Yara Buys Terra

Click here to download:
Yara Buys Terra.pdf (97 KB)
(download)

With the purchase of Terra by Yara, we lose another major domestic nitrogen fertilizer company.  As we have shared many times, relying on non-U.S. sources and now increasingly non-U.S. companies for our food supply is an unwise national policy.

We at SynGest are more than eager to do something about it.

Bill Gates live! @ TED2010

At TED2010, Bill Gates unveiled his vision for the world's energy future, describing the need for "miracles" to avoid planetary catastrophe. The necessary goal? Zero carbon emissions globally by 2050.

Image004

Bill Gates' talk from this year’s TED 2010 (www.ted.com) is now online.  It has been described as the year's most important climate speech.  I couldn’t agree more. It can be viewed at http://on.ted.com/89Dt 

For the first time, Bill Gates has come out publicly acknowledging that Climate Change is real, is now, and must be addressed immediately.  Since stepping down as the head of Microsoft, Bill has been focused on using his accumulated business skills and wealth in combination with advanced research to solve some of the world’s biggest issues, like malaria.  Because he runs a private foundation he can move much more quickly and with greater skill than most governments. 

Image003

I have known Bill personally since the early days of the PC software industry. He truly is one of the smartest people on earth.  He shines when it comes to taking in enormous amounts of info, sifting through it and arriving at the best and most rational strategy for success.  As a result, we know that he has read everything on the subject of Climate Change, including the basic research itself.  He has also personally interviewed the scientists and grilled them to find any holes in the science, where they exist, and whether they impact the conclusions.  He clearly states that the science is clear.  This is how he ran Microsoft and his approach gets results and also uncovers B.S.  All this goes to say that for anyone that wasn’t sure yet whether Climate Change is real, because they didn’t know whether they can trust the source, can rest assured that there is now a trusted source.  Bill Gates is one of the few people on Earth who cannot be accused of having a hidden agenda or something to gain by promoting the reality of Climate Change. He is already the richest person on the planet and you can tell from his presentation that it pains him to divert attention from the large problems that have been at the center of his thinking for quite some time.  Yet he knows that it is the right (and most important) thing to do and critical that we act now. 

Although the press seems to have focused in on the part of the discussion surrounding his work with Nathan Myhrvold in advanced nuclear power generation, it is important to note that what he presented is a rational strategy that focuses on five (5) key technology areas, that he refers to opportunities for “Energy Miracles”.  What he said is that the only opportunities for achieving a carbon-free energy system resides in one or more of these five areas. Whether we nail it with one or a combination of them, this is where we need to be focusing enough attention and funding so that we are certain to achieve success.  Bill is investing in the possibility of new nuclear technology.  I am betting on an entirely new generation of nano-tech direct solar energy collection.  Such new approaches will dramatically increase the amount of solar energy that can be collective per square foot.  I am optimistic about this approach because it has the potential to achieve very quick and very large capacity advances much the same as we have seen in the micro-processor industry.  Also, when we achieve truly efficient, large and inexpensive solar energy collection, energy storage and efficiency will no longer be an issue of concern.

Image001

We often hear that we must do a little bit of everything in order to achieve our carbon-free energy goals.  I cannot recall a time in history or business where such a strategy has ever been effective.  Bill Gates, on the other hand, reminds us that a focused effort on a few promising and likely paths to success make the most sense.  There is no question that he has nailed this aspect of the strategy and we should listen and act accordingly.    

Bill also points out that we must achieve these “Energy Miracles” by a certain deadline. Normally, we get to allow technology advancement to happen at its own pace.  This is a case where we must organize differently.  The best model to describe what we must do now is what we see today in the micro-processor industry.  We must invest in advanced R&D while simultaneously forming multi-disciplinary teams.  Such teams have been proven to innovate together and develop not only the fundamental new technology but the means to manufacture it in massive volumes, all at the same time.  If we hope to achieve our goals, we will need to streamline the “Miracle” development process, based on the best industry practices available today.  Bill also points out that the cost of the early stages of R&D, even in the hundreds of millions of dollars, is “small money” when compared to the deployment stage.  He advocates for a wide deployment of resources to identify the technologies that can scale to the level that we need.  He also advocates funding ideas that just sound crazy too.  This is a very smart strategic approach.  Funding technologies like algae and cellulosic ethanol are losing propositions.  Unless there is a clear technology “learning curve” that leads to appropriate economic outcomes, such investments are a waste of time, money, and worse yet, distractions from achieving the long term goal.

Image005

Finally, Bill Gates said “If I can have one wish it would be [getting to zero-carbon energy].   [It] is an important wish but it’s one I think we can achieve”.

Image006

I am proud to know that one of our fellow Americans, the one who can most afford to ignore this issue, is doing whatever he can to make a difference.

Jack Oswald

Founder and CEO

SynGest Inc. (www.SynGest.com)

joswald@SynGest.com

Image002

About Bill Gates:

A passionate techie and a shrewd businessman, Bill Gates changed the world once, while leading Microsoft to dizzying success. He plans to do it again with his own style of philanthropy and passion for innovation.

Jack Oswald, CEO of SynGest to be Featured Speaker at VLAB Event: Biofuels 2.0: Sustainable Startups - from Garage to Gargantuan

______________________________________________________________________________________

Biofuels 2.0: Sustainable Startups from Garage to Gargantuan

 

Image001

When: 

    Tuesday, February 16, 2010

    6:00pm - 7:00pm - Networking and Refreshment

    7:00pm - 8:30pm - Panel Discussion and Q/A 

Where: 

Biofuels 1.0 focused on using traditional techniques to derive ethanol from food crops. While many companies saw initial success, increases in the cost of food combined with falling oil prices sent ripples through the entire biofuels industry. A new generation of startups,  Biofuels 2.0, is once again tackling the opportunity in liquid fuels.  Some innovative technologies also offer alternatives to the use of fossil fuels for plastics, fertilizers, and commercial chemicals creating additional ways to leverage investments and diversify markets. 

Armed with lessons learned, new business models, advancements in biotechnology, and an evolved understanding of how to minimize and control social and environmental impactsall eyes are set on claiming a substantial portion of the global $1 trillion+ petroleum-based fuels market.

A panel of industry leaders, including early-stage biofuel CEOs, will discuss whether biofuels 2.0 can really provide sustainably better solutions, and how a new generation of companies are going from Garage to Gargantuan.

    * Sustainability of business models, scaleability, and environmental impacts
    * Opportunities for small, bootstrap startups in the biofuels value chain
    * How failures in biofuels 1.0 are creating new opportunities in 2.0
    * Counterpoint: The dark side of the revolution
    * How to know if a company is sustainable
    * Exit strategies and cheap oil: What models are most viable?  What do VCs think about Biofuels 2.0?
    * Industry partnerships: How best to use them to scale
    * Informatics and genomics: Exponential drivers for development

This event is co-sponsored by BayBIO.org, the voice of the Bay Area biotechnology community, and CleanTech.org, the preeminent local investment community focused on game-changing technologies.

Moderator:

ü  Jim Lane, Editor/Publisher, BioFuels Digest

Presenter:

ü  Jack Oswald, Founder & CEO, SynGest 

Panelists:

ü  Eric McAfee, Founder & CEO, AE Biofuels 

ü  Leandro Vetcher, Co-founder & VP Business Development, Green Pacific Biologicals

ü  David Berry, MD, PhD, Partner, Flagship Ventures (Co-founder LS9, Joule Biotech)

ü  Paul Bryan, PhD, Biofuels VP-Technology, Chevron Energy Technology Co.

BUY TICKETS HERE!!

____________

SynGest Adds Dr. Robert Brown to Its Technical Advisory Committee

SynGest Inc.

Dr. Robert C. Brown, Director of Iowa State University's Bioeconomy Institute, to Serve on SynGest's Technical Advisory Committee

 

San Francisco, California - (Feb 1, 2010) -  SynGest Inc. announced that Dr. Robert C. Brown, Gary and Donna Hoover Chair in Mechanical Engineering at Iowa State University in Ames, Iowa, will serve on SynGest's technical advisory committee.  He is also the Anson Marston Distinguished Professor of Engineering, Professor of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Professor of Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering, Director of the Center for Sustainable Environmental Technologies (CSET), and Director of the Bioeconomy Institute.

  "Dr. Brown is a world renowned pioneer in the conversion of biorenewable resources into bioenergy and biobased products.  His expertise includes combustion, gasification, fast pyrolysis and hydrogen energy," said Jack Oswald, CEO of SynGest.  "His wealth of knowledge and experience in these fields is unmatched in academia and industry," he added.

  Robert Brown was invited to testify before the U.S. Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry on April 26, 2006, where he addressed a hearing on the state of the emerging biofuels sector.  "Agriculture must think beyond corn and soybean production if it is to supply a significant fraction of U.S. transportation fuels," advised Brown.  He also suggested four goals as a platform for the bioeconomy:

  1) reduce reliance on imported petroleum,
2) improve environmental quality,
3) expand markets for U.S. agricultural products, and
4) provide economic development opportunities for rural America.

  "SynGest's strategy of local production of bioammonia from biomass meets all the four goals stipulated by Dr. Brown," noted Oswald.  "In this context, Dr. Brown's engagement with SynGest is highly fortuitous."  

  SynGest's technical advisory committee will consist of individuals representing key technology areas important to SynGest's success.  Additional candidates are being interviewed, and final selections will be announced over the next few months.  From an organizational perspective, the committee will work directly with the Chairman of SynGest and its Board of Directors, thereby providing an independent non-executive review of the company's technical affairs.

  Professor Robert Brown earned his Ph.D. and M.S. in Mechanical Engineering at Michigan State University.  Prior to that, he obtained his B.A. in Mathematics and B.S. in Physics, both at University of Missouri, Columbia.  Dr. Brown also serves as a technical advisor to Coskata Inc.

Jack Oswald, CEO
SynGest Inc. +1 415-986-8300 joswald@syngest.com
www.SynGest.com

 

©2009 SynGest. All rights reserved.