See also:

How much fuel can we grow? How much land will it take?
http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html#howmuch

"Small is beautifuel" - Pannirselvam

--0--

http://www.counterpunch.org/bryce12312010.html

New Year's Edition

December 31, 2010 - January 2, 2011

Thomas Freidman's Folly

Biofuel Delusions

By ROBERT BRYCE

Debunking the tsunami of hype about biofuels doesn't require much. A 
standard calculator will do. Alas, Thomas Friedman can't be bothered 
to do the handful of simple calculations that prove the futility of 
the biofuels madness.

In a recent piece, the New York Times columnist and best-selling 
author praised the Navy and Marines for, as he put it "building a 
strategy for 'out-greening' Al Qaeda, 'out-greening' the Taliban and 
'out-greening' the world's petro-dictators."

Hmm. I've never heard of Taliban fighters using tanks or F-15s. And 
if Osama bin Laden and his al-Qaeda operatives are worrying about the 
size of their carbon footprints, that revelation might eclipse the 
latest news about Lady Gaga - at least for a few hours.

Nevertheless, Friedman reports that the military is planning to "run 
its ships on nuclear energy, biofuels and hybrid engines, and fly its 
jets with bio-fuels." Friedman goes on to say that the brass at the 
Pentagon is only pursuing "third generation" biofuels made from algae 
and non-food sources. But here's the reality: the commercial 
viability of advanced biofuels is a lot like the Easter Bunny and the 
Tooth Fairy: lots of people believe in it but no one ever sees it.

To be sure, the logisticians at the Pentagon know that the US 
military's profligate use of oil on the battlefield is a strategic 
liability. And while it's obvious that the Defense Department could - 
given its nearly $700 billion in annual spending -- make significant 
contributions in the development of new energy technologies, those 
advances are unlikely to happen on the biofuels front.

For decades, various pundits have been proclaiming that biofuels will 
displace our need for oil. Back in 1976, energy analyst Amory Lovins, 
a darling of the Green/Left, wrote a piece for Foreign Affairs in 
which he said that there are "exciting developments in the conversion 
of agricultural, forestry and urban wastes to methanol and other 
liquid and gaseous fuels." He went on, saying that those fuels "now 
offer practical, economically interesting technologies sufficient to 
run an efficient U.S. transport sector."

Today, 34 years after Lovins said that biofuels "now offer" the 
ability to run the transport sector, biofuels remain little more than 
a sinkhole for taxpayer dollars. According to the Congressional 
Budget Office, producing enough corn ethanol to match the energy 
contained in a single gallon of conventional gasoline costs taxpayers 
$1.78. Even with those subsidies, which total about $7 billion per 
year, corn ethanol still only provides about 3 percent of America's 
oil needs. And by mandating the consumption of ethanol, Congress has 
created an industry that now gobbles up about one-third of America's 
corn crop.

Those numbers are germane to Friedman's claim that biofuels will be 
an essential part of the DOD's new "green" future. The Pulitzer 
Prize-winning columnist lauded the Navy for its experiments with jet 
fuel derived from camellina, a plant in the mustard family. In April, 
the Navy flew an F-18 using a mixture of conventional jet fuel and 
camellina-based fuel. The cost of that biofuel: about $67.50 per 
gallon.

The fundamental problem with using plants to make liquid motor fuel 
isn't want-to, it's physics. We pump oil out of the earth because of 
its high energy density. That is it contains lots of stored chemical 
energy by both weight and volume. Camellina, like switchgrass, and 
nearly every other plant-based feedstock now being considered for 
"advanced" biofuel production, has low energy density. Thus, in order 
to produce a significant quantity of liquid fuels that have high 
energy density - such as jet fuel, diesel, or gasoline -- from those 
plants, you need Bunyanesque quantities of the stuff.

Friedman would have understood that had he done a bit of math on 
soybean-based biodiesel. The US produces about 3.2 billion bushels of 
soybeans per year and each bushel can be processed into about 1.5 
gallons of biodiesel. Thus, if it made sense to do so, we could 
convert all US soybean production into diesel with total output of 
about 4.8 billion gallons.

How much fuel is that? By Pentagon standards, it's not much. In 2008, 
the DOD consumed 132.5 million barrels of oil products, or about 5.5 
billion gallons. Put another way, even the US decided to convert  all 
of its soybean production into motor fuel, doing so would only 
provide about 87 percent of the Pentagon's total oil needs.

Tim Searchinger, a research scholar at Princeton University's Woodrow 
Wilson School who has written extensively about the problems with 
biofuels, says that biofuels don't make much sense because it "takes 
a huge amount of land to produce a modest amount of energy." The key 
issue, says Searchinger, is scale. He points out that even if we used 
"every piece of wood on the planet, every piece of grass eaten by 
livestock, and all food crops, that much biomass could only provide 
about 30 percent of the world's total energy needs."

Some crops can provide a relatively good feedstock for biofuels. For 
instance, Brazil utilizes sugar cane to produce ethanol. (Brazil is 
the world's second-largest ethanol producer, behind the US.) But even 
if  the US military commandeered all of Brazil's ethanol production 
-- which totaled 6.5 billion gallons in 2008 - that volume of energy 
still wouldn't be enough to keep the Pentagon's planes, trucks, and 
tanks moving. Recall that ethanol contains just two-thirds of the 
heat energy of gasoline. Therefore Brazil's 6.5 billion gallons of 
ethanol is equal to 4.3 billion gallons of refined oil product, far 
less than the US military's consumption of 5.5 billion gallons per 
year.  

Going beyond Brazil, biomass-based fuels may be worthwhile on 
tropical islands, like Hawaii, that have lots of rainfall and plenty 
of arable land. Furthermore, fuels derived from photosynthetic algae 
might - repeat, might - someday become commercial.

Friedman ended his column by saying that "we might really get a green 
revolution in the military." Sure, that's a possibility. But before 
Friedman writes another article about the promise of biofuels he 
should invest in a calculator.

Robert Bryce's latest book is Power Hungry: The Myths of "Green" 
Energy and the Real Fuels of the Future.

 


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