Researchers say versatile grass could be used for sustainable fuel, building materials and more
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miscanthus Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

When you look across a field of miscanthus, it’s "hypnotically beautiful," says Emily Heaton, whose family farm has for two decades grown the first commercial field of this grass in Illinois. Dense, sun-loving and often called "giant," it blooms in late summer to fall with a showy silver flower.

Just like cornstalks across the Midwest, this crop grows several feet tall as it reaches up to the sky. And similar to soybean cultivation in the last century, annual production of miscanthus—mostly grown on tens of thousands of acres in the eastern U.S.—is projected to skyrocket to millions of acres by 2050.

The versatile grass has a multitude…

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