Subscribe to daily environment news





 

Click for news Click for pictures
National Tree Day

Planet Ark Home


Switchgrass Fuel Yields Bountiful Energy: Study
Mail this story to a friend | Printer friendly version

US: January 10, 2008


NEW YORK - Switchgrass, a crop touted by venture capitalists and environmentalists alike as a next-generation ethanol feedstock, yields about five times more energy than it takes to grow it, making the plant a far more efficient fuel source than corn, a new study said.


In addition, the life cycle of the switchgrass ethanol -- which includes growing the crop, making the fuel, and burning it in vehicles -- emits about 94 percent less of planet-warming carbon dioxide than the life cycle of gasoline, said the study, published on Tuesday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

US companies are racing to make economical ethanol from nonfood sources like switchgrass as oil clings near record highs of over US$100 per barrel and as the US government inches closer to national greenhouse gas emission regulations.

Switchgrass is expected to be the main feedstock for cellulosic ethanol, a new type of alternative fuel made from breaking down the woody bits of plants. The energy law signed by President Bush last month mandates a five-fold increase in ethanol blending by 2022, and some of that fuel is required to come from cellulosic sources.

Switchgrass, which used to grow naturally across wide swaths of the United States, can be grown on marginal crop land using far fewer energy-intensive inputs like fertilizer than corn needs. And since it does not double as a feed crop, it will not lead to higher grain prices.

"Switchgrass is a good crop for marginal crop lands," Ken Vogel, a co-author of the study, called "Net Energy of Cellulosic Ethanol from Switchgrass," said in an interview. "Corn is still going to be grown to make ethanol; whether it ever takes a chunk of crop land away from corn is all going to come down to economics," said Vogel, a researcher for the US Department of Agriculture.

Cellulosic ethanol currently costs about double the price as making the fuel from corn, the main US ethanol feedstock. Venture capitalists and companies that are making small amounts of cellulosic ethanol say once the industry gets underway, biological advances in the fungi and other organisms used to break down woody plant bits into fuel will make the process cheaper.

Switchgrass plants sequester carbon dioxide in the ground because they have extensive root systems that remain buried after the crop is harvested, Vogel said. Steep greenhouse gas emissions reductions, of about 94 percent compared to gasoline, are contingent on burning switchgrass waste to fire bio-refineries. Unlike waste left over from corn after it is made into ethanol, switchgrass waste cannot be made into the animal feed distillers' grain.

The study, funded by the US energy and agriculture departments, did not not compare the efficiency of corn ethanol to switchgrass ethanol. Several recent studies have suggested corn ethanol yields about 1.25 to 1.50 times more energy than it takes to grow and process the grain into fuel. (Editing by Christian Wiessner)


Story by Timothy Gardner


REUTERS NEWS SERVICE

Reuters



© 2008 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.
top

 
TODAY'S
ENVIRONMENT
NEWS

ARGENTINA:
Argentine Beekeepers No Longer in Clover

BELGIUM:
EU Lawmakers Vote to Save Factories from Carbon Cost

BELGIUM:
EU Vote Backs Increase in Domestic Climate Action

BRAZIL:
Global Financial Crisis May Help Amazon - Minister

CHINA:
China Shying from Climate Obligations - Adviser

GERMANY:
Nuclear Power Back on German Political Agenda

INDIA:
India Hopes to Attract Over US$4bln in Green Energy

INDONESIA:
Jakarta Sinks as Citizens Tap Groundwater

INDONESIA:
Indonesia Raises Alert Level of Sulawesi Volcano

ITALY:
Italy's Illegal Fishing Threatens Tuna Species - WWF

ITALY:
Italy Facing Solar Power Rush, But Hurdles Remain

ITALY:
World Needs to Rethink Biofuels - UN Food Agency

JAPAN:
Tokyo Exchange Eager to Trade CO2, Awaits Policy

MEXICO:
Tropical Storm Marco Lashes Mexico's Gulf Coast

SPAIN:
Nature Inspires New Products in 'Biomimic' Study

SPAIN:
Evidence of Warming Growing Day by Day - Pachauri

SPAIN:
Green Policies Can Have Big Economic Spinoffs - UN

SUDAN:
At Least 17 Killed in South Sudan Floods

US:
US Coal Exports Seen as Target in Climate Fix

US:
World Bank Sees 'Trend' Strategy to Curb Carbon

US:
Financial Gloom Clouds Environment Trust Fund

US:
US to Limit Oil Development in Polar Bear Habitat

US:
'Hydrogen Cities' Seen Driving Fuel Cell Adoption



previous day


This site developed by Frontline, and managed by Planet Ark using RPM-NT.

Site designed by Jon Dee @ Planet Ark.

Radiant