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Attacking The Growth Challenge National Algae Association Quarterly Conference Houston, Texas - 29 April 2010

Attacking The Growth Challenge National Algae Association Quarterly Conference Houston, Texas - 29 April 2010

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Page 1: Attacking The Growth Challenge National Algae Association Quarterly Conference Houston, Texas - 29 April 2010

Attacking The Growth Challenge

National Algae Association Quarterly ConferenceHouston, Texas - 29 April 2010

Page 2: Attacking The Growth Challenge National Algae Association Quarterly Conference Houston, Texas - 29 April 2010

(OTCBB: OOIL) © 2009-2010 OriginOil, Inc. 2

Safe Harbor Statement

Matters discussed in this presentation contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. When used in this press release, the words "anticipate," "believe," "estimate," "may," "intend," "expect" and similar expressions identify such forward-looking statements. Actual results, performance or achievements could differ materially from those contemplated, expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements contained herein, and while expected, there is no guarantee that we will attain the aforementioned anticipated developmental milestones. These forward-looking statements are based largely on the expectations of the Company and are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties. These include, but are not limited to, risks and uncertainties associated with: the impact of economic, competitive and other factors affecting the Company and its operations, markets, product, and distributor performance, the impact on the national and local economies resulting from terrorist actions, and U.S. actions subsequently; and other factors detailed in reports filed by the Company.

Page 3: Attacking The Growth Challenge National Algae Association Quarterly Conference Houston, Texas - 29 April 2010

(OTCBB: OOIL) © 2009-2010 OriginOil, Inc. 3

Algae Challenge is a Technology Challenge

OptimizedCO2 andNutrientDelivery

Optimized Light

Delivery

MinimalInstallationFootprint

LowCost

Oil Extraction

Energy Efficient

ContinuousProduction

+ + + + =

RenewableOil

AnywhereAnytime

Technology Breakthrough Requirements

Page 4: Attacking The Growth Challenge National Algae Association Quarterly Conference Houston, Texas - 29 April 2010

NOW… DO WE HAVE ENERGY-EFFICIENT CONTINUOUS PRODUCTION?

Page 5: Attacking The Growth Challenge National Algae Association Quarterly Conference Houston, Texas - 29 April 2010

(OTCBB: OOIL) © 2009-2010 OriginOil, Inc. 5

Well, about that electricity… Modeling shows: electrical lighting works ONLY where energy is available:

From waste sources (process heat, etc.) In special cases (excess energy generation, geothermal etc.)

SAMPLE SCENARIO

Page 6: Attacking The Growth Challenge National Algae Association Quarterly Conference Houston, Texas - 29 April 2010

(OTCBB: OOIL) © 2009-2010 OriginOil, Inc. 6

Achieving “Free” Energy

The world’s main source of “free” energy is the sun. But photovoltaic conversion of sunlight to grow algae is so inefficient

that…

You’re now in the solar farm business!

CONCLUSION: COST-EFFICIENT

CONTINUOUS ALGAE PRODUCTION (USUALLY)

REQUIRES DIRECT SOLAR ENERGY.

Page 7: Attacking The Growth Challenge National Algae Association Quarterly Conference Houston, Texas - 29 April 2010

(OTCBB: OOIL) © 2009-2010 OriginOil, Inc. 7

Do Open Ponds or Solar Reactors Work?

Biggest issue: massive footprint requirement. The reason:

PAR* value of sunlight falling on the earth’s surface is 2000 µmol photons m–2 s–1 (1000 µmol photons m–2 s–1 in winter).

But… algae and other photosynthetic organisms require only ~200 µmol photons m–2 s–1 PAR irradiance for maximum growth.

This means that a pond or solar reactor can only use 10-20% of available irradiance…

It is not possible for one growth layer to absorb all available sunlight.

* PAR - Photosynthetically Active Radiation

Page 8: Attacking The Growth Challenge National Algae Association Quarterly Conference Houston, Texas - 29 April 2010

(OTCBB: OOIL) © 2009-2010 OriginOil, Inc. 8

Conclusions

We are wasting solar energy and therefore land surface. If we could multiply the reactor layers, we could (theoretically)

access all available PAR. Then, we could achieve industrial algae production using direct solar

energy. We would finally have…

ENERGY-EFFICIENT CONTINUOUS PRODUCTION!

Page 9: Attacking The Growth Challenge National Algae Association Quarterly Conference Houston, Texas - 29 April 2010

(OTCBB: OOIL) © 2009-2010 OriginOil, Inc. 9

Announcing OriginOil’s MultiReactor™

Simple concept: stack the layers. Using our MultiReactor, we stack the algae reactors and channel

sunlight using an array of converging and diverging lenses.

MultiReactorCross-Section

© OriginOil 2010 - Patent Pending

Page 10: Attacking The Growth Challenge National Algae Association Quarterly Conference Houston, Texas - 29 April 2010

(OTCBB: OOIL) © 2009-2010 OriginOil, Inc. 10

Features of the MultiReactor

Unique lens array distributes and concentrates light through the vertical matrix.

Bioreactors get optimal light intensity (use channels, tubes or bags). Algae cultures circulate through the different levels. End-units for gas harvesting. Prisms split off unwanted wavelengths (possible energy storage for

night growth). Number of levels can vary according to latitude. Modular architecture for portability, flexibility and scalability.

Page 11: Attacking The Growth Challenge National Algae Association Quarterly Conference Houston, Texas - 29 April 2010

(OTCBB: OOIL) © 2009-2010 OriginOil, Inc. 11

Benefits of the MultiReactor

Production rates can be increased by 10 or 20 times over single layer designs.

Avoids shading problems inherent to naturally lit bioreactors. Optional light strips enable night-time growth for continuous

operation. Stacking reduces pump energy requirements for continuous harvest. Compact setup allows concentration of equipment. Standardized design means rapid deployment.

Page 12: Attacking The Growth Challenge National Algae Association Quarterly Conference Houston, Texas - 29 April 2010

MultiReactorCross-Section

© OriginOil 2010 - Patent Pending -

Radiant Light (Sunlight)Diverging

Lenses

Converging

Lenses

Compound Lenses

ConcentratedLight

Light

Con

centr

atio

n

IncidentLight

NoSunlight

Artificial Light

(Optional)

Culture Channel

Culture Channel

Page 13: Attacking The Growth Challenge National Algae Association Quarterly Conference Houston, Texas - 29 April 2010

(OTCBB: OOIL) © 2009-2010 OriginOil, Inc. 13

MultiReactor (Side View)

Design also corrects for varying angles of incidence throughout the year.(North-South axis)

Page 14: Attacking The Growth Challenge National Algae Association Quarterly Conference Houston, Texas - 29 April 2010

(OTCBB: OOIL) © 2009-2010 OriginOil, Inc. 14

What’s Next?

Development of a 40-foot container-based commercial pilot: Portable Inexpensive Widely Available Easy to Replicate Certifiable standard for carbon credits.

Integration with existing bag and tube designs. Integration with all other OriginOil processes, for a complete production

system. Use of LED-based systems continues to optimize industrial production in-

house and at test sites.

Page 15: Attacking The Growth Challenge National Algae Association Quarterly Conference Houston, Texas - 29 April 2010

(OTCBB: OOIL) © 2009-2010 OriginOil, Inc. 15

THANK YOU!

Scott FraserVice President, Operations

Page 16: Attacking The Growth Challenge National Algae Association Quarterly Conference Houston, Texas - 29 April 2010

(OTCBB: OOIL) © 2009-2010 OriginOil, Inc. 16

OriginOil, Inc.(OTCBB: OOIL)

Delivering A Renewable Source of OilAnywhere, Anytime.

www.originoil.com(877) 999-OOIL (6645)