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A tiny organism thinner than a strand of hair could help fuel airplanes in the future. Japanese firm Euglena has been cultivating a type of algae for use in food and cosmetics. But it sees a range ...
And yet, as I sit across from the unwaveringly professional investor and public relations manager at Euglena’s futuristic Tokyo headquarters, this prospect doesn’t seem quite so far-fetched. Euglena ...
Enter the Euglena. An Osaka Metropolitan University team has found a way to have one species of this microalgae produce wax esters with shorter carbon chains than usual. The findings were ...
Euglena, a simple, single-celled organism that grows in fresh water, trumpeted as a solution to food shortages, a potential replacement for fossil fuels and a way to reduce CO 2 emissions, has ...
Isuzu Motors Ltd. and Euglena Co. will work together to develop a new kind of biodiesel using algae, with a goal of establishing the technology by 2018. The companies want to develop a type of ...
TOKYO, Oct. 4, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- "The Day Sushi Disappears" campaign has been launched jointly by euglena Co., Ltd. (headquartered in Minato-ku, Tokyo; Mitsuru Izumo, CEO; "euglena Co.") and a ...
This partnership leverages EcoCeres’ expertise as a renewable fuel producer and Euglena’s distribution network to ensure a stable supply of biofuels like SUSTEO. As demand for cleaner energy ...
Eni Sustainable Mobility S.p.a. KUALA LUMPUR, July 26 (Reuters) - Malaysia's state energy firm Petroliam Nasional Berhad (Petronas), Italy's Enilive SpA, and Japanese company Euglena Co (2931.T ...
Through genome editing using CRISPR/Cas9, researchers stably create euglena mutants that can produce wax esters with improved cold flow, making the esters suitable as feedstock for biofuels.