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Sugar from Cellulosic Biomass

2.7 pounds of sugar contains as much energy as 1 pound of crude oil

America has more Sugar than the Middle East has oil.

How can this be?

When people are asked where sugar comes from they will most likely answer: sugar cane or sugar beets, because that is what most people are familiar with. Yet, sugar is the basic molecular building block within all plant life on Earth. Carbohydrates are made of sugar molecules. All plants, including trees and grasses are made of carbohydrates, combined with lignin and a small percentage of oils and proteins (although some plants and vegetables are known for their high percentage of oil or protein, they are the exception).

America can grow more plants and trees—the desert sands of the Middle East cannot grow more oil.

Carbohydrates are made of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen with a ratio of two hydrogen atoms for every oxygen atom. Carbohydrates are produced by photosynthesis—a natural process that takes place chemically within the plants and trees. Photosynthesis uses the energy of sunlight to remove carbon from CO2, that the plant absorbs from the atmosphere, and combines the carbon with hydrogen and oxygen taken from water drawn from the plants roots, creating carbohydrate molecular chains to grow the plant's cells, and releasing free oxygen molecules back to the outside air. In this way, plants and trees create the oxygen animals and humans need to breath.

The name carbohydrate means "watered carbon" or carbon with attached water molecules.

Carbohydrates take the form of natural sugars, starches, cellulose and hemicellulose. The natural sugars are called simple carbohydrates, or simple sugars (monosaccharides). The starches, cellulose and hemicellulose are called complex carbohydrates, also known as complex sugars (polysaccharides).

Because of modern technology, all biomass (plants and trees) are a source of sugar and energy. Modern technology can break down the long molecular chains that form the complex carbohydrates within the plants and free the sugar molecules for conversion to usable forms of energy such as renewable ethanol.

Picture in your mind's eye the trees and plants that cover the United States. Imagine how vast this is. The energy locked inside the sugar molecules created by the huge amount of new plant growth each year within the U.S. is far more than the energy contained within the crude oil the U.S. imports each year.



With Cellulosic Ethanol, There is No Food vs. Fuel Debate

Bruce Dale
Dr. Bruce Dale
Ethanol made from cellulosic materials, rather than corn grain, renders the food vs. fuel debate moot, according to research by Michigan State University ethanol expert.

As more and more corn grain is diverted to make ethanol, some groups have become concerned about food shortages. Dr. Bruce Dale, Michigan Agricultural Experiment Station (MAES) chemical engineering and materials science researcher, has used life cycle analysis tools, which include agricultural data and computer modeling, to study the sustainability of producing biofuels — fuels such as ethanol and biodiesel that are made from renewable resources.

"We grow animal feed, not human food in the United States," Dale said. "We could feed the country's population with 25 million acres of cropland, and we currently have 500 million acres. Most of our agricultural land is being used to grow animal feed. It's a lot simpler to integrate animal feed production into cellulosic ethanol production than it is to integrate human food production. With cellulosic ethanol, the 'food vs. fuel' debate goes away."

Dale, who also serves as associate director of the MSU Office of Biobased Technologies, presented his findings March 27, 2007 at the American Chemical Society annual meeting in Chicago

Cellulosic ethanol is made from the stems, leaves, stalks and trunks of plants, none of which is used for human food production. Dale, who has studied ethanol for more than 30 years, said that as the country moves toward large-scale cellulosic ethanol production, the yield of so-called energy crops—grasses and woody materials grown for their energy content—also will dramatically increase.

"This will reduce pressure on our land resources," Dale said. "We'll be able to get more raw material out of one acre of land."

Dale also pointed out that many of these energy crops will be grown on land that isn't prime agricultural acreage, but rather on marginal land that isn't growing a commercial crop right now.

"The evidence indicates that large-scale biofuel production will increase, not decrease, world food supplies by making animal feed production much more efficient," Dale said.

Sustainability Analyses of the Biobased Economy The biobased economy will grow rapidly during the 21st century. A combination of low cost plant raw materials and gradually improving biorefinery process technologies for converting these raw materials into a variety of fuels, chemicals, materials, foods and feeds will drive the adoption of the biobased economy. The biological sciences will have a particularly powerful impact on both the raw materials and the processing technologies underlying the biobased economy... Our sustainability analysis efforts are intended to outline how this new industry can achieve both environmental and economic sustainability. For perhaps the first time, humanity can design and develop a new industry, the biorefining industry, to achieve both economic and environmental goals. —Bruce E. Dale


     One persistent myth about biomass is that it takes more energy to produce fuels from biomass than the fuels themselves contain. In other words, that it is a net energy loser. In fact, current ethanol production uses corn, one of the most energy-intensive crops, and then uses just the kernels from the corn plant, and not even the entire kernel. Even so, this process yields 50 percent more energy than it takes to make the ethanol, so it is a net gainer.
     Nonetheless, we could do much better. By making ethanol from energy crops, we could obtain between four and five times the energy that we put in, and by making electricity we could get perhaps 10 times or more. In the future, to make a truly sustainable biomass energy system, we would have to replace fossil fuels with biomass or other renewable fuels to plant and harvest the crops.
     Another important consideration with biomass energy systems is that biomass contains less energy per pound than fossil fuels. This means that raw biomass typically can't be cost-effectively shipped more than about 50 miles before it is converted into fuel or energy. It also means that biomass energy systems are likely to be smaller than their fossil fuel counterparts, because it is hard to gather and process more than this quantity of fuel in one place. This has the advantage that local, rural communities -- and perhaps even individual farms -- will be able to design energy systems that are self-sufficient, sustainable, and perfectly adapted to their own needs.

Union of Concerned Scientists

     Relief from soaring prices at the gas pump could come in the form of corncobs, cornstalks, switchgrass and other types of biomass, according to a joint feasibility study for the departments of Agriculture and Energy.
     The recently completed Oak Ridge National Laboratory report outlines a national strategy in which 1 billion dry tons of biomass - any organic matter that is available on a renewable or recurring basis - would displace 30 percent of the nation's petroleum consumption for transportation.
     "One of the main points of the report is that the United States can produce nearly 1 billion dry tons of biomass annually from agricultural lands and still continue to meet food, feed and export demands,"
said Robin Graham, leader for Ecosystem and Plant Sciences in ORNL's Environmental Sciences Division.
     Current production of ethanol is about 3.4 billion gallons per year, but that total could reach 80 billion gallons or more under the scenario outlined in this report. Such an increase in ethanol production would see transportation fuels from biomass increase from 0.5 percent of U.S. consumption in 2001 to 4 percent in 2010, 10 percent in 2020 and 20 percent in 2030. In fact, depending on several factors, biomass could supply 15 percent of the nation's energy by 2030.
Growth in biomass could put U.S. on road to energy independence


Ethanol and Net Energy

There is much discussion, or argument, about Ethanol: Does it take more energy to make it than you can get back from it?

The argument focuses on the energy consumed by the tractors and the farm equipment, the trucks that transport the ethanol to market, and the fertilizer that is made from fossil fuels, as well as the amount of energy required to extract the sugar from corn starch (or cellulosic biomass) and convert it to ethanol.

Bruce Dale, Professor of Chemical Engineering at Michigan State University (MSU) provides some very important information about “Net Energy”.

Professor Dale tells us: “Net energy analysis is fundamentally wrong: it assumes that all BTU are equivalent. This is obviously untrue; otherwise, we would not pay over ten times as much for electrical energy derived from coal as we do for the energy in the coal itself. All energy conversion systems lose some quantity of energy in order to increase energy quality. Gasoline from petroleum actually has a poorer net energy than ethanol from corn. The MOST RELEVANT measure of energy efficiency for biofuels is the liquid fuel produced per unit of PETROLEUM CONSUMED. Ethanol production systems generate OVER 20 TIMES as much liquid fuel per unit of petroleum consumed as is generated by converting that petroleum to gasoline and diesel instead.”

Do we have enough land? Professor Dale gives us the answer: “The range of opinion on this subject varies enormously. A recent USDA-DOE study indicates that we can sustainably produce about 1.3 billion tons per year of cellulosic biomass, sufficient to produce at least 100 BILLION gallons/year of ethanol. I believe this estimate is conservative because: 1) we have at least 800 million acres suitable for energy crops, 2) we have devoted very little attention to increasing energy crop yields, 3) we have not explored the opportunities for integrating food/feed production with energy crops, and 4) biomass conversion technology is very far from mature. Given proper emphasis to increasing energy crop yields, maturing biomass conversion technology and integrating food/feed production with energy crops, it should be POSSIBLE TO PRODUCE SEVERAL HUNDRED BILLION GALLONS PER YEAR OF ETHANOL and other liquid fuels while simultaneously increasing food/feed supplies. We will not choose between food or fuel; we will produce food and fuel.”

Economic Viability? Professor Dale responds: “The United States has a serious problem. In the words of President Bush, we’re ‘addicted to oil.’ Our national and state economies are absolutely dependent on liquid fuels. The United States currently uses more than 140 billion gallons of gasoline and almost 40 billion gallons of diesel fuel annually. More than 60 percent of the petroleum we use is imported, and the percentage is rising. At $20 per barrel, oil is still cheaper to refine than biofuels are,” Dale explained. “But when oil costs $40 a barrel, biofuels are very competitive. At current corn prices, corn ethanol is competitive with gasoline when petroleum is about $45/barrel. When cellulosic biomass conversion technology is mature, we should be able to produce hundreds of billions of gallons of liquid biofuels at much less than $1 per gallon (energy equivalent basis) and be competitive with petroleum at about $25 per barrel. Hence it is critical that we do both the fundamental research and technology deployment at scale required to rapidly develop mature biomass conversion technology.”
Everything Biomass-Dale Research Group —The Biomass Conversion Research Laboratory at Michigan State University.

Net Energy Basics: Rebutting Some Ethanol Myths —Debunking Pimentel and Patzek Studies   size: 200 Kb - 10 pages

Thinking Clearly about Biofuels: Ending the Irrelevant “Net Energy” Controversy    size: 19 Kb - 2 pages
— By Bruce E. Dale, Ph. D. Professor of Chemical Engineering, Michigan State University, February 20, 2007

MIT ethanol analysis confirms benefits of biofuels

Ethanol Fuel More Advantageous Than Thought

Ethanol versus Gasoline —The net energy yield of corn ethanol


Switchgrass is a promising energy crop

tall switchgrass
A one-acre plot of switchgrass can grow the energy equivalent of about 2-6 tons of coal per year. (Photo credits: Warren Gretz, DOE/NREL)

The American prairie—tens of millions of acres—was once covered with tall fast-growing native grasses that fed millions of bison. Switchgrass is one of America's natural prairie grasses.

Switchgrass grows fast, capturing solar energy and turning it into chemical energy in the form of cellulose that can be harvested and converted to sugar.

Switchgrass reaches deep into the soil for water, and uses the water it finds very efficiently. The plant can thrive in climates and growing conditions spanning much of the nation.

Switchgrass can be cut and baled with standard farming equipment.

Many farmers are already experienced at raising switchgrass for forage or to protect soil from erosion. Switchgrass also restores vital organic nutrients to farmed-out soils.

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) believes that biofuels—made from crops of native grasses, such as fast- growing switchgrass—could reduce the nation's dependence on foreign oil, curb emissions of the "greenhouse gas" carbon dioxide, and strengthen America's farm economy. The Biofuels Feedstock Development Program (BFDP) at DOE's Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), has assembled a team of scientists ranging from economists and energy analysts to plant physiologists and geneticists to lay the groundwork for this new source of renewable energy. Included are researchers at universities, other national laboratories, and agricultural research stations around the nation. Their goal, according to ORNL physiologist Sandy McLaughlin, who leads the switchgrass research effort, is nothing short of building the foundation for a biofuels industry that will make and market ethanol and other biofuels from switchgrass and at prices competitive with fossil fuels such as gasoline and diesel.

Test plots of switchgrass at Auburn University have produced up to 15 tons of dry biomass per acre, and five-year yields average 11.5 tons—enough to make 1,150 gallons of ethanol per acre each year.

Scientists determine farm costs of producing switchgrass for ethanol (With the total farm costs of growing switchgrass known, scientists have estimated the cost of producing cellulosic ethanol from switchgrass will be about $0.55 to $0.62 per gallon)  April 11, 2008

First, a distinction: switchgrass and your suburban lawn grasses—bluegrass and zoysia grass—are about as similar as a shopping-mall ficus and an old-growth redwood. Switchgrass is big and it's tough—after a good growing season, it can stand 10 feet high, with stems as thick and strong as hardwood pencils.

Switchgrass is harvested using conventional farm equipment.

But what makes switchgrass bad for barefoot lawns makes it ideal for energy crops: It grows fast, capturing lots of solar energy and turning it into lots of chemical energy— cellulose—that can be liquified, gasified, or burned directly. It also reaches deep into the soil for water, and uses the water it finds very efficiently.

And because it spent millions of years evolving to thrive in climates and growing conditions spanning much of the nation, switchgrass is remarkably adaptable.

Now, to make switchgrass even more promising, researchers across the country are working to boost switchgrass hardiness and yields, adapt varieties to a wide range of growing conditions, and reduce the need for nitrogen and other chemical fertilizers. By "fingerprinting" the DNA and physiological characteristics of numerous varieties, the researchers are steadily identifying and breeding varieties of switchgrass that show great promise for the future.

Many farmers already grow switchgrass, either as forage for livestock or as a ground cover, to control erosion. Cultivating switchgrass as an energy crop instead would require only minor changes in how it's managed and when it's harvested. Switchgrass can be cut and baled with conventional mowers and balers. And it's a hardy, adaptable perennial, so once it's established in a field, it can be harvested as a cash crop, either annually or semiannually, for 10 years or more before replanting is needed. And because it has multiple uses—as an ethanol feedstock, as forage, as ground cover—a farmer who plants switchgrass can be confident knowing that a switchgrass crop will be put to good use.

Biofuels from Switchgrass: Greener Energy Pastures (Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Bioenergy Feedstock Development Program)


Research farms have demonstrated that switchgrass farming can yield about 1,000 gallons of ethanol per acre each year:

  • One thousand acres of switchgrass would yield about one million gallons of ethanol per year.
  • One million acres of switchgrass would yield about one billion gallons of ethanol annually.
  • One hundred million acres of switchgrass could produce about one hundred billion gallons of ethanol every year.

The deep Switchgrass root system could store tons of atmospheric carbon - removing the cause of global warming.
“Switchgrass could have a lot to do with carbon sequestration storage potential and for overall improvement of soil quality as well,” says Mark Liebig, a soil scientist at USDA's Agricultural Research Service laboratory in Mandan.
Researchers unlocking switchgrass secrets.

If Renewable Fertilizer is used in place of chemical fertilizer made from fossil fuels, then the energy input for switchgrass farming would also be from renewable domestic sources of energy, thereby eliminating one of the concerns about ethanol’s energy balance.

Native American Switchgrass


The state of South Dakota could produce enough ethanol from native prairie grasses to be the third largest energy exporter after Saudi Arabia and Iran.

Farmers can make more money growing ethanol feedstock biomass than corn and soybeans.



Waste Not Want Not

BlueFire Ethanol, Inc. is a cellulose-to-ethanol company that has successfully demonstrated production of ethanol from urban trash (post-sorted MSW), rice and wheat straws, wood waste and other agricultural residues.

Agricultural farming of energy crops consumes energy for planting, harvesting and fertilizer, etc. But what about biomass waste? How much biomass waste is dumped into public landfills each year, or burned? What about woodchip waste from paper and lumber mills? What about straw and waste fiber left over after a harvest?

What if these and other sources of waste carbohydrates could be turned into sugar and used for energy? If a sugar extraction facility was located at every public landfill, or other convenient place where people could take their yard waste, or farm waste, and the material was free of cost to the extraction facility, how much would it then cost to extract the sugar?

Imagine the huge amount of lawn cuttings, leaves and landscape trimmings taken from homes, businesses, golf courses and public areas around the country and hauled off to landfills. Take a few minutes and make a list of all the plant and wood biomass and other organic material that is disposed of every year in every city, town and community within the United States. Why not give this stuff to a local sugar extraction facility and let them convert it to sugar to make renewable fuels?


Cellulosic ethanol companies:
www.iogen.ca
www.coskata.com
www.bluefireethanol.com

Ethanol Equipment and Engineers:
www.beienginc.com
www.brelsfordenginc.us

U.S. Patent 6,660,506
Ethanol Production with Dilute Acid Hydrolysis Using Partially Dried Lignocellulosics
—A process of converting lignocellulosic biomass to ethanol, comprising hydrolyzing lignocellulosic materials by subjecting dried lignocellulosic material in a reactor to a catalyst comprised of a dilute solution of a strong acid and a metal salt to lower the activation energy (i.e., the temperature) of cellulose hydrolysis and ultimately obtain higher sugar yields.
—Interested in this Technology? NREL is looking for an organization to develop and commercialize this innovative technology.
Please contact Richard Bolin at (303) 275-3028 for licensing.

Biomass Gasification:
www.brienergy.com —The entire process from gasification to distillation requires approximately seven minutes. This is a significant advantage over current processes that require 36 to 48 hours.

Anaerobic Thermal Conversion:
www.RangeFuels.com —Our focus is on plant matter (or biomass), which cannot be used for food and currently has no useful life. Humble items deemed waste products by the agriculture industry – such as corn stover (stalks that remain after the corn has been harvested), hog manure, municipal garbage, sawdust, paper pulp, and more – can be converted into cellulosic ethanol.

Range Fuels' machine makes cellulosic ethanol through anaerobic thermal conversion rather than through fermentation or acid hydrolysis. It does not need organisms or enzymes to do its work. Biomass is heated in an oxygen-free environment to produce carbon monoxide and hydrogen….The carbon monoxide and hydrogen are then reconstituted into various alcohols – like ethanol. Better still, fermentation and acid hydrolysis can take days to occur, but thermal conversion breaks down organic matter and converts it to ethanol in minutes.

And here’s the really exciting part: Because all organic matter contains carbon, Range Fuels can make ethanol out of cellulose or any form of organic matter. This means the usual suspects such as corn, switchgrass, sugarcane, and miscanthus but also any waste product such as wood chips, paper pulp, cow manure, and even human waste

Range Fuels can produce more ethanol for a given amount of energy expended than is possible with any other competing process. This key difference is a result of our ability to convert all – not just some – of the biomass used, along with our modular facilities, which bring the conversion process right to the biomass source. Our approach is highly flexible, efficient, cost effective, and scalable.


Cellulosic ethanol plant to open next yearThe race is on to try to open the first large-scale cellulosic ethanol plant. Several companies are pursuing techniques to make ethanol out of plants other than corn, which is how ethanol is made today in the United States. Cellulosic ethanol processes convert plant wastes, like wood chips and grasses, to ethanol. Range Fuels has announced that the company was awarded a construction permit from the state of Georgia to build the first commercial-scale cellulosic ethanol plant in the United States. Ground breaking will take place this summer in Treutlen County, Georgia for a 100-million-gallon-per-year cellulosic ethanol plant that will use wood waste from Georgia’s forests as its feedstock. Phase 1 of the plant is scheduled to complete construction in 2008 with a production capacity of 20 million gallons a year.

Exciting new research:
Ammonia Fiber Explosion (AFEX) for Pretreatment of Switchgrass
     Ammonia Fiber Explosion (AFEX) process has been used to treat switchgrass, a native prairie grass having potential for ethanol production. The AFEX process treats lignocellulosic biomass with high-pressure liquid ammonia and then explosively releases the pressure. The combined chemical effects (cellulose decrystallization and hemicelluloses prehydrolysis) and physical effect (increased accessible surface area) enhance the susceptibility of lignocellulosic biomass to enzymatic hydrolysis. Optimizing the process conditions and parameters greatly improves the efficiency of the pretreatment. Three different operational variables including: ammonia loading, moisture content of biomass and temperature were experimented with over different ranges to evaluate their effects on the AFEX treatment of switchgrass. The treated switchgrass samples were evaluated by enzymatic hydrolysis and simultaneous saccharification and fermentation (SSF) for the fermentable sugar content and eventual ethanol yield. All AFEX process variables studied affected the effectiveness of the treatment on switchgrass.
     The optimal treatment conditions for switchgrass were found to be near 100 ° C –110 ° C; 1.25:1 kg of ammonia: kg of dry swtchgrass and 100% moisture content (dry weight basis [dwb]); at a residence time (holding at target temperature) of 5 minutes. The ethanol yield of the AFEX-treated sample was twice that of an untreated sample.
Process for treating cellulosic materials —United States Patent #6,106,888

Liquid Alkane Production (Aqueous Phase Reforming)
The main obstacle to the more widespread utilization of low-cost biomass resources is the absence of low-cost processing technologies. The objective of our research is to develop highly efficient and low-cost catalytic processes, catalytic materials and reactors for biomass conversion to fuels and chemicals utilizing aqueous-phase processing.

Plastics from SugarNew catalysts convert glucose into a valuable chemical feedstock.  Researchers at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) have come up with an easy, inexpensive method to directly convert glucose into a chemical that can be used to make polyester and other plastics, industrial chemicals, and even fuels.

DuPont and BP to introduce 'biobutanol'BP and DuPont announced a breakthrough in biofuels, saying they were close to producing a plant-derived fuel more advanced than ethanol. The new product, biobutanol, produces more energy than ethanol and can be used in vehicles more easily without modification to engines.

Butanol is an oxygenate which can replace gasolineButanol can be blended in any percentage with gasoline seamlessly without loss of performance. Butanol can be used in Biodiesel applications. Butanol can be made from anything that grows on the planet not just corn.

BP's Bet on Butanol Butanol, like ethanol, can be made from corn starch or sugar beets, its properties are a lot more like gasoline than like ethanol. That means it can be shipped in existing gasoline pipelines. And it contains more energy than ethanol does, which will improve mileage per gallon. Butanol is not a competitor to ethanol. An ethanol plant can evolve into a butanol plant. Butanol can be mixed with ethanol.


The Biofuels for Energy Security and Transportation Act of 2007
BINGAMAN, DOMENICI INTRODUCE LEGISLATION TO DRAMATICALLY EXPAND RENEWABLE FUEL SOURCES
Senators Seek to Spur Usage and Development of Biofuels —March 27th, 2007

Responding to calls for reduced dependence on foreign sources of oil and cleaner sources of energy, U.S. Senators Jeff Bingaman and Pete Domenici today unveiled legislation that will dramatically expand the use of renewable fuels in America over the next two decades.

Bingaman and Domenici, who lead the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, today announced that they have introduced the Biofuels for Energy Security and Transportation Act of 2007 (S.987), which builds on the Energy Policy Act to create new renewable fuel standards and promote their usage and development.

The legislation will require America’s fuel supply to contain higher amounts of renewable fuels, from 8.5 billion gallons in 2008 to 36 billion gallons in 2022. From 2016 to 2022, the bill requires an increasing portion of the renewable fuels consumed to be advanced biofuels, such as cellulosic ethanol, biobutanol and other fuels derived from unconventional biomass feedstocks.

The bill supports the development of advanced biofuels by increasing Department of Energy funding for bioenergy research and development by 50 percent over fiscal years 2007 to 2009. This increased funding will allow for the establishment of seven bioenergy research centers throughout the country and will also establish grants for research in renewable technologies in states with low rates of ethanol production.

“One of the biggest energy policy questions facing us is how to diversify energy supplies for transportation,” Bingaman said. “As our first committee hearing of the year demonstrated, the United States faces significant energy security challenges stemming from our dependence on foreign oil. Biologically derived fuels will have an important role to play in promoting our energy security.”

“I’m pleased to be introducing this landmark legislation which will dramatically expand the use of renewable fuels in America. The time has come for clean burning biofuels like ethanol to join the mainstream. By doing so, we will reduce our dependence on foreign oil and secure our nation’s energy future. I look forward to quickly moving this legislation through the Energy Committee and bringing it to the floor,” Domenici said.

S.987 promotes investment in renewable fuel infrastructure by authorizing federal loan guarantees for advanced renewable fuel facilities, as well as grants to states to establish renewable fuels corridors and means to transport biomass to biorefineries.

Said Bingaman, “Different regions of the United States have diverse fuel needs and a mixture of biomass resources. These centers will help to tailor our future programs to those regional needs and resource opportunities.”

“One of the main goals of this bill is to spur development of advanced biofuels, like celluosic ethanol. This legislation sets an ambitious standard for advanced biofuels, combined with incentives to spur timely production. Developing this technology is an important part of our overall energy future,” Domenici said.


Biofuels: DOE Lacks a Strategic Approach to Coordinate Increasing Production with Infrastructure Development and Vehicle Needs
Reported by the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO):
The U.S. transportation sector is almost entirely dependent on oil, a condition that poses significant economic and environmental risks. Biofuels, such as ethanol and biodiesel, have the potential to displace oil use in transportation fuel. GAO was asked to describe the status of and impediments to expanding biofuel production, distribution infrastructure, and compatible vehicles as well as federal policy options to overcome the impediments. GAO was also asked to assess the extent to which the Department of Energy (DOE) has developed a strategic approach to coordinate the expansion of biofuel production, infrastructure, and ...


Links:
Ethanol
Butanol
Alcohol fuel
Ethanol Fuel
Ethyl alcohol
ABC's of Biofuels
Ethanol Research
Cellulosic Ethanol
Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum)
Biomass Technologies of the Future
Ethanol: Frequently Asked Questions
Biomass Sugar Extraction Technology
Biomass information at Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Understanding Biomass as a Source of Sugars and Energy
Ethanol Can Contribute to Energy and Environmental Goals size: 175 Kb - 3 pages
Biomass as Feedstock for a Bioenergy and Bioproducts Industry size: 5.5 Mb - 78 pages
The BioEnergy Home Page (University of Wisconsin Forest Products Laboratory)

Web sites:
DOE E85 Toolkit
www.Ethanol.org
www.e85fuel.com
www.IdahoEthanol.com
Ethanol Producer Magazine
www.everythingbiomass.org
www.bioenergyproducers.org
www.EthanolAcrossAmerica.net
Renewable Fuels Association (RFA)
USDA Biofuels Research Information
www.epa.gov/smartway/growandgo/
www.cleanairchoice.org/outdoor/E85background.asp
Advanced biofuels —Everyone seems to think that ethanol is a good way to make cars greener. Everyone is wrong.
www.ls9.com —the Renewable Petroleum Company™
www.codexis.com
www.amyrisbiotech.com
www.syntheticgenomics.com
DuPont and BP—creating the next generation of biofuels

Great Articles:
My Big Biofuels Bet —The road to energy independence starts in a cornfield in Nebraska.
Money Follows Media — Renowned venture capitalist Vinod Khosla bets on bioproducts.
The Holy & the Hawks
Cornfields vs. Oil Fields
Biorefinery Breakthrough
Ethanol: Myths and realities
The history of ethyl alcohol fuel
DuPont builds future on biotech
Will Cellulosic Ethanol Take Off? —Fuel from grass and wood chips could be big in the next 10 years
Is an ethanol revolution coming? —By Stone Phillips, Anchor - Dateline NBC (May 11, 2006)
New Fuel Source Grows on the Prairie
Energy talk explores biomass potential
Unlikely Allies Fight U.S. Oil Dependence
A Better Way to Get From Here to There
Bugs Could Be Key to Kicking Oil Addiction
How far can you drive on a bushel of corn?
USDA: ethanol output could double by 2010
Alternative fuels see a renaissance in the U.S.
Ethanol demand brings big profit for producers
How to Beat the High Cost of Gasoline. Forever! —Stop dreaming about hydrogen. Ethanol is the answer to the energy dilemma. It's clean and green and runs in today's cars. And in a generation, it could replace gas. FORTUNE Magazine January 24, 2006
Creating Cellulosic Ethanol: Spinning Straw into Fuel
Scientists Study Feasibility of Switchgrass for Energy Production
BIOFUEL AS AN OIL ALTERNATIVE — PBS Newshour segment on biofuels, April 13, 2006
Greener and cheaper, ethanol could fuel rural America — and won't feed Mideast terrorism
—By Stone Phillips, Anchor - Dateline NBC (This report aired Dateline Sunday, May 7, 2006)
The Ethanol Solution — Could Corn-Based Fuel Help End America's Dependence On Imported Oil?
Wal-Mart considers supplying gas stations at its stores and Sam's Clubs with E-85 fuel  —E-85 is a blend of 85 percent ethanol and 15 percent gasoline.
Lawmakers Make Renewable Fuels Availability, Energy Efficiency a Top Priority for New Congress —January 8, 2007
Not so fast with ethanol, other biofuels —Unchecked growth could see new problems offset climate gains
Advanced biofuels —Everyone seems to think that ethanol is a good way to make cars greener. Everyone is wrong.

Cars and Trucks that run on ethanol:
GM E85 vehicles
Ford E85 vehicles
Ford's Fleet Flex-Fuel (E85) Vehicles
The National Ethanol Vehicle Coalition Guide
Alternative Fuel and Advanced Technology Vehicle Guide

Recommended reading:
Our Energy Challenge by Nobel Laureate Dr. Richard E. Smalley
Detoxing Our Oil Addiction By Bruce E. Dale, Professor of Chemical Engineering
size: 258 Kb - 4 pages
Ethanol and Energy Independence How to get 85 miles per gallon in a Ford F150 Pickup

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Copyright © 2003-2008 Ron Bengtson. Boise, Idaho USA
Ron Bengtson can be reached via e-mail Ron@AmericanEnergyIndependence.com