KiOR's project under the DOE loan guarantee program will consist of four biorefineries that will contribute approximately 250 million gal of cellulosic biofuel to the Renewable Fuel Standard. The first two plants are expected to be in Mississippi, with additional sites planned in Georgia and Texas.
"We are pleased to work with the DOE on reaching this milestone and are excited about the scale and impact of the project. The project's first facility, planned in Newton, Miss., is expected to be the largest cellulosic biofuels facility in the U.S. Additionally, the project will have a significant impact on rural communities through the creation of direct, indirect, and induced jobs, with more than 14,000 jobs created during construction and more than 4,000 jobs created during operations.
The project also expects to reduce greenhouse gas lifecycle emissions by more than 70% compared with fossil-derived gasoline and diesel fuels, said Fred Cannon, president and CEO of KiOR. "While the term sheet is an important step in the process, we recognize that more work lies ahead to finalize the loan guarantee and there is no assurance it will be issued until the loan is closed," he added.
Vinod Khosla of Khosla Ventures noted that "I hope over time we can resurrect many of the thousands of jobs lost at the hundreds of paper mills that have been shutdown in America. Each mill shutdown devastated a community and now we hope to resurrect many of these rural communities while reducing our dependence on foreign oil."
"Last year Mississippi realized the tremendous potential of the KiOR technology and made a decision to bring it to our state," said Gov. Haley Barbour. "We're excited the U.S. Department of Energy has come to the same conclusion to support this one-billion-plus dollar project to speed up the construction of two additional KiOR facilities here."
This project accelerates KiOR's commercialization strategy. In August 2010, the company announced the start of engineering and construction on the first commercial facility in Columbus, Miss. which is expected to produce more than 11 million gal of fuel per year. KiOR also has additional projects in various stages of development in Arkansas, Alabama, and other southern states.
KiOR's technology combines a proprietary catalyst system with a biomass-to-renewable crude conversion technology to produce a high-quality oil called Re-Crude, using a process similar to Fluid Catalytic Cracking used in the oil industry. Re-Crude is refined into gasoline and diesel blendstocks that are compatible with our country's existing fuel infrastructure and are a viable near-term solution to help ease our dependence on foreign oil, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and create high-quality jobs and economic benefit across rural America. Khosla Ventures incubated the company in 2007 and is the lead investor.
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