WEST PALM BEACH, Fla., Sept. 08, 2016 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Alliance BioEnergy Plus, Inc. (OTCQB:ALLM) (the "Company"), is very pleased to release the results from months of testing and data collection on dozens of lignocellulose feedstocks utilizing the patented CTS conversion process. Corn stover, sugar cane bagasse, various grasses, hard and soft woods, landscape waste, agricultural waste and specialty plants were all put through the CTS system. The C5 and C6 sugars were recovered, solubilized and fermented into alcohols while the pure lignin was separated and collected. Extensive data on energy consumption, recycling, recovery rates, processing times and overall economics have been compiled.
For the first time a cellulose conversion process has the ability to meet the Renewable Fuel Standard as enacted by Congress.
The Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS and RFS2) is an American federal program that requires a continuing reduction in the use of corn-starch based sugar and an increase in Cellulosic based Sugar for the production of renewable fuel to be blended into petroleum based transportation fuel in increasing amounts each year, escalating to 36 billion gallons by 2022 with no more than a maximum of 15 billion gallons from corn-starch ethanol and a minimum of 16 billion gallons from Cellulosic ethanol.
The Problem that RFS2 has generated is a serious problem for the Ethanol producers as they have been unsuccessful in using a Cellulosic Enzymatic Extraction Process at commercial levels. Only 3 commercial scale plants have been constructed at a total cost of $1 Billion and all 3 have been unsuccessful in producing volumes of cellulosic ethanol. Abengoa was the 1st at $500 million opening in 2013 in Hugoton, KS and closing in December 2015. In 2014, Poet in partnership with DSM opened a $275 million facility in Emmetsburg, IA with the expectation of producing 20 million gallons a year only to deliver several tanker cars of cellulosic ethanol by spring of 2016, according to company press release dated April 27, 2016. The 3rd, built by DuPont at a cost of $225 million, opened October 2015, also in Iowa and it remains to be seen if it will reach its stated capacity. The common elements of these plants are the use of an enzymatic conversion process, corn stover as a feedstock and a projected gallon of ethanol production cost well above $3.50, making these ventures economically unfeasible.
The Solution is Alliance’s CTS process which overcomes all of the enzymatic shortcomings. The CTS process has proven to be the only cellulosic sugar extraction system that is not only in-expensive to construct and operate, but, is able to accept-and-process multiple cellulosic feedstocks on a continuous basis without the need for a pre-treatment, enzymes, liquid acids, applied heat or pressures. By example: if the CTS process were added to one of the existing Cellulosic Ethanol plants using their extremely high corn stover economic model and bypassing the pre-treatment and enzymatic process completely the cost to make a pound of sugar from the stover would decrease to less than 8.5 cents and the production cost of a gallon of cellulosic ethanol would drop to less than $1.70. The capital cost for the CTS replacement system for the same capacity would be less than 30% of the cost of the enzymatic system it is replacing. This is based on extensive data that includes: mass balance, utility consumption and labor rates, capital and start-up costs, finance and depreciation, product yields, feedstock, overhead, fixed costs, installed equipment costs, engineering and Lang factor multipliers. In addition, the CTS process is able to introduce less costly feedstocks bringing the per pound sugar cost down to as low as 4 cents in some cases and the per gallon production cost of cellulosic ethanol to as low as $0.90 cents with the right feedstock. By contrast traditional corn ethanol is produced at a cost of between $1.35 and $1.75 depending on the price of corn.
The Economic-Bottom-Line is that beyond providing an RFS2 compliant, commercially viable Cellulosic process, the installation of ALLM’s bolt-on CTS unit to an existing enzymatic, low output facility, would instantly bring that plant to capacity and with the production of 20 million gallons of cellulosic ethanol per year would generate more than $68,000,000 in revenues from the fuel alone plus any available carbon credits, tax incentives as well as local, state and federal benefits from producing a completely green and renewable fuel source. This does not take into account the value of the pure lignin produced from the process or any other byproducts and fine chemicals. Unlike the other systems the CTS process is modular and is able to be added to existing sugar mills, corn ethanol plants, cellulosic ethanol plants or built free standing as a greenfield project. It can be expanded to meet the needs of the available feedstock with the simple addition of low cost CTS reactors thus increasing the potential revenue of a single plant by hundreds of millions of dollars a year.
About ALLM:
Alliance BioEnergy +, Inc. (“ALLM”) is a publicly traded company focusing on the commercialization and licensing of a patented cellulose conversion technology that it controls through a master license agreement with the University of Central Florida. ALLM’s subsidiary, AMG Energy Group, LLC (“AMG”), owns 50% of Carbolosic, LLC, in a joint venture with Thor Renewable Energy Singapore. Carbolosic holds the exclusive, worldwide license to three (3) issued patents and fifteen (15) filed and pending patents revolving around the core CTS (cellulose to sugar) technology. ALLM also holds the exclusive CTS rights to North America (Canada, US, and Mexico) and Africa.
The CTS process is the only known patented, dry mechanical process that can convert virtually any cellulose material into sugars and other products in a matter of minutes with no liquid acids, no applied heat, pressure or hazardous materials of any kind. The CTS process when used in the production of Ethanol is clean, less expensive to build and operate than traditional ethanol plants or other cellulose ethanol technologies and is completely environmentally friendly.
Information in this document constitute forward-looking statements or statements which may be deemed or construed to be forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The words "forecast", "anticipate", "estimate", "project", "intend", "expect", "should", "believe", and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements involve, and are subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which could cause Alliance BioEnergy Plus, Inc. actual results, performance (financial or operating) or achievements to differ from the future results, performance (financial or operating) or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. The risks, uncertainties and other factors are more fully discussed in Alliance Media Group Holdings, Inc’s filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. All forward-looking statements attributable to Alliance BioEnergy Plus, Inc herein are expressly qualified in their entirety by the above-mentioned cautionary statement. Alliance BioEnergy Plus, Inc. disclaims any obligation to update forward-looking statements contained in this estimate, except as may be required by law.