"Green" Chemicals Could Be Boon For Africa
Stephanie Kung – August 23, 2006 – 4:23am
In July, the government of Ethiopia
signed an agreement
allowing a British biotechnology firm to commercialize the oilseed plant
vernonia as a renewable source of industrial chemicals. Long dismissed by
Ethiopian farmers as a nuisance shrub, vernonia, also
known as ironweed, is considered a potential replacement for petroleum in a
variety of industrial uses. The plant’s shiny black seeds produce an oil rich
in epoxies, which can be used to manufacture innovative bio-based paints,
adhesives, and plastic products.
Though it has been grown successfully in a variety of
locations, vernonia thrives naturally within 20 degrees of the Equator, and has
been particularly prolific in Ethiopia.
The new commercialization deal, which took place under the auspices of the United
Nations Convention on Biological Diversity's Access and Benefit Sharing
Agreement, gives the British company Vernique Biotech access to the plant
for the next 10 years. In exchange, the Ethiopian government will receive
royalty payments and profit shares, while hundreds of local farmers will have
an opportunity to boost their earnings by growing the oilseed on land too poor
for food crops.
Studies show that use of vernonia-derived oils has the
potential to significantly offset petroleum use and related fossil-fuel
emissions. In 1992, the United States
consumed roughly 227 kilograms of petroleum per person to produce plastics and
industrial petrochemicals; according to scientists,
replacing those feedstock with vernonia oil could have
reduced emissions by up to 73 million kilograms annually. In 2004, the U.S.
industrial sector consumed about 5.1 million
barrels of oil per day, or 23 percent of the nation’s total. The naturally
epoxidized vernonia oil is also being considered for pharmaceutical uses, such
as alleviating psoriasis.