The Carbohydrate Economy Newsletter Archive
The Carbohydrate Economy Newsletter – Winter 2003
- Letter from David Morris: Reflections on a Hydrogen Economy
- Is a Hydrogen Economy an Energy Sink? New study says it could be.
- New Federal Report Favors Farm Ownership. Excerpts from a Biomass Roadmap.
- Buying Green in Washington. A cautionary tale.
- Companies On The Cutting Edge: Livestock as a source of methane; ethanol fuel cells.
- Plant Uses in the United Kingdom. UK report on new uses, pitfalls and promise.
- ILSR comments on USDA R&D Strategy.
The Carbohydrate Economy Newsletter – Summer 2002
- Letter from David Morris: An Open Letter to the Environmental Community
- Talking About Corn Stover with Jim Hettenhaus
- Renewable Energy Loans, Grants Part of Farm Bill Energy Title
- Minnesota Passes Biodiesel Mandate
- Budget Woes, lack of biodiesel hamper Missouri School District reimbursement program
- Coop goes corporate in North Dakota
- Cellulose to Ethanol: A Progress Report
The Carbohydrate Economy Newsletter – Winter 2002
- The Carbohydrate Economy Revisited
- Compact’s Demise Leaves Family Dairies in Flux
- Harnessing Green Power in Europe: An Update
- Whither Federal R&D?
- South Dakota Soybean Growers build a homegrown industry.
The Carbohydrate Economy Newsletter – Fall 2001
- The New Coops
- Moving Farmers Up the Food Chain
- Energy from Conserved Land
- Brewing Corn for California
- Fertilizer From Ethanol Leftovers
- Soybeans Used for Urethane
The Carbohydrate Economy Newsletter – Spring 2001
- Cooperative value-added forestry initiatives
- Plant-based deicers
- Update on ethanol production
- Inside/outside approach to genetic engineering.
The Carbohydrate Economy Newsletter – Fall 2000
- Vegetable oil-based lubricant industry
- Agricultural fiber in thermoplastics
- Tree free papers
- Cooperative producing vegetable oil-derived lubricants.
The Carbohydrate Economy Newsletter – Spring 2000
- Plant-based cleaners
- Electricity generated from biomass
- Vegetable oil-derived lubricants
- Wheat straw board
- EPA’s ruling on MTBE and its potential impact on the ethanol industry.
The Carbohydrate Economy Newsletter – Fall 1999
- The Great Canadian Hemp Experiment: Year II
- It’s Just Plane Ethanol
- Michigan urges biobased oils; Congress promotes farmer ownership; states study industrial hemp.
- Companies on the Cutting Edge Agro Management Group’s new vegetable-based motor oil is friendly to the environment and lucrative for farmers; Acadia Board Company makes it possible to build with bagasse.
The Carbohydrate Economy Newsletter – Summer 1999
- Painting the Town Green
- Companies on the Cutting Edge – Will that be paper, plastic or . . . cornstarch?
- A Circle of Cooperation
- News from the Field A sticky sweet discovery from ARS; low-cost acid from cellulosic waste.
The Carbohydrate Economy Newsletter – Spring 1999
- Purchasing Plant Matter: D.C. Opens the Door
- Carbohydrate Fuels to the Rescue
- Iowa requires BioSoy, Congress recognizes biodiesel, states debate hemp.
- Companies on the Cutting Edge
- Wheat Straw Sways an Industry
The Carbohydrate Economy Newsletter – Fall 1998
- Two Steps Forward
- Kenex is making the most of Canada’s first hemp crop.
- Move Over Rock Salt
- Natural Color: Will Plant-based Dyes Live Again?
The Carbohydrate Economy Newsletter – Summer 1998
- Growing Cars
- Changing the World by 30 Percent Encouraging the carbohydrate economy by executive order.
- Changing the Rules – Canada brings hemp back to the farmers.
- Plant Matter Prophets What did George Washington Carver and Henry Ford have in common?
The Carbohydrate Economy Newsletter – Winter 1998
- Ethanol’s Epic Journey
- The Carb-Kyoto Connection
- Replacing fiberglass with flax and paint stripper with wheat starch blasts
- AGreen Solution to Pollution: Flower power fights pollutants
- Cooperatives make a comeback in North Dakota
- Gas from Grass
The Carbohydrate Economy Newsletter – Fall 1997
- With new technology, plant matter matters again.
- Success with biochemicals and tree-free fibers.
- Hemp: The Rip Van Winkle Crop
- Vegetable Oils Reclaim Their Share Of Inks
- The Fiber Revolution
- Biochemicals Enhance Worker Safety Lower health risk is one