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Originally Posted by Nouvellecosse
I think it's greenwashing when people suggest that we can keep doing exactly what we've been doing in terms of energy consumption but just burn ethanol or biodiesel rather than gasoline or fuel oil. It would be a disaster to have a large portion of societal energy come from biofuels. But they're perfect to fill the gap for that remaining small slice of energy needs that are really difficult to electrify. But... that's if it's done right.
Biofuels are potentially carbon neutral, but not necessarily carbon neutral. If say, you clear huge tracts of forest where carbon is sequestered and start growing corn, then not so much. If you inject carbon emissions into the production process by growing the organic material using fossil fuel powered tractors and moving it long distances with fossil fuel powered trucks, etc. then it's no longer carbon neutral. But if it's produced using waste materials or algae and transported in a carbon-free manner, that's different. So whether or not it's actually green is in the details rather than the general concept.
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Waste materials tend to have a low energy density and often need a lot of processing (which can be energy intensive) to get a useable fuel. Then there is the question as to what would have happened to that waste material if it wasn't converted to fuel? We are looking for ways to capture carbon and sequestered it, and here we have waste material with a high carbon content in a relatively stable form that could easily be sequestered instead of burning it and releasing its carbon.
Then there is the question of if it truly is a waste product. I gather Europe encourages the use of wood pellets as a carbon neutral energy source, with the idea that they can be made from scrap sawdust, but the cost of the pellets has risen so much that many of the ones imported are not from waste, but made from trees harvested solely for the purpose of chipping them to make the pellets. Obviously it would have been better for the environment to keep the trees alive.
As for using algae, that process relies on photo synthesis, which means you need to capture sunlight. My question is how much land will be used to grow the algae to make any meaningful amount of fuel, and could that land be put to better use?
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But ultimately any energy strategy needs to look at both the production side and the consumption side. We can't use any production/storage innovations as an excuse for not using energy more responsibly.
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I agree. The key is finding ways to use energy more efficiently and giving people/companies the resources to do so.