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SG Biofuels Doubles Jatropha Output, Triples Profits

SG Biofuels, a company that specializes in developing jatropha for use in alternative fuels, such as biodiesel, has announced a new variety of the tropical plant that has double the oil output of normal jatropha and is best for the tropics where it is grown.

This company press release says the new variety is named JMax 100, a proprietary cultivar of Jatropha optimized for growing conditions in Guatemala with yields 100 percent greater than existing varieties:

JMax 100 is the first elite cultivar developed through the company’s JMax Jatropha Optimization Platform. The platform provides growers and plantation developers with access to the highest yielding and most profitable Jatropha in the world, the sequenced genome and advanced biotech and synthetic biology tools to develop cultivars specifically optimized for their unique growing conditions.

“The yields and profitability of JMax100 and the JMax platform far exceed what is currently available through existing varieties of Jatropha,” said Kirk Haney, President and Chief Executive Officer of SG Biofuels. “In Guatemala, we have utilized the world’s largest library of Jatropha genetic material and our advanced genetic program to enable exponential increases in productivity and profitability, and establish Jatropha as a large-scale sustainable energy crop.”

The press release goes on to say that the JMax 100 variety triples the profitability of Jatropha to greater than $400 per acre, cranking out more than 350 gallons per acre at $1.39 per gallon.

    5 Comments

  • [...] for the biofuel industry. SG Biofuels, who already specializes in developing jatropha biodiesel, has announced a new variety of the plant that has double the oil output of normal jatropha. This new variety, dubbed JMax 100, [...]

  • April 18, 2010 — 8:50 pm

    constantino rampone

    I am currently growing Tempate in El Salvador and my crop is about 2 and 1/2 years old. I am using a variety imported from India and these plants have been proven to be well adapted to El Salvador. I am waiting to see if this Indian crop will produce more in El Salvador because of the better weather conditions than in India. The seeds that I used were the best producing seeds that they had in India at the time of my purchase.
    I am wondering if the seeds that I planted will produce a similar yield as the JMax 100. I am interested in communicating more with you regarding these issues because we are growing Jatropha in neighboring countries. It would be beneficial if we were able to contact each other.

  • [...] output. The report also notes some of the feedstock’s drawbacks which include the fact that no consistently high yielding varieties have been developed and because the plant is toxic to both humans and animals, it can not be used [...]

  • [...] oil output. The report also notes some of the feedstock’s drawbacks which include the fact that no consistently high yielding varieties have been developed and because the plant is toxic to both humans and animals, it can not be used [...]

  • [...] Biofuels, a bioenergy crop company focusing on Jatropha for biofuels, has officially opened operations in Brazil and has named Brazilian entrepreneur and genomics [...]

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