Morning Sun

Biden administra­tion plans to spur biological production of fuels, chemicals and plastics

Developmen­t spurred by $1 billion investment

- By Riley Griffin

The White House is preparing to release plans for building U.S. capacity to make plastics, chemicals, foods, fuels and other products using biological processes in an effort to keep pace in a global biomanufac­turing race.

Prompted by a September executive order and supported by more than $1 billion in Defense Department funding, the Biden administra­tion program will release documents Wednesday outlining biomanufac­turing and biotechnol­ogy targets. Goals include using living organisms to make at least 30% of chemicals and to be able to displace more than 90% of plastics within the next two decades, according to documents reviewed by Bloomberg News.

Bio-based processes have the potential to generate as much as $4 trillion in annual U.S. economic impact over the next 10 to 20 years, according to a Mckinsey & Co. projection cited in the documents. While the country is a leader in the science that underpins many of these bio-based products, the administra­tion wants to build the manufactur­ing capacity and workforce needed to produce them in industrial quantities and at a level that can compete with other countries.

“The current network of facilities in the United States does not meet demand and lags overseas networks, driving some companies to conduct scale-up efforts abroad,” according to a Department of Energy report among the documents compiled by the White House.

The White House’s plan includes reports from the Department­s of Energy, Agricultur­e, Commerce, Health and Human Services and the National Science Foundation, along with other federal agencies. Separately, the Department of Defense released its own biomanufac­turing strategy geared at guiding a previously announced $1.2 billion investment in domestic biomanufac­turing infrastruc­ture.

“If you can imagine it, you can probably make it through biology,” said Kate Sixt, principal director for biosecurit­y in the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineerin­g. “That’s the promise of biomanufac­turing.”

Long-term Biden administra­tion targets include displacing plastics and commercial polymers with bio-based alternativ­es, meeting at least 30% of chemical demand through biomanufac­turing and increasing manufactur­ing of cell-based medicine while cutting their costs 10-fold.

By the end of the decade, the administra­tion is aiming for production of 3 billion gallons (11.4 billion liters) of a bio-based aircraft fuel while reducing agricultur­al methane admissions by capturing biogases and better managing manure. In five years, it aims to sequence the genomes of a million microbial species, gain understand­ing of the function of at least 80% of newly discovered genes and produce at least a quarter of active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s in certain common medicines.

These are goals, not commitment­s, the White House cautioned, calling for government collaborat­ion with private companies and national laboratori­es. To some they’re ambitious, and others, outlandish.

“I love it when I see big, bold, barely feasible goals, because then it tells you what you need to do to start creating the future you want,” said Arati Prabhakar, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology, which will lead implementa­tion. The plan also has the potential to significan­tly reduce dependence on fossil fuels, she said.

“It’s sort of crazy when you think about it, we’re digging up dead dinosaur molecules to make plastic and other materials so integral to the world that we live in,” she said in an interview before announcing the goals at the Advanced Bioeconomy Leadership Conference in Washington.

The Defense Department will invest $1 billion over five years to establish the domestic biomanufac­turing industrial base, $270 million over five years for a program focused on supply-chain resilience, and $200 million to support biosecurit­y and cybersecur­ity, according to its report.

The Pentagon said it’s focused on addressing “critical shortfalls in military capability and building an enduring advantage in biomanufac­turing by retaining domestic capability.” The department is trying to head off more situations where U.S. manufactur­ers might have to go to China and other foreign countries for key products such as semiconduc­tors.

“Not only are we seeing investment in infrastruc­ture for chips and clean tech, but biomanufac­turing is drawing from that same industrial base,” said Elisabeth Reynolds, the former special assistant to President Joe Biden for manufactur­ing and economic developmen­t at the National Economic Council, who launched the biomanufac­turing initiative last year. “We’re in a position where the U.S. can be a competitor, but it has to happen now for national and physical security.”

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