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23 November 2006

Media Information: David Garner 01904 432153 or Dr Louisa Wright 01904 328802

Plant potential in the pipeline

Think for a moment about what you have done so far today - made a cup of tea, driven to work, sent an e-mail or text?

Each of those activities is dependent on oil, from fuel for transport to the plastic parts of your kettle, car, keyboard and mobile. Development of our high-impact consumer lifestyles is accelerating even as fossil fuel supplies are dwindling, and the environmental impact of their use becomes ever more apparent.

But plants, rather than fossil fuels, can provide our future energy, fuel and domestic needs and today an international group of scientists will reveal how. The EPOBIO project, led by CNAP, a research centre at the University of York, is releasing its first series of reports on the endless possibilities of plants.

The renewable revolution

Plants offer a sustainable tool to achieve the renewable revolution. They are 'green factories' using energy from sunlight to make biofuel, bioplastics and a range of other products cheaply and in large quantities. The reports, issued today by the EPOBIO project, present detailed analyses of how plant products and plants themselves can be used to replace products made using oil.

EPOBIO co-ordinator and CNAP Director Professor Dianna Bowles, said: "Two key threats to society are our dependence on finite fossil fuels and climate change. Plants have the potential to provide us with everything now made using petroleum, creating a sustainable society for the future and addressing immediate concerns such as energy costs, security of supply and our impact on the environment."

Key issues:

The need for alternative sources of natural rubber:

"Plants have the potential to provide us with everything now made using petroleum"
Professor Dianna Bowles

The potential of using plants as an energy supply:

The potential of producing lubricants from plants:

The EPOBIO project involves a partnership between experts in plant science, environmental impact assessment, economic analysis and social expectations and combines these strengths to identify the plant-based products which offer greatest benefit to society within the next 10-15 years.

ENDS

Notes for editors:
EPOBIO Co-ordinator Professor Dianna Bowles CNAP, University of Yorke-mail: djb32@york.ac.uk tel: +44 (0)1904 328780
EPOBIO project manager David Clayton CNAP, University of York e-mail: dc530@york.ac.uk tel: +44 (0)7795 315069
Biopolymers report author Dr Jan van Beilen University of Lausanne, Switzerland e-mail: vanbeilen@biotech.biol.ethz.ch tel: +41 44 6333444
Plant Cell Walls report author Dr Ralf Möller Max-Plank-Institute of Molecular Plant Physiology, Germany e-mail: moeller@mpimp-golm.mpg.de tel: +49 (0)331 567 8263
Plant Oils report author Dr Anders Carlsson Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences e-mail: anders.carlsson@vv.slu.se tel: +46 (0)40 415561

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