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Significance to the Ethanol Market

3F Inc’s process is believed to be the most significant find in bio-fuel history.  For Fuel Freedom’s proprietary system incorporates a proprietary blend of organisms for its enzymatic pretreatment process, resulting in 143.5% more product than without.  This Organic HydrolysisSM process is carbon negative and produces almost 4.3 times as much ethanol as similar cellulosic processes, 2.3 times more than corn ethanol.  Our goal is 5 times as much product in order to meet 100% of U.S. fuel demand, calculating energy equivalents of ethanol to gasoline, and we are on the cusp of discovering just how to make that reality.

Discovery

For Fuel Freedom (3F Inc Biofuels) made a discovery that resisted the conventional wisdom that one is only limited to the sugars inside plant cell tissue, and uses nearly 100% of the biomass.  For Fuel Freedoms’s formulated process is organic and utilizes Einstein’s theory of Capillary Action; there is no environmentally questionable acid needed.  When microscopic "bugs" were found consuming 30 year-old newspaper in landfills, a proprietary organic substance was then discovered that forms a chain reaction breakdown that utilizes carbon dioxide pollution from the air and nearly 100% of the plant fibers, not just the cellulose.  Unrecyclable paper, a food source for mold and insects, totals over 40% of total municipal solid waste and is a key renewable source for cellulosic technology.

"For Fuel Freedom is willing to pay 10¢ per metric ton for CO2."

3F Inc Biofuels raises the bar again by being carbon negative.  A symbiotic relationship with bio-diesel production shaves off cost of production and also resolves other environmental concerns.  Bio-diesel from algae can offset cost of primary process as well as producing oxygen to restore the ozone.  Algae growth can be promoted by using the carbon dioxide gases captured from heating and fermentation sources, as well as using carbon-capture filtration systems on power plants.  Algae on large-scale ponds can be scaled to operate 17.8 to 20.7 tons of mass per acre, in a solution between 5,000 to 5,800 gallons per acre.  Algae will produce approximately 14.4237 gallons per day for each ton per acre, based on 60% oil extraction with carbon dioxide, and can grow 31.507041% additional mass per day.  At 17.8 tons per acre, mass will increment to 23.4 tons, and can generate about 256 gallons oil for use in bio-diesel per day.  Algae only provides this benefit in such quantity when using species of algae specifically or indigenously adapted to that specific climate.

It can cost as little as 50.65 ¢ents per gallon of ethanol to sequester the CO2 for the algae, and because the process requires an average of 0.765 metric tons of CO2 per gallon of ethanol produced, the company is willing to pay 10¢ per metric ton in addition to trading carbons.  That is a lot better than having to pay $165 to sequester each ton of CO2 and store it underground.  In addition, 3F Inc. is seeking to partner with a publicly traded company, so their patent license and equipment lease offer will be more attractive to potential investors.

Ethanol Production Comparison Table

Simply stated, this Super-cellulosicSM process is economically sound because the system produces at a profit without an economic threshhold and has a positive energy balance of at least 8.65.  This is unlike corn: it must sell its by-products to livestock in order to stay alive, its profits are governed by grain markets because its prices are regulated as a commodity, and with all the plowing, planting, irrigation, fertilizer, and harvesting, corn’s energy output over that expended is merely 1.3.

The following table shows why supply and demand concerns are unfounded when comparing production levels of our proprietary and patented process: 

Production Assumptions (best-case)
Quantity
Method
Barrels
(42 Gal.)
Gallons
Liters
1.00 bushel Corn Ethanol     0.04       1.48         5.60
1.00 ton Corn (†Approx. Ton)     2.30     96.43      365.03
1.00 ton Cellulosic Ethanol     1.78     74.60      282.39
1.00 ton For Fuel Freedom     7.46   313.30   1,185.97

Potential Average Daily Fuel Output (Barrels)
Avg. Tons
Corn†
Cellulosic
For Fuel Freedom
           613 Sm.Crop†/Avg.Landfill Tonnage       1,407       1,089         4,573
        3,062  Tons Avail In A Given Region       7,030       5,439       22,841
  1,087,445 Tons Readily Avail Nationally 2,496,722  1,931,509   8,111,822

The following statements compares those annual production levels to average annual demand in the United States:

Annual Production Threshold Assumptions (Barrels) 
Corn†
Cellulosic
For Fuel
Freedom
15.0% of U.S. Avg. Demand
(U.S. Corn Ethanol Threshold*)
          584,832,963                   
26.5% of U.S. Avg. Demand
(Est. Cellulosic Ethanol Production**)
         1,033,204,901         
86.7% of U.S. Avg. Demand
(FFF Output***)
         3,365,908,646

Notes: Per industry analysis, whereby comparisons between production types reflect most-likely scenarios.  *Corn growers are limited by location, economics, and other factors that limit expansion.  **Cellulosic processes are limited by how much fermentation can be gotten out of its raw material and how many readily available renewable resources exist (as listed in Annual Fuel Production tables in the Addendum of the National Renewable Fuel & Economic Recovery Proposal).  ***Factors in calculating For Fuel Freedom's production threshhold includes available renewable resources, market equalibrium algorithms based on these threshholds, and exportation of remaining fuel.

The Best Answer Put Forth

This Super-cellulosicSM hybrid ethanol and bio-diesel system will effect your community with many positive changes.  Each 110 million gallon per year (MGPY) facility can produce enough renewable fuel each year to power 204,000 cars, 37,000 trucks, and 1,265 hours of flight while diverting 307,000 tons from local landfills and polluting farm waste or forestry shipped by rail line, using at least 23 million gallons of wastewater, and harnessing perhaps as much as 10½ million metric tons of CO2 emissions from surrounding power plants, while a Super-cellulosicSM hybrid plant would only produce 5 Tons Per Year (tpy) of Volatile Organic Compounds and can either be designed to have Zero-liquid Discharge or provide clean water to parks and eco-systems.  This should create 12,723 jobs citywide (indirectly) and improve anywhere between 4 – 18 square miles of infrastructure around each refinery.

In terms of national impact, assuming corn ethanol tops out slightly over 10.05 billion gallons, and other cellulosic companies supplies another 1.28 billion gallons in the ethanol market, this technology could very easily pick up the proverbial 97.7 billion gallon slack by utilizing farm waste, forest understory, sorghum, wastewater, and municipal solid waste in the largest cities collectively will produce the energy equivalent of 78.1 billion gallons of gas (69.5% of demand).  In addition, the amount of algae-oil created from this technology, along with algae ponds strategically placed throughout the country, will produce enough bio-diesel and jet-fuel to divert another 34.5% of this nation’s fuel demand – nearly 3.2 billion barrels worth.

Looking Forward

Statements about For Fuel Freedom’s future expectations, including future revenues and earnings, and all other statements contained herein or introduced other than historical facts are "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and as the term is defined in the Private Litigation Reform Act of 1995.  For Fuel Freedom’s actual results could differ materially from expected results.  For Fuel Freedom undertakes no obligation to update forward-looking statements to reflect subsequently occurring events or circumstances.  Should events occur which materially affect any comments made within this objective, For Fuel Freedom will appropriately inform the public.

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