agriculture * food * energy * environment
4 Mar
Cellulosic biofuels offer similar, if not lower, costs and very large reductions in greenhouse gas emissions compared to petroleum-derived fuels. That’s one of the key take-home messages from a series of expert papers on “The Role of Biomass in America’s Energy Future (RBAEF)” in a special issue of Biofuels, Bioproducts and Biorefining.
Professor Lee Lynd, from Dartmouth College’s Thayer School of Engineering is co-author of five of the eight papers in the special issue.
“We conclude that mature biomass refining is highly competitive with the fuels currently available, based on all the factors considered” says Professor Lynd. “The most promising class of processes we analysed combined the biological fermentation of carbohydrates to fuels with advanced technologies that thermochemically convert process residues to electrical power and, or, additional liquid fuels. One of our important findings, which contradicts conventional wisdom, is that similar greenhouse gas emission reductions on a per ton biomass basis are anticipated for the production of liquid fuels and electricity via mature technology.”
The researchers also found that the mature cellulosic biofuel technologies analysed:
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