusalem artichoke
(Helianthus tuberosis), a perennial native sunflower species, as a
feedstock for producing ethanol.
The institute is a research center jointly affiliated with the
departments of horticulture and forestry at Virginia Polytechnic
Institute and State University (Virginia Tech) (http://www.vt.edu) that’s focused on developing new opportunities for farming communities affected by declining tobacco and textile markets.
The Jerusalem artichoke grows from tubers and produces inulin, a
fructose polymer. The plant stores the inulin in its stem until it
flowers, when the inulin is then translocated to the tuber. “The plant
grows like a weed,” said Dr. M. Javed Iqbal, a researcher at the
Institute for Sustainable and Renewable Resources. “Even if you harvest
most of the tubers, there will still be one left that will grow back
again. It's kind of a nuisance in the Upper Midwest, because it's hard
to get rid of, which leads to one of the problems, actually: It grows
so thick that you sometimes have to thin it.”
Iqbal said Native Americans used Jerusalem artichoke tubers as
food. Settlers brought the tuber back to Europe and today, scientists
in Spain are looking at the plant as a feedstock for ethanol
production. Iqbal said Chinese researchers are also looking at the
feedstock. “There is a good amount of research going on (for) producing
ethanol from the Jerusalem artichoke,” he said, “but unfortunately, not
in the U.S.—other than me.” Iqbal laughed. “I don't know why people
aren't interested in using it. Everybody is after switchgrass. There is
nothing wrong with that, but we need to have alternative feedstocks,
also.”
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