Biofuels Coming With a High Environmental Price? 541
DurandalTree writes "With the spectre of global warming on the horizon, biofuels have been touted as the solution to motor vehicles' greenhouse gas emissions. But with biodiesel use on the increase, it appears a distinctively environmentally unfriendly footprint is being left behind by some of its prime sources; affected food prices are surging out of reach of the poor and rainforests are being destroyed to create larger plantations."
Happened in the past with renewables (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Happened in the past with renewables (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Happened in the past with renewables (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Happened in the past with renewables (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Happened in the past with renewables (Score:5, Insightful)
The reason Americans aren't building new urban areas isn't because of some great love of suburbia; it's because no one wants to live in a ghetto, and since most cities (especially those on the east coast) have turned into ghettos, it seems logical that any new densely-populated cities would probably turn into ghettos as well. (This may not actually be true, as there are cities on the west coast which buck this trend, but they tend to be very new cities, without generations of poor people who have grown up there to establish a ghetto. Nevertheless it is still the common belief that cities lead to ghettos.)
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If cities were truly models of efficiency, then maybe more folks would be attracted, but more exurbanites (lik
Re:Happened in the past with renewables (Score:5, Insightful)
I pity anyone trapped in such a place. It's not how a human should live.
Re:Happened in the past with renewables (Score:5, Insightful)
Some of these policies will hurt people living out in the real countryside (especially the fuel tax one) but the benefits overall are strong. A way of easing the pain for people who have to be in the countryside (e.g. farmers) is tax rebates, but these would have to be carefully designed to prevent massive abuse. (It's proved a tricky balance to get right in other countries, FWIW, but I suspect it is still the fairest way.)
I should note that living in a small and largely self-contained municipality of a few thousand is a perfectly acceptable response to the above policies; that's how a great many Europeans actually live, even though we have a lot of big cities too. I'd also like to point out that the US isn't the only place agonizing over these problems; I can remember them being a regular topic of debate here (the UK) at least as far back as my memories of such topics go (late '70s).
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Actually, it is the attitude of people like you which has been causing a lot of the problems in the first place. Big city official in the U.S. LOVE to force people to do stuff - They have been using all sorts of authoritarian methods to try to force people to live according to whatever European design is popular. They love to tax, love to regulate, love to dic
Re:Happened in the past with renewables (Score:4, Insightful)
There are solutions. It just takes a little effort.
Re:Happened in the past with renewables (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't have numbers in front of me, but my understanding is that LEDs are no more efficient than fluorescent lamps. They may or may not be more efficient than compact fluorescent bulbs (CF), because CF is less efficient than the traditional 4' or 8' long tubes, but it's not much of a difference. The main benefits to LED lighting are: 1) it's small and simple: just apply DC current and it works; fluorescent requires a ballast with complicated circuitry. 2) it's rugged, so it works well in a flashlight or car subjected to shock. 3) It turns on instantly, which is good in car brake lights for safety, or any other non-continuous use.
I really wish more automakers would make hybrid powertrains available in more vehicles. The technology seems mature enough, but there's not enough selection. Besides, I'd like a used one to transplant into my older car.
I'd love to have some solar cells on my house. The problem with them is that they're still very expensive, and unless you plan on living in the same house for the next 30 years, it just doesn't pay to invest in them.
Re:Happened in the past with renewables (Score:4, Informative)
Such open housing areas (for poorer residents) are easier for police to patrol with fewer hiding places for bad guys and gangs.
And yes - strong urban growth rules are politically explosive and devisive - and yes sometimes errors are made - but in general: our sprawl is contained - our housing is affordable - we consistently are rated with a high level of livability (Linus Torvalds has a residence here).
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Re:Happened in the past with renewables (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course, the key word here is "expensive". That's another reason the suburbs are still the best option for most. If you want to live in the city center, you're either going to be in a dangerous ghetto, or in a very overpriced (and small) condo. The suburbs are the most economical choice by far. Your increased energy costs there are miniscule compared to the decreased land prices. Energy would have to become extremely expensive to change that equation.
urban renewal (Score:3, Informative)
In the 90s there was a great deal of urban renewal, and a lot of people who had moved out of the city starting moving back.
Much of the urban renewal going on is due to gentrification [boston.com] which creates more problems. One, two, or more people may buy property in a rundown neighberhood which they'll fix up. Seeing this others will as well which drives up prices pricing lower income residents out, many of whom rent.
Falcon
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I agree (Score:3, Insightful)
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Re:Happened in the past with renewables (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Happened in the past with renewables (Score:5, Insightful)
I ran the calculations a couple years ago and based on an average solar insolation rate of 5kwHr/day/m^2 for the the bands where the majority of the arable landmass is, and the 1.3 × 10^13 m^2 of arable land we get 6.5x10^13*365 or 2.37x10^16kwHr/year or 2.37x10^14MwHr per year. US demand was 3.3x10^12MwHr/year in 1999. The world has about 20x the population of the US, so worldwide demand if everyone lived like the US and population is steady would be 6.6x10^13, or about one fifth of the total insolation on arable land.
That means we need better than 20% NET efficiency from sunlight to usable energy to maintain the world at current US consumptions rates. That is just not possible and proves that our way of life is NOT sustainable in the long run without drastic reductions in energy use or population.
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It's pretty amazing how much energy, resources and space we expend on cars. I only started noticing when I stopped owning one.(don't worry, no lecture, right now, about how everyone must, MUST I say! ride a bike)
Re:Happened in the past with renewables (Score:4, Insightful)
You're pessimistic by about 3 orders of magnitude (Score:5, Insightful)
The insolation in mid-Kansas is about 1550 kWh/m^2/yr. At 15% efficiency, this would produce about 230 kWh/m^2/yr of electricity. Divide 4.038e12 kWh/yr by 230 kWh/m^2/yr and you get 1.76e10 m^2, or 17,600 km^2. Total impervious area in the USA (roofs, pavement, etc.) is 112610 km^2 [ourwater.org], so we'd need to put PV on about 16% of what's already covered. This can be done when we re-roof.
True, covering the rest of our energy needs would take more, but that's no reason to curl up in a fetal position and suck your thumb.
Re:You're pessimistic by about 3 orders of magnitu (Score:3, Interesting)
There currently is about 386 GWe of nuclear capacity in the world from 435 nuclear reactors operating in 30 countries supply 16% of world electicity with fairly rock-solid base load. We need to have about 14 times as many as we do now to meet world
There's more than one solution (Score:3, Interesting)
A plant that has been proposed for making cellulose ethanol is a Brazilian water hyacinth [wikipedia.org], it has the advantage of being one of the fastest growing plan
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--
Get Solar! http://mdsolar.blogspot.com/2007/01/slashdot-users -selling-solar.html [blogspot.com]
Not everyone wastes like the US (Score:4, Insightful)
Very few people are as wasteful as the US. This extends through energy use/waste and food use/waste. The whole system is propped up by agricultural subsidies which keep the system inefficient and unsustainable.
The typical US diet uses a hell of a lot more arable land than the average diet. The resulting land use is a major land destructor and uses a lot more water, oil land input than it should. One of the biggest problems is high meat consumption.
If people ate the grain fed to beef, instead of the beef, they'd only need to consume one tenth of the grain (ie grain to beef is only approx 10% efficient).
Each pound of beef requires about 3-4 pounds of oil.
Thus, switching to significantly reduced meat intake would use vastly less oil and free up a lot of land that could be put to other uses (eg. biofuels).
Of course, the farming and oil industries don't really want you to change the current high consumption and are happy for you to keep funding this insane system through subsidy handouts.
Re:Happened in the past with renewables (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Happened in the past with renewables (Score:5, Insightful)
I think the OP means that those who don't learn from the past are condemned to repeat it.
To me, the problem here is that we need to let free market evolution select the fuel sources of the future. The current situation in the US is various government funded "intelligent design" ideas each of which will eventually fail. But as long as the government $$s flow, the failures will be masked.
I'm all for new or different technology, but these things have to grow from the ground up, working out the bugs as they grow.
Re:Happened in the past with renewables (Score:5, Insightful)
GE food (Score:3, Informative)
If there were studies showing GMO food as anything other than a way to grow more, better food on the same land, I'd be the first in line, but there isn't.
Ah but there is. Some people are allergic to brazil nuts, some have gone into shock and have died. Soy was gentically engineered with a gene from the brazil nut. In a study it was shown those with an allergy to brazil nuts were also allergic to the soy. The gene inserted encoded for a protein that's an allergin.
Case study: Brazil nut allergen in G [cornell.edu]
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If there were studies showing GMO food as anything other than a way to grow more, better food on the same land, I'd be the first in line, but there isn't.
Ah but there is. Some people are allergic to brazil nuts, some have gone into shock and have died. Soy was gentically engineered with a gene from the brazil nut. In a study it was shown those with an allergy to brazil nuts were also allergic to the soy. The gene inserted encoded for a protein that's an allergin.
I was under the impression that the test was specifically adding sequences that produced the allergic reaction and other sequences that did not in order to verify that unrelated sequences could be safely added from nuts. Of course, the test is always cited as having shown that sequences from nuts cause allergic reactions, but that's a distortion as it only presents half of the results.
What's more, you say "some have gone into shock and have died." This is not true of GMO foods, as far as I know.
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That's not an issue with genetically modified foods as such, it's an issue with an hyperimmune response to certain foods, and the foods whose genetic materials are used.
And who's to say more gm foods won't create more allergins? Also who can say definitively other bioreactive chemicals, proteins or not, won't be created as well?
Using your arguement, we shouldn't import brazil nuts, because they cause an hyperimmune response.
Not at all. Most people don't have an allergy to brazil nuts, myself, I lov
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People who waste their time on trendy non-issues like this make me sick.
Re:GE food (Score:4, Interesting)
People who waste their time on trendy non-issues like this make me sick.
Nonissue? People dying from an allergic reaction is a nonissue?
There are people dying RIGHT NOW from actual problems in the food industry with handling, inspection
These are handling and sanitation issues and don't have anything to do with genetic engineering. GE does nothing for preventing food from being contaminated. And for people without enough to eat, that's a problem with politics and logistics. Take Zimbabwe, it used to be the breadbasket of southern Africa. But when pres Mugabe forced the white farmers off of their farms then gave the farms to his cronies the country turned into a basket case. Then there's what's happening in Mexico. Because of massive subsidies the US gives to US agribusinesses these companies can export food to Mexico and sale it there cheaper than Mexican farmers can grow food. You can blame this on many of those "illegal immigrants" in the US. Because Mexican farmers can't make a living on their farms they migrate into the Mexican cities or north to come to the US. And those who go to the cities drive those already there north. Massive farm subsidies was the reason the WTO talks in Geneva fell apart. India and other coutries demanded the EU, Japan, and the US to stop subidizing their agribusinesses so these companies couldn't flood export markets with food that cost less than what local farmers could grow food for. In India thousands of farmers [blogcritics.org] have been committing suicide in part because they can't compeat with subsidized imported food [business-standard.com].
FalconRe:Happened in the past with renewables (Score:4, Insightful)
Do you know how low-power, unreliable, dirty, dangerous, and expensive those things are? I own one.
BioFuel isn't a renewable (Score:5, Insightful)
Corn is produced through an incredible usage of fossil fuels. From the fertilizers, through the mechanized Ag cycle. It's just awful! A petro-carbon boondoggle, for Monsanto and the usual Cheney back-room.
Then there's the "let's burn food!" aspect.
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Anyway, ethanol from corn is good FOR NOW because it reduces the need for corn subsidies and helps get people switched to ethanol. It will never be a long term source of massive
This just in.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Are we really so myopic that the lure of "free fuel" has completely distracted us from the fact that nothing on this planet is being produced in such quantity that changing the market for that product radically will not affect the marketplace?
I guess the answer is, "yes."
Re:This just in.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Algae (Score:5, Insightful)
The best bet for biofuels is something that has less of an impact on the soil and the planet, such as algae based biofuels. Algae is grown in tanks, so the process requires less land, and any chemicals used in the process can be contained so it isn't spread over open land.
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Corn? You COULD use it.
Algae? You could use it.
Human waste? You could use it.
The fact that it can draw from sources that are less likely to drain the biosphere is one of the best things ABOUT biodiesal.
Re:Algae (Score:4, Interesting)
I drive by a sewage treatment plant, and a landfill a few times a week, and wonder just how much methane is just escaping into the atmosphere. Methane which could be captured fairly easily, and used anywhere natural gas or propane are currently used.
Re:Algae (Score:4, Interesting)
If it's a well-managed facility, the methane is probably already being reclaimed. They do that at the Vancouver landfill. Surprisingly though, sewage treatment doesn't release that much methane, unless you have an anaerobic tank for biological phosphorus removal. Most of the carbon-based gas released is CO2 from the aerobic reactor.
And before you point out the smell, methane is actually odorless. The smell most people associate with methane is hydrogen sulfide, which is often produced at the same time by anaerobic biological processes.
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Algea could make enough oil for biodiesel to replace petroleum for transportation in a fraction of the surface area that is going into corn production this year. And it wouldn't have to be good farm land either. This could be done for roughly twice what the US spends to import oil each year. There are no big technical hurdles to overcome.
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Flooded lead-acid batteries in a well-designed EV will last between 50k-100k miles (lots of variables there). Perhaps you think that's pitifully short, but I'm not so dissapointed in that number. A new lead-acid traction pack will cost about $3000, so that's about $0.03-$0.06/mile spent on the batteries.
Fairly simple economics (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, switching to these kind of fuels will leave less of an environmental impact, but it will hurt poor people the most who consume corn frequently and will certainly lead to an increase in price in corn-produced food. [wsj.com] (Think Corn Syrup in soda) This is why we can't radically switch to biofuels like some people are calling for.
Corn is massively subsidised (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Corn is massively subsidised (Score:4, Interesting)
And I completely agree that rising corn prices are not a problem while the US government subsidizes production. Get rid of the subsidies, and then we can talk about the affect on food prices. If the poor really can't afford to eat because of rising corn prices, the subsidies on corn production could be replaced with an increase in funding for foodstamp programs, if nothing else.
Re:Corn is massively subsidised (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Corn is massively subsidised (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Fairly simple economics (Score:5, Informative)
China didn't ban ethanol production, indeed, China has a rather ambitious ethanol production agenda. China, however, has switch focus from grain produced ethanol to cellulosic ethanol, which is produced from cellulose from sources like switchgrass, rather than from grain crops that are human food staples.
Just throw corn right out the door (Score:4, Informative)
Corn is not the future of U.S. ethanol: DOE
http://www.reuters.com/article/scienceNews/idUSN2
A cellulosic ethanol company who was recently awarded a $40M grant from the DOE in February:
http://bluefireethanol.com/ [bluefireethanol.com]
Economics is fairly simple (Score:4, Insightful)
The best example of where such a model falls down was the Australian wool industry. Wool was selling at a low price. Leading economists said the answer was simple - kill lots of sheep to make wool scarce. It didn't work, they forgot that cotton exists. I wish I was making this up but this piece of utter stupidity that ruined many farmers really did happen.
People don't really care (Score:5, Insightful)
The simple answer is to reduce energy usage, but people don't want to.
Stop travelling, have new stuff, heat/cool their houses, import food etc.
Myself I fully intend to visit a few more far off locations, I want a new couch and bigger TV, I want my house warm in the winter and cool in the summer and I want a broad selection of fresh fruits and vegetables year round.
That's gonna use a lot of energy, even if I gave up my car to walk to a market. People don't want to change, and they won't yet.
The latest trend I saw is directly blaming the "rich", which pretty much includes most of us with computers and the time to argue on slashdot. I don't see us making huge changes.
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The latest trend I saw is directly blaming the "rich", which pretty much includes most of us with computers and the time to argue on slashdot. I don't see us making huge changes.
FWIW I bought an old diesel Benz. As climate allows I'm burning a blend of diesel (petrol or bio) and straight veggie oil. Even easier on the environment than processing the oil to diesel and leaving a shitload of glycerin laying around with methoxide contamination (as is uber common in home setups). Add to this that the oil I'm burning is already a waste product of the fried food industry and I'm making my little tiny impact. Up on the list of things to do to the car is build a hybrid fuel system that
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Re:People don't really care (Score:5, Insightful)
No one gets that getting molecules to perform work for us is what makes us rich.
I can't wait til environmentalists find out how many "poor" people will starve once they mandate "organic" farming.
The cost of almost everything in a market-based economy is purely based in the energy consumption of its constituent parts.
Hippies would sure be surprised to find out how long shelter took to build before the industrial revolution. That is why everyone lived in cramped quarters.
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"Reducing individual energy usage has a much shorter name.. poverty"
This is untrue. Energy efficiency, and sensible urban planning allow us to maintain (and even improve) our standard of living while reducing energy consumption. Please don't make straw-man arguements - _sensible_ environmentalists don't want people living in caves, or eating bacterial cultures to save energy.
However, we _do_ need to reassess some aspects of our society.
Suburbia tends to have the following characteristics:
- people can't walk
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I don't equate riches with waste. There are a lot of things worth having which don't require staring at gas guzzling vehicles zooming around in circles, for instance, like, say, the enormous supply of literature we've built up, or, God forbid, sitting around with a group of folks making things with your ow
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It just might. Perhaps if we start riding bicycles and mass transport like Chinese, CO2 concentration will reach equilibrium where increased photosynthesis by plants due to higher temperature + higher CO2 compensates for remaining human activity.
what happened to hydrogen? (Score:2)
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Hydrogen is a storage medium, not an energy source.
BTW - the "energy source" for biofuel is solar. In fact, if you discount nuclear, everything is solar. Well, actually, nuclear is solar, too, since that's where the elements were formed (though perhaps not _our_ sun - perhaps stellar energy is more accurate). But I digress...
Biofuel uses solar energy which is being collected now, instead
Re:what happened to hydrogen? (Score:4, Informative)
So? Neither is petroleum, coal, or biodiesel.
There is not a single energy positive creation source on the face of the planet. 99.9% of everything all our energy sources come from the sun (excluding geothermal and uranium) which oil and coal was from plants and animals from millions of years ago that got their energy from the sun, while biodiesel is from more recent plants.
The reason that hydrogen is not used is because it is currently inefficient to convert from your standard energy production methods. You could technically grow corn and burn it to make hydrogen just like biodiesel. It is just not that efficient to do so.
This might change and eventually someday be easier to just use direct solar power and remove hydrogen from water.
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Biofuels are easier to store, easier to transport, easier to use in existing engines, not (with some exceptions, such as, IIRC, corn-based ethanol) either a net energy loss to produce or a byproduct of the fossil fuel industry the way hydrogen is. There are lots of reasons that biofuels are taking off.
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Nah, anybody who said burning hydrogen has to leave the room. Anyone who said fusing hydrogen just gets to be called foolishly optimistic.
Duh. (Score:5, Insightful)
Energy demand = Growing rapidly without forseeable upper bound
If you switch from fossil fuels to biofuels, all you do is change the problem set, from pollution and peak oil to deforestation and starvation. There is one solution and one solution only: energy efficiency and conservation. I suppose you could say there is a second, getting energy from outside the system (i.e. space) but that still leaves the problem of getting the energy back out of the system (i.e. pushing it cleanly and transparently back into space once used) so that we don't simply heat/pollute the globe beyond control.
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Indeed... (Score:5, Interesting)
That said, we could make better use of the oceans - but I trust our current free market much less there - the oceans have much more of a "tragedy of the commons" dynamic than elsewhere, with fragile ecosystems and high difficulty sectioning off properties. Algae on land-based ponds in otherwise nonviable landscapes would offer the most promise for producing biomass in a way that would not negatively affect prices for the poor. Algae can produce its own food, doesn't need to use much fresh water, can produce various kinds of oils, and could even be used as a part of foods if we are interested in exploring that. The only question is, will it be able to scale and pay for itself in terms of needing to control its environment to mass produce it? Given the history of livestock, I can't imagine algae can't be made efficient or be properly bred en mass.
That's just my idea though - and I'm fairly uninformed about the whole field of energy crops. Why are we currently pursuing the whole turn-food-to-fuel path anyway, given how wide open the algae field is?
Ryan Fenton
Biofuels are simply not environmentally friendly! (Score:4, Insightful)
Biofuels are simply not environmentally friendly in any way, shape or form. They are seen by some as a temporary solution to dwindling oil stocks. Not as the environmental saviour some idiots have imagined them to be.
Biofuels can be environmentally benign (Score:3, Informative)
Note that the linked articles are foreign, discussing production of biodiesel in places like Malaysia. US biodiesel production, OTOH, is a by-product of soybeans grown for human and animal consumption; the fuel does not compete with food here in the USA.
Now, if we started importing biodiesel the way we have with ethanol, then its an entirely different situation. Product from Brazil or Malaysia would almost certainly come from a process of deforestation.
The EU farms rapese
Re:Biofuels are simply not environmentally friendl (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm sorry, but what?
If you want to be literal, then basically nothing we do is environmentally friendly. At least, nothing modern. In fact, the only environmentally friendly thing we could really do is to bury ourselves and become fertilizer.
But a biofuel can be mostly environmentally friendly. There are problems with issues like nitric oxides, which are produced by burning many fuels - gasoline, diesel, biodiesel, and vegetable oil alike. But then, burning wood releases many things that we would prefer not to breathe, and it is a natural occurrence.
One thing that you can say for biofuels is that they themselves are carbon-neutral. Other processes related to them may not be, of course. But if all of our energy was derived from biofuels, it would all be carbon-neutral.
Arguably the best fuel to use for these various reasons would be hydrogen. It is not an energy source, but then, neither is biofuel, which is the liquid result of processing plants made mostly with solar energy. Hydrogen burns most cleanly (the outputs are water and heat) but of course the energy has to come from somewhere, and it has a laundry list of problems, probably the most serious of which is hydrogen embrittlement which destroys everything dealing with hydrogen eventually.
An option I like a great deal for transmitting power is the use of compressed air. MDI's air car technology is quite environmentally friendly.
But put quite simply, the biofuels are our best hope for reducing our environmental impact in the short term, and one article that says that one flawed method of producing biofuels is causing problems is quite simply not evidence that the entire concept is flawed.
You make clever use of propaganda in your comment, but I notice that there is no actual content, no facts, no science. Please come back when you have some meat to place in your comment.
Well, we have to try our best? (Score:3, Interesting)
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Re:Well, we have to try our best? (Score:5, Interesting)
Chernobyl would probably still be running and providing power if they had not shut off all kinds of safety mechanisms at the same time like a bunch of fucking idiots.
The saying more accurately says that we can build very safe nuclear plants that consume less fuel than coal plants spew into the atmosphere as a result of burning coal. Many people (correctly) point out that it is possible to scrub all of that from the air, but most coal-burning plants do not do this. Also it is not a matter of "now". We have known for decades how to build breeder reactors that will process the "spent" fuel back into usable fuel, and which are not capable of making weapons-grade material (the usual purpose for a breeder reactor.) This would reduce our fuel needs by something like three orders of magnitude and the fuel waste would be (IIRC) two orders of magnitude less long-lived. If you do the math you will see that if this does not actually solve the nuclear waste problem, it at least comes very close to it.
We do not do this because of a flawed interpretation of a nuclear treaty. Bush (ObDisclaimer: I hate the guy, his family, and all for which they stand, which has nothing to do with America except the part about greed) has spoken in favor of the use of breeder reactors for processing nuclear fuel.
Very true, but it is a horrible mistake to base anything you don't have to on topsoil. We are destroying soil at an alarming rate. Modern farming processes create monocultures in soil; all these people in the midwest who talk about how great their dirt is havefor the most part never seen real soil. Modern tilling techniques and the use of heavy equipment create hardpan under the soil, damaging drainage. The use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides kills off some of the biota in the soil (soil is sixty to eighty percent organic material, and up to 40% living material) but not others, creating monocultures which do little to protect plants and may even harm them. The result is a soil that does not drain properly, that requires the use of more and more chemicals, and which is additionally blown and washed away during winds and rains.
But wait, there's more! Any kind of hard soil will run off water too quickly, contributing to floods. Any kind of soft, uncovered soil will be blown away - some of the soil lands back on your ground, some of it on your neighbor's ground, and some of it goes into the water once again. Both this source of soil in the water and simply washing it away with irrigation clogs streams and rivers, creating anaerobic conditions which kill both flora and fauna. This process continues all the way to the ocean, where ocean life near the land is often killed off by changes in salinity, lack of light due to suspended soil fines, and other issues.
This last effect kills not only small, submerged plants and animals, but also plant life on the coast lines. The coast line in the Southern part of the US is especially damaged - a fact which has been blamed for much of the fury of the storm which tore New Orleans into small, floating pieces.
Topsoil-based fuels are simply completely wrongheaded, a fact which Brazil will discover sooner or later...
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Non-food biofuel. (Score:5, Interesting)
Which might not be as hard as it sounds. The University of New Hampshire did a study [unh.edu] in 2004 where they concluded that biodiesel from algae could -- at least theoritically -- supply all the nation's fuel supply without require food oil (like soy or palm) to be used at all. On the ethanol front, cellulosic ethanol [wikipedia.org] can be produced from high-cellulose plant products, like sawgrass or wood chips, without cutting into the corn crop. Some of cellulosic plants are beginning to approach commercial volumes of production.
It's not that biofuels are a bad idea, but not all implementations of those ideas are equally valid.
Re:Non-food biofuel. (Score:5, Informative)
Yes, and the US Government concluded the same thing in 1998 [energy.gov].
US DOE's approach was to use algae grown in foot-deep "raceway" size pools built in ring shapes and agitated by paddlewheels. Local algae was found to be the best algae to use; just build ponds and the algae will come along and colonize them. Using specially selected algaes produced a single-digit percentage improvement in efficiency at best and actually worked less well than the local stuff in some cases.
They found also that they could capture up to 80% of the CO2 output of a coal power plant and put it into algae growth. This approach is not carbon-neutral but at least the CO2 is used twice.
Interestingly, the same algae can be used to create both biodiesel and ethanol, because the former is made from fats and the latter is made from carbohydrates - and algaes produce both in various ratios depending on species and environment. Remaining solids can be used (without processing) for fertilizer.
There are things other than corn (Score:5, Informative)
Somebody will mention the word "clean" at some point - it is not a word that really makes sense in the context of burning stuff in air (nitrous oxides are produced), and the clown that always mentions nuclear whenever energy is mentioned should also remember that mining and processing is not "clean" either.
Nuclear Power is the answer (Score:3, Interesting)
The Solution to the Problem (Score:5, Informative)
With legal, non-smokable Hemp, we could stop cutting down forests. We could cut back on the amount of cotton crops that have to be grown (and the corresponding amount of land that has to be rested because cotton crops sucked the life out of them). We could even use it for biofuel until we can get algae farms that are efficient. Hemp was made illegal because some big tycoon decided he wanted to protect his cash cow. It's time to get rid of that silliness, and start using our heads. Hemp is where it's at. Wake up, USA.
And, in conjunction with Hemp, let's work on algae... a great way to make use of inhospitable land, and possibly the best/most-efficient biological source that we can turn into biofuel to replace our dependence on dead dinosaurs.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
GreenFuel Technologies' idea of "growing" oil-laden algae in vertical tanks makes the most sense, since the algae can be harvested many times per year to make millions of gallons of diesel fuel/heating oil per 200 acre farm of these tanks, and almost just as much ethanol from the solid waste of algae processing.
Play politics or die by them (Score:3, Insightful)
Missing the point altogether (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, I don't intend to go back to living in a world of horse flop in the streets, coal in my stove, pumping water every day from a well a half mile away. Nor should I. Nor should anyone else.
What is flabbergasting is that the same crowd that joneses for Star Trek all the time is so fast to posit that we need to live simply so that others may simply live. If there's anything Trek should have taught you is that life is not a zero sum game, mankind can design and reason its way out of situations it creates, and there are more than enough resources to go around and you just need to figure out what they are and how to use them.
We are truly stupid if we turn backwards right when we figure out how to do high efficiency fusion, store energy as extra mass, and other off the wall things we've cooked up in sci-fi but haven't gotten around to figuring out in the basic physics departments. We will be condeming all future generations to poverty of not only economy, but morality and ethics, because with poverty of nations go all those things we so hate in our pasts: war, slavery, conquest, exploitation, disease, starvation. We have more than enough of those things left now. We have been fighting damn hard to change ourselves for a long time. To rise from that horrid muck.
There's a difference between being more efficient and doing an about face in our march forward. And getting things done from building pyramids to cities needs energy of one kind or another. We can't simply stop using energy. We can make things use less and still use. We cannot stop using.
Damn us all now if we reflexively retreat from advancement now like idiot children. Damn us to hell.
Still Missing the Point (Score:5, Insightful)
If we actually stopped and thought about what we were doing a small fraction of the time and budgeted what we had, we might have a chance of getting to that future you talk about. Otherwise, all that will happen is that new technology will beget *more waste*. How far has the space program gotten in the last half century? People flush the economy and ecology down the toilet and complain about research being a waste of money, so landfills fill up and space exploration languishes.
Good god, I want to smack Monbiot (Score:4, Interesting)
If biodiesel production causes food prices to spike, capitalists will find something different that does not cause this to occur. It may take longer than we wish, but it will happen.
As for land-stripping, it is well known tht most stripping has occurred to plant inefficient farms. This was happening well before the recent enthusiasm for biofuels, and it will continue. I'd love to see it stop. But I'm not going to give up biodiesel to try and stop it or even help it. My fuel comes from America, not Saudi Arabia, Brazil, or even Canada, as does a great deal of our oil.
The last thing I have to say about Monbiot, the most insulting, doubtlessly the one thing that will make people say "you lose this argument because you got personal, hell, you might as well just get it over with and violate Godwin's Law," is about his style of presentation. George Monbiot [monbiot.com] makes himself out being omniscient, and if only the world would listen to him, all would be well and people would live in peace. I had enough of that sort of person when I lived in Madison, Wisconsin. They're everywhere there. It is, IMNSHO, this sort of person that enrages the reactionaries among us like no other, the ones who think that they know better than everyone else how to live, function, even breathe.
Okay, let's put ALL biofuels on hold for five years. With that sweeping generalization, all work on it comes to an crashing end for five years. In April 2012, we will resume. And know what? We'll be right where we left off, only to find that we're five years behind, as we finally had the wisdom to listen to the one guy who knows better than us how to run the world. At least, we thought he was. You'd think we'd have learned by now to listen to people who claim to know better than everyone else, but our race is notorious for its memory deficiency.
Miscanthus (Score:3, Interesting)
Miscanthus is a genus of about 15 species of perennial grasses. Miscanthus giganteus has been trialed as a biofuel in Europe since the early 1980s. It can grow to heights of more than 3.5m in one growth season. Its dry weight annual yield can reach 25t/ha (10t/acre). The rapid growth, low mineral content and high biomass yield of Miscanthus make it a favorite choice as a biofuel. After harvest, it can be burned to produce heat and power turbines. The resulting CO2 emissions are equal to the amount of CO2 that the plant used up from the atmosphere during its growing phase, and thus the process is greenhouse gas-neutral.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miscanthus_giganteus [wikipedia.org]
Educate yourself http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-57028888
Sensationalism... (Score:4, Insightful)
Nobody is going to starve. It's just that we've all become so used-to subsidized corn, that we never expected having to deal with market forces. Now that we do, everything is changing. Farmers are looking for new cattle feed, companies like Coca-Cola are looking for other sugar alternatives than corn syrup, et al. The market is starting to take action on this change, and there's no reason to believe it won't work just fine.
That rain forest is being burned is a huge shame. However, biofuels certainly don't require the burning of rain forest, so they aren't really the cause. What's more, even in the current state of affairs, that kind of pollution is only a one-time issue, while that land will continue to produce biofuels for many, many years.
Claims of limited arable lands are nonsense as well. Water can and is being transported to arid regions for crops. Every farmer in the developed world fertilizes their own fields, and there is no shortage of compost available. Once again, it will require some changes, and initially higher prices, but it really is the kind of thing the free market is perfectly good at handling, if you just give it a few years to work itself out.
People are touting cellulose ethanol, which is a good option, but it's going to have precisely the same drawbacks, just less pronounced... Food prices rising because cellulose is currently used in hog and cattle feed. Expansion of farming to meet the demands. Rising prices of crops, as existing farmland is stretched to produce enough fuel. Increase in use of petroleum fertilizers, as cheap cellulose is no longer available for compost. etc.
Things like algae for production of biofuels have plenty of potential, but it isn't just going to spring-up overnight. You really need to create a guaranteed demand for the product, before anyone is going to be willing to invest in such technologies. Indeed, the more expensive corn ethanol gets, the higher the potential profit in developing algae solutions.
Just saying "to hell with it, developing biofuels is too challenging" is just going to prolong our problems. Giving up on a good option, because it produces complications like higher corn prices in the (very) near-term is horribly myopic. We'll be reaping the benefits of widespread production of biofuels for at least the next century, and probably longer. Those in the poorer parts of the world, affected by the food prices, will also.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
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-nB
Re:Yes but... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Yes but... (Score:4, Interesting)
Excepting the fact that you conveniently didn't RTFA. Biofuels are encroaching on native habitats, which often includes slash and burn farming.
But is that actually true?
Slash and burn farming has been encroaching on native habitats long before we decided to make biofuels. The fact is that population pressures in these areas will cause farmers to slash and burn in order to grow any crop which is at that time economically viable. Now that we are concentrating on biofuels the demand for sugar cane grows and that is the particular crop that is chosen.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Ethanol fuel production is not the ONLY reason that slash and burn exists and is on the rise, but it greatly increases the rate at which it occurs.
I seriously doubt that ... and how could you demonstrate it?
If the demand for coffee were rising instead of the demand for biofuels would we be saying that drinking coffee greatly increases the rate at which slash and burn occurs? Ie. there is nothing inherent in biofuels that leads to this kind of deforestation. Nor would non-use of biofuels allievate defo
Diesel now has much less sulphur and particulates (Score:5, Interesting)
Diesel engines are much cleaner now, if the proper technology is used to clean the exhaust. Unfortunately all that technology got clogged up by the sulphur in US diesel through last year, so none of it was used.
US diesel switched to a low-sulphur blend at the start of the year, and all 2007 model year diesel cars require it. It exchange, they now have the particulate filters that make diesels run cleaner. This does little to clean up the millions of diesel cars and trucks built before 2007, unfortunately, but it shows that the problem hasn't been forgotton.
Please don't attack diesel based on a complete lack of information and one anecdote. For more information, see the National Clean Diesel Campaign [epa.gov].
Re:Biofuels Do Nothing (or Worse) for Global Warmi (Score:3, Interesting)
As another poster pointed out [can't find the post right now, so no link, sorry], the difference in the source of the C02 that is released by burning petro- or bio-diesel matters. Fossil fuels contain carbons that would not ordinarily be dumped into the atmosphere in the billions of tons a year without we extract them and burn them.
Plants, on the other hand, bind at