S ER HIGH LEVEL NETWORKING CONGRESS & EXHIBITION + K 17 EA SP EO C

NOVEMBER 9-10, 2010 – SAN FRANCISCO DELIVERING THE FIRST BILLION GALLONS

LEARN FROM ADVANCED BIOFUELS LEADERS, INCLUDING: FEATURING:

Bill Haywood, Richard Hamilton, Chief Executive Officer, President & Chief Executive Officer, INDUSTRY LEADERS LS9 Ceres Bill Sims, Wayne W. Simmons, First hand experiences of 16+ CEOs and Presidents who Chief Executive Officer, Chief Executive Officer, are driving the development of advanced biofuels Joule Unlimited Sundrop Fuels Jim Imbler, Theodora Retsina, President & Chief Executive Officer, INVESTMENT LEADERS President, Zeachem American Process, Inc. Explore financing options with leading venture Eric McAfee, capitalists, strategic and project financing professionals Gregory Karpinsky, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer , and government program directors AE Biofuels Director of Biofuels, Victaulic Company John McCarthy, President & Chief Executive Officer, Rick Wilson, MARKET INSIGHT Qteros President & Chief Executive Officer, In-depth analysis on the drivers for the Cobalt Technologies Kirk L. Haney, commercialization of advanced biofuels, including President & Chief Executive Officer, Harrison Dillon, , biobutanol, algal biofuels, synfuels, SG Biofuels President & Chief Technology Officer , renewable diesel and solar fuels Jack Oswald, Solazyme Chief Executive Officer, Tim Potter, SynGest Chief Executive Officer, NETWORKING D. Hunt Ramsbottom, Butamax™ Advanced Biofuels, LLC Connect and do business with leading biofuels Chief Executive Officer & President, William F. Hagy III , company executives, corporate partners and investors Rentech Director of Alternative Energy Policy , John Scott, USDA Chairman & Chief Executive Officer, Michael Melnick, AWARDS PetroAlgae Principal, Energy and Materials, Biofuels Digest’s Transformative Technology in Alan Shaw, CMEA Capital President & Chief Executive Officer, awards reception Codexis

Gold Sponsor: Silver Sponsors: Lanyard Sponsor: Supporting Sponsors:

Book Now – Call +1 971 238 0700 or Online at: www.greenpowerconferences.com/advancedbiofuelsUSA

Organized By: Official Offset Partner: Part of: “Bio-based fuels, energy and chemicals have the potential to generate up to $230 billion in revenues by 2030.” Source: World Economic Forum “Future of Industrial ” report

The Obama Administration has projected that the US alone will need to construct 500 advanced bioenergy plants between 2011 and 2022 to comply with the Renewable Fuel Standard of 21 billion gallons per year of Advanced Biofuels by 2022. 21 billion gallons starts with the first billion - the first commercial-scale plants that will carve out the business models and demonstrate the sustainability and viability of the technologies. The Advanced Biofuels Markets conference will bring together leading experts who are bringing advanced biofuels to market, including Advanced Biofuels Company Executives, Venture Capitalists and Investment Bankers, Corporate Strategic Investment and Alliance Executives, EPC firms and industry suppliers. Join us in November in San Francisco as we explore and advance the discussion of every aspect of strategy and execution as it pertains to delivering those first one billion gallons of advanced biofuels into the marketplace. Event highlights include

• Scaling up to create the first billion gallons: Hear how Solazyme and AE Biofuels are • Biofuels Digest Transformative Technology 30 developing scalable processes to optimize biofuel production on a commercial scale. awards reception: The Transformative Technology 30 is a reader-voted award which attracted more • Transformational technologies: Find out how SynGest, Sundrop Fuels, Joule than 30,000 votes in 2010, to recognize Biotechnology, Ceres and Q-Teros are pioneering the development of new organizations for their work in the development technologies to drive advanced biofuels commercialization. of transformative technologies for bioenergy. • Delivering the first billion gallons to the market: Understand what it actually takes to Technologies considered were required to have bring renewable products to the market with insight from Butamax™ Advanced reached pilot scale and could include Biofuels, LLC and Cobalt Technologies . technologies for feedstock, bioprocessing, or distribution. • Military and aviation markets for advanced biofuels: Exlore the challenges of delivering advanced biojet fuels and how Rentech carried out the first biofuel test • Network with market leaders: Advanced Biofuels flight with United Airlines. Markets will bring together leading biofuels company executives, corporate partners and • Co-Products: Strategies and building blocks for early profitability: LS9, SynGest, investors, providing you with the information and Segetis, Cobalt Biofuels and Solazyme share their experiences with renewable the contacts you need to ensure your success in chemicals, plastics and bio-based materials. the fast moving advanced biofuels industry.

Who will you meet?

Our past biofuels events have attracted Airline Industry: KLM, British Airways, SAS, leading players from across the value Lufthansa, Boeing, Airbus, Pratt &Whitney, IATA, Federal Aviation Authority chain, including: Traders & Brokers: ED&F MAN, Noble Group, Co-organized by: Oil Majors: Shell, Chevron, ConocoPhillps, Exxon Starsupply Renewables, Vertical, TOTSA, Louis Mobil, Petrobras, Total Dreyfus Commodities, Nidera, Mabanaft, Biofuels Producers: Verenium, Copersucar, Czarnikow Group, Shell Trading, Mercuria Renewable Energy Group,World Energy, Investors: HSBC, JP Morgan, Rabobank, Imperium Renewables, POET, Wilmar, Cosan, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, BNP Paribas, Greenergy, Abengoa, Acciona Barclays Bank, Credit Suisse, ABN AMRO, Green Power Conferences, the organizers of World Biofuels Markets. Chemical Companies: Dow, DuPont Danisco, Investec, Macquarie, Standard Bank BASF, Solvay, Bayer, Evonik Degussa, Avantium, Process Engineering: Flottweg, Anhydro, ICM, World Biofuels Markets is the leading Arizona Chemicals, Ashland, SK Chemicals, Yara GEA Westfalia, Lanxess, Edwards Vacuum, annual industry networking event where International Petrotec, Dasgip, PPM, Grace the leaders of the biofuels world meet to drive innovation and do business. Over 5465 Algae Biofuels: Algenol, Sapphire Energy, Engineering & EPC: ABB, Alfa Laval, Axens, high calibre executives from 80 countries PetroAlgae, OriginOil, Cellana, Seambiotic, Mitsubishi, GE, Siemens, Samsung, Bosch, have attended to date. Solazyme, Aurora Biofuels, Bionavitas, Blue Caterpillar, Desmet Engineers, Ferrostaal, Mott Marble Energy, SBAE Industries, A2BE Carbon MacDonald, Aker Solutions, Alstom, UOP, Capture, Bodega Algae, General Atomics, ABO Desmet Ballestra, Praj, Poyry, Wartsilla, Industrial Biotech & Next Generation FosterWheeler Biofuels: Genencor, Novozymes, Iogen, Angel Inspection & Testing: Inspectorate, Intertek, Yeast, Virent, LS9, Amyris, Gevo, Dyadic, Coskata, SGS, Saybolt, Tuev Sued, Infineum, ASG Analytik, Dynamotive, Chemrec, Enbasys, ZeaChem Agility Tech, Cognes, Laborolec, Tracerco, DNV Biofuels Digest is the most widely-read biofuels daily in the world. 62 percent of Agribusiness & Energy Crops: Cargill, ADM, Consultants: Accenture, Booz Allen & subscribers call it “the best online biofuels Bunge, Monsanto, Syngenta, Ceres, Cibus Global Hamilton, KPMG, PWC, Deloitte, Roland Berger, media”. The Digest has more than 200,000 Vehicle Manufacturers: Ford, GM, Volvo, Ernst & Young,WoodMac, McKinsey, Kingsman references in Google and readers in 200+ Daimler, Toyota, Honda, Renault, Scania, Bentley, countries. Digest publications have a Lotus, Fiat, Peugeot combined readership of more than 75,000.

www.greenpowerconferences.com/advancedbiofuelsUSA Day One: Tuesday, November 9, 2010 12:10 Biomass Enzyme Advances: Partnering with the Cellulosic Biofuel Community 7:30 Registration and Morning Coffee As a leading supplier of enzyme solutions, Genencor continues to promote the commercially sustainable production of biofuels & biochemicals worldwide. Today more 8:30 Welcome and Introductory Remarks than 50 tanker trucks of enzyme are shipped each week from our factories around the Jim Lane, Editor & Publisher, Biofuels Digest world to starch and cellulosic ethanol facilities. This presentation will examine: • How Genencor’s Applications Group tests over 300 different combinations of biomass substrates and pretreatments to optimize enzyme performance in conjunction with our partners Renewable Chemicals and Bio-Materials: • Lessons learned from Genencor’s work with its partners on-site to aid in the successful Co-Product Strategies and Building Blocks for Early Profitability start-up of over 50 different biofuels facilities Dr. Aaron Kelley, Senior Manager, Business Development, Genencor, a Danisco Division 8:40 Renewable Transportation Fuels and Sustainable Chemicals LS9 is engineering a new technology platform to enable the rapid and widespread 12:30 Networking Lunch Break adoption of renewable transportation fuels and produce cost competitive industrial and consumer chemicals from sustainable feedstocks. 2:00 Conversion of Existing Corn Ethanol Production Facilities to • The role of sustainable chemicals in LS9's strategy • Scale up issues for advanced biofuels companies in sustainable chemicals Integrated Cellulosic and Starch Ethanol Production • Balancing the demands of different co-product streams in the early stages of a AE Biofuels operates the first integrated cellulose and starch ethanol demonstration facility company's development in the United States, using a variety of feedstocks, including grasses, , corn, corn Bill Haywood, Chief Executive Officer, LS9 and sugar cane stalks. • The economics integrated production • Capital structure and benefits 9:00 Putting an End to the Food vs. Fuel Debate: “The Cornucopia • The technical conversion of an existing corn ethanol biofuels plant to integrated Integrated ” cellulosic and starch production SynGest has developed gasification and syngas technology to annually turn 150,000 tons • Required enzyme process changes of corncobs, from 245,000 acres, into 50,000 tons of anhydrous ammonia, which is enough • The role of partnerships to fertilize 500,000 acres of land. Eric McAfee, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer, AE Biofuels • Building the world’s first biomass-to-ammonia plant, to help supply the U.S.’s 18 million ton per year ammonia market 2:30 Revolutionizing Energy • Using “slipstream” biomass harvesting, dry fractionation, fermentation, gasification and This session will outline POET’s perspective on the key issues facing the industry, explain food grade oil extraction to re-design existing corn processing systems potential solutions to the challenges, and update the group on advances being made at • Maximizing financial returns on all parts of the ear, simultaneously making food, POET to assure consumer value for a long time to come. Topics reviewed include: fertilizer and fuel • The urgency to reduce our dependence on foreign oil • Planning and executing a commercialization and scale-up strategy • Agricultures role in a changing world • Financing the $105 million Cornucopia Integrated Biorefinery plant • Technical advances of ethanol Jack Oswald, Chief Executive Officer, SynGest • Project LIBERTY and cellulosic ethanol • Regulatory changes needed for success 9:20 Creating a Biofuels Partnering Ecosystem to Accelerate Commercialization Doug Berven, Director of Corporate Affairs, POET Codexis is partnered with Shell for global development of a range of advanced biofuels, leveraging Codexis’ technology expertise with Shell’s global distribution. These partnerships 2:50 Panel Discussion: Partnering and Alliances in Advanced Biofuels are the hallmark of sustainable companies that will be long term winners in the market. Moderator: Ann M. Caviani Pease, Partner, Dechert, LLP • The power of partnerships to accelerate deployment of technology in the commercial market Greg Bohlmann, Business Development, Genencor, a Danisco Division • What are the strategic advantages of building networks (or EcoSystems of Alliances)? Harrison Dillon, President & Chief Technology Officer, Solazyme • What lessons can be learned from Codexis’ experience? Alan Shaw, President & Chief Executive Officer, Codexis 3:10 Networking and Refreshment Break

9:40 Biofuels and Beyond: The Role for Bio-based Chemicals Financing Advanced Biofuels: Strategies, Players and Structures • How dedicated energy crops offer fixed price feedstocks • Integration of known processes for superior efficiency and yield In this session, we examine the current state and climate of venture capital, corporate finance and • Diverse product portfolios for fuels and chemicals industries project financing for advanced biofuels companies. Industry experts will discuss ways that companies can Jim Imbler, Chief Executive Officer, Zeachem, Inc. employ creative strategies for attracting financing and look at deal structures and financing options.

3:40 Panel Discussion: The Buy Side and the Sell Side: Sources, Strategies 10:00 Panel Discussion: The Market for Renewable Chemicals and Bio- Materials and their Role in Biofuels’ Companies Strategy and Perspectives on Advanced Biofuels Company Financings Senior Executives talk about case studies of financing sources, strategies, processes and Moderator: Jim Lane , Editor, Biofuels Digest results; Corporate Strategic Investors discuss bringing more to the table than just money. Bill Haywood, Chief Executive Officer, LS9 Moderator: John Hamer, Managing Director, Burrill and Company Harrison Dillon, President & Chief Technology Officer , Solazyme Eric McAfee, Chairman &Chief Executive Officer, AE Biofuels Jack Oswald, Chief Executive Officer, SynGest Wes Bolsen, Chief Marketing Officer and Vice President of Government Affairs, Coskata 10:30 Networking Coffee Break with Exhibit Viewing Timothy Cesarek, Managing Director, Organic Growth Group, Waste Management From Bench to Big: Scaling-Up and Delivering the First Ron Stinebaugh, Senior Vice President, Finance & Acquisitions, Syntroleum

Billion Gallons to the Market 4:20 Panel Discussion: Venture Capital and Public Market Financing for Advanced Biofuels 11:10 Sugar – The New Crude Moderator: John Hamer, Managing Director, Burrill and Company Producing sugars from biomass is a necessary, if sometimes overlooked, first step for all sugar- Michael Melnick, Principal, Energy and Materials, CMEA Capital based routes to biofuels and biochemicals. To enable financially viable biorefineries, sugars must be produced with high yield, low capital and operating cost and flexibility to mixed and varied Dan Adler, President, California Clean Energy Fund feedstocks. Sugar is indeed the “green crude”. American Process is a biorefinery company that Alexander V. Kroner, Director, Global Energy Group, Credit Suisse Securities LLC is focusing on sugar production. Challenges and technologies will be discussed. Theodora Retsina, President, American Process, Inc. 4:50 Panel Discussion: Project Finance Opportunities, Structures and Credit Enhancement Mechanisms for the Advanced Biofuels Industry 11.30 Changing the Equation: Transformative Feedstock Technologies The members of this panel have led the charge with the USDA and DOE in reforming and adapting each of the (i) USDA--Section 9003 Biorefinery Assistance, Section 9007 Renewable By applying modern biology to bioenergy feedstocks, we can change the supply side of the Energy Assistance (REAP), and Business & Industry Loan Guarantee Programs, and (ii) DOE-- equation and address common misperceptions like indirect land use and food versus fuel. Sections 1703 and 1705 Loan Guarantee Programs to utilize corporate debt by accessing the • The importance of low cost, high yield density feedstocks for bioenergy institutional debt funding markets for both credit-enhanced and unguaranteed debt, in lieu • How modern biology is being used to improve the yield, reduce inputs and improve of using hard-to-find, expensive, short term and less flexible commercial debt from traditional conversion of bioenergy feedstocks lenders. This panel will discuss various financing structures and the opportunities for the use • Future bioenergy value chains: where will the rent accrue? federal loan guarantees to provide credit enhancements for debt financing, including the • Applying transformative technology to create dramatic improvements in feedstocks intricacies of filing a competitive loan guarantee application. Richard Hamilton, President & Chief Executive Officer, Ceres Moderator: John M. May, Managing Director, Stern Brothers & Co Mark J. Riedy, Partner, Mintz Levin Cohn Ferris Glovsky and Popeo 11.50 Partnering to Advance Commercialization John R. Kirkwood, Partner, Krieg DeVault, LLP As a cleantech start-up specializing in renewable algal oil and bioproducts, Solazyme recognized early on that it needed to form strategic partnerships to help elevate the 5:10 Panel Discussion: Finance open discussion company and push its technology along the path to commercialization. • Insight on how advanced biofuel start-ups can propel their technology toward Moderator: John Hamer, Managing Director, Burrill and Company commercialization through strategic partnerships • How can certain partnerships make sense during each step toward commercialization, 5:40 End of Day One from R&D to operating a biorefinery? Harrison Dillon, President & Chief Technology Officer , Solazyme 6:30 Biofuels Digest “Transformative Technologies in Bioenergy” Awards Reception

Call Graham Swanson on: +1 971 238 0700 Day Two : Wednesday, November 10, 2010 12:00 Patented Microbe and Consolidated Bioprocessing Systems Qteros’ Q Microbe technology offers ethanol producers significant cost reductions by 7:00 Morning Coffee streamlining the biomass-conversion process, commonly referred to as “consolidated bio- processing” (CBP). 7:30 Breakfast Roundtable Discussions • Overview of Qteros’ CBP platform to deliver lowest cost production of cellulosic ethanol • Moving from Pilot Scale to Commercial Scale Operations • Applying the technology platform to a wide variety of feedstocks Discussion Leader: Terry Kulesa, Chief Executive Officer, IR1 Group, LLC • Biological advantages of the Q Microbe.Overview of the technology • Financing: Sources, Strategies and Structures John McCarthy, President and Chief Executive Officer , Qteros Discussion Leader: John Hamer, Managing Director, Burrill and Company • Emerging Feedstocks 12:20 Drop-In Fuels: A New Approach for Rapidly Commercializing Biofuels Discussion Leader: Will Thurmond, Principal, Emerging Markets Online • The potential impact of drop-in fuels • Government Support for Renewable Chemicals and Bio-Materials • How do we drive rapid adoption of advanced biofuels? Discussion Leader: TBA • Leveraging the current oil refinery industry infrastructure • Alliances and Partnerships • Scale-up Issues Discussion Leader: Ann M. Caviani Pease, Partner, Dechert, LLP • Government Policy and Program Directions John Scott, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer, PetroAlgae Discussion Leader: Michael McAdams, Executive Director, Advanced Biofuels Association 12.40 Jatropha 2.0 – How a fully-integrated platform is bringing the 8:30 Round-Table Discussion Reports opportunities of Jatropha to reality • Overview of the company’s considerable recent success advancing Jatropha as an Advanced Biofuels Government Policies and Programs economically viable and sustainable source for sustainable plant oil. • Impact of the company’s landmark partnerships and investments from Flint Hills Resources, a major United States oil refiner and petrochemical company, and Life 9:00 Advanced Biofuels Government Policies and Programs – The View Technologies Corporation (NASDAQ: LIFE), a global biotechnology tools companyKirk from Industry Haney, Chief Executive Officer, SG Biofuels Michael McAdams, Executive Director, Advanced Biofuels Association Kirk Haney, Chief Executive Officer, SG Biofuels

9:20 The President’s Initiatives for Advanced Biofuels and the USDA’s Support 1:00 Networking Lunch Break The President has made a clean energy economy and energy security priorities. In this session you will learn how USDA is supporting these priorities through the various energy programs and related activities within USDA and how it is partnering with other Federal Scaling Up and Delivering to the Market Agencies and the private sector. We will examine: • The President’s Biofuel Directive A major theme of this conference is “Delivering the First Billion Gallons”. In this session • Growing America’s Fuel Report we look at what it actually takes to ramp up production and bring renewable products to • USDA’s Regional Roadmap for Meeting the Renewable Fuels Standard by 2022 the market. • Memorandum of Understanding with the Department of the Navy William F. Hagy III, Director of Alternative Energy Policy, USDA 2:20 Bringing it All Together to Deliver to Your Stakeholders How do you find the balance and instill the discipline to deliver on the combination of technology, 9:50 DOE Programs and Support for Advanced Biofuels Commercialization plants, markets and money for the successful commercialization of advanced biofuels? Paul Bryan, Office of Biomass, U.S. Department of Energy Vincent Chornet, Chief Executive Officer, Enerkem

10:10 California Biofuels after Proposition 23" 2:40 What it Takes to Bring Renewable Products to the Market California's world-leading framework for advancing , the Low Carbon Cobalt Technologies produces n-butanol for use in solvents, chemicals and derivatives, Fuel Standard (LCFS), is in jeopardy under under Proposition 23. If the proposition passes, gasoline blending, and conversion to jet fuel and diesel. The difficulties of penetrating and California's climate change initiatives are suspended: these markets and gaining customer acceptance for new products, even when these • What will be the market and policy drivers for biofuels going forward? products meet well-established technical specifications, are considerable. • If it fails, and California continues to implement economy-wide climate legislation, how • Gaining access to existing markets: blocking by existing players, assuring supply will LCFS transform the state;s fuels market? reliability, guaranteeing quality and access to logistics • Can one state's efforts meaningfully impact technology investment and the • Meeting the challenges and the specific steps that must be taken to bring renewable development of new biofuels infrastructure to scale? products to the market Dan Adler, President , California Clean Energy Fund Rick Wilson, President & Chief Executive Officer, Cobalt Technologies

10:30 Panel Discussion: Advanced Biofuels Government Policies and Programs 3:00 Biobutanol Enables the Further Advancement of Biofuels Moderator: Michael McAdams, Executive Director, Advanced Biofuels Association Offering information on biobutanol as a biofuels and how ButamaxTM biobutanol William F. Hagy III, Director of Alternative Energy Policy, USDA technology enables the sustrainable growth of biofuels within the transport fuel supply • How isobutanol fuel moelcule enables efficent crude oil processing for fuel blends Wes Bolsen, Chief Marketing Officer and Vice President of Government • The feedstock diversity of Butamax's biobutanol technology Affairs, Coskata • Butamax's commercialization roadmap offers increased value to all stakeholders in the Christopher Hessler, Partner, AJW, Inc., Consultant to Iogen supply chain Doug Berven, Director of Corporate Affairs, POET Tim Potter, Chief Executive Officer Butamax™ Advanced Biofuels, LLC

11:00 Morning Coffee and Networking Break 3:20 Lean Design and Construction Techniques to Reduce Capital Costs and Schedule in Biofuels Plant Development Transformational Technologies and Advanced Biofuels Commercialization • Defining the concept of lean construction as it relates to biofuel plant construction • Comparing these processes to traditional construction techniques 11:20 Commercial Scale-up of a Solar-Reactor Driven Gasification Process ·•Explaining the economic, schedule, labor, safety and environmental benefits for the Converting Biomass to Gasoline plant owners, engineers and contractors. Sundrop Fuels, Inc. has developed a cleaner and more efficient way to turn biomass into ·•These concepts will be applied to piping as a reference, as piping represents up to 40 synthetic fuels by harnessing the intense heat of the sun to vaporize wood and crop percent of the capital cost of a biofuels plant. waste. Its process can produce twice the amount of gasoline or diesel per ton of biomass Gregory Karpinsky, Director of Biofuels, Victaulic Company compared to conventional biomass gasification systems. • The development of a 5-10 million gallon solar liquid fuel plant 3:40 Refreshment and Networking Break • Solar-reactor and syngas conversion technology Integration • The economics of the process of solar reactor conversion of biomass to gasoline • Technical challenges in moving from pilot to full-scale production Military and Aviation Markets for Advanced Biofuels • Utilizing strategic partnering • Sources, strategies and structures for plant scale-up financing – the roles of debt, equity and strategic financing sources 4.20 Meeting the Challenges of Delivering the First Advanced BioJet Wayne W. Simmons, Chief Executive Officer, Sundrop Fuels Fuel to the Market Rentech’s RenJet® Fuel was the first jet fuel to be successfully tested in by United Airlines 11:40 A Category-Busting Answer to Fossil Fuel Dependency: Liquid Fuel in a commercially scheduled flight. • Using a combination of strategy, government support and partnerships to bring bio jet from the Sun fuels to reach real end-user customers Joule is pioneering an entirely new fuel category with the production of Liquid Fuel from • “Getting to market” with flexibility in technology and strategy the Sun™; a direct, single-step, continuous process for renewable diesel – not biofuel or • Driving down the cost curve . The process is free of the land, resource and processing constraints that hinder biomass-derived biofuels, enabling productivities and cost efficiencies to economically D. Hunt Ramsbottom, Chief Executive Officer, President & Director, Rentech scale-up in line with escalating fuel demands. • Combining breakthroughs in genome engineering, bioprocessing and systems 4:40 The U.S. Navy Green Strike Force and Military and Aviation engineering to ensure commercial viability Advanced Biofuels Markets– A Panel Discussion • Engineering “catalysts” to synthesize and secrete fuel for weeks at a time and to overcome Moderator: Jim Lane, Editor & Publisher, Biofuels Digest challenges and liabilities of biomass growth, harvesting, extraction and refining Harrison Dillon, President & Chief Technology Officer Solazyme • Using a closed system to scale to desired output levels with no dependence on agricultural land, fresh water or crops, and consuming otherwise harmful CO2 emissions William F. Hagy III, Director of Alternative Energy Policy, USDA • Achieving 15,000 gallons of diesel per acre annually, at a fraction of the land use D. Hunt Ramsbottom, Chief Executive Officer, President & Director, Rentech required by alternative methods, with a positive net energy balance, and at costs as low Daniel Baniszewski, Chemist, Defense Logistics Agency Energy as $30/barrel equivalent Bill Sims, Chief Executive Officer, Joule Unlimited 5.20 End of Conference

Email: [email protected] “This is the place to be. As a networking event, it is hard to find anything similar” Poyry (Sponsor of World Biofuels Markets)

Maximize your marketing dollars at Advanced Biofuels Markets 12 10 3 Excellent marketing opportunities are available at the 2010 Advanced Biofuels Markets for anyone 9 4 looking to reach customers involved in the development of next generation biofuels. The 8 5 market is rapidly growing and this premier 7 6 event will bring together a targeted audience of decision makers with the power to buy. Conference Sponsorships are now available and provide access to strategic marketing, networking and media opportunities. SHO YO WCAS Exhibiting at Advanced Biofuels Markets will provide an excellent platform for UR S E TO OLUT KEY IONS you to showcase your solutions to key decision makers, enhance corporate DE STRA CISIO TEGIC visibility and generate high quality business leads. N-MA KERS Sign up today: Sponsors review our past biofuels events Contact: Chris Lewis Tel: +44 (0) 203 355 4224 , Fax: +44 20 7900 1853 “This is the number one event for biofuels [email protected] globally” Starsupply Renewables Media Partners

“It’s by far the best attended and the level of For information on becoming an event partner, email attendees are precisely the market we are [email protected] looking to meet” Inspectorate “You have the right people here, people at One of the fantastic features of the right level of decision making, the right the Advanced Biofuels Markets legislators, the right level of key opinion conference and exhibition is the online networking system – all leaders, these are the people who make the pre-registered delegates, speakers and guests can contact strategies for the future” each other, organise meetings and network before, during and after the event using this easy to use, private networking SBAE Industries system. For more information, please visit the website.

Call Graham Swanson on: +1 971 238 0700 Tel: +1 971 238 0700 Fax: +1 971 228 0308 E-mail: [email protected] November 9-10, 2010 – San Francisco Online: www.greenpowerconferences.com/advancedbiofuelsUSA

Please Register Me For Standard Rates

□ 2 day conference US$1899

□ Non Profit Discount: Receive a 20% discount with the non profit organization rate Note: Non Profit Rates are available for registered NGO's, government representatives and non profit organisations only. Discounts are at the discretion of Green Power Conferences and proof of status may be required.

□ 10% Early Booking Discount available until September 28

□ Special Group Offer: Register 3 delegates, only pay for 2

Delegate Details

Delegate 1: Name: ...... Surname: ......

Job Title: ......

Telephone: ...... Business Email: ......

Delegate 2: Name: ...... Surname: ......

Job Title: ......

Telephone: ...... Business Email: ......

Delegate 3: Name: ...... Surname: ......

Job Title: ......

Telephone: ...... Business Email: ......

Company Details Venue: The Renaissance Stanford Court Hotel Company Name: ...... 905 California Street Address: ...... San Francisco, CA 94108, United States (415) 989-3500 ...... www.stanfordcourt.com Accommodation: ...... Postcode: ...... Registered delegates will be sent hotel options and booking forms. Country: ...... Fax: ......

Payment Details

Please charge my credit card TERMS & CONDITIONS CONFIRMATION: You will receive confirmation of your booking by email. Please debit my: If you do not receive anything within 48 hours, please contact [email protected] to ensure we have received your booking. Card no. CANCELLATIONS: If you cancel at least 10 full working days before the event date you will only be charged a 15% cancellation fee. We regret that no cancellations can be accepted after this date and full Expiry date payment is due. Cancellations which are the result of a Force Majeure Event will also be chargeable on the above guidelines. Substitutions are welcome at any time. All other amendments to your booking may Amount Security code incur a 5% charge. CONTENT: It may be necessary for reasons beyond the control of the organisers to alter the content and Cardholder’s name timing of the agenda or the identity of the speakers. FORCE MAJEURE: If for any reason arising from or attributable to acts, events, omissions or accidents Signature beyond Green Power Conferences’ reasonable control it is necessary to make amendments to the original planning of an event or it becomes impossible to run an event, Green Power Conferences is relieved of International Bank Transfer all obligations and does not take any responsibility for compensation, reimbursement of any additional Account name: Green Thinking (Services) Ltd expenses, inconvenience or loss of business that may be experienced by attendees. Further to this, Bank: Barclays Green Power Conferences reserves the right to retain delegate fees as a contribution to all venue and Bank Address: 38 Hans Crescent, London, administrative costs incurred. SW1X 0LZ United Kingdom PAYMENT MUST BE DATA PROTECTION: The personal information provided by you on this brochure will be held on a Sort Code: 20-47-35 database. Sometimes your details may be made available to partner companies for marketing purposes. Account Number: 87434988 RECEIVED PRIOR TO If you do not wish your details to be used for this purpose, please tick here □. Swift Code: BARCGB22 THE CONFERENCE For full terms and conditions please see IBAN: GB44BARC20473587434988 http://www.greenpowerconferences.com/general/booking_terms.html

Organized By: Fax your completed registration to: +1 971 228 0308 or Register Online at: www.greenpowerconferences.com