Another Blow to Ethanol: Biolectricity Is Greener

<http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1896813,00.html>http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1896813,00.html
 

By Bryan Walsh Friday, May. 08, 2009
environment bioelectricity

Chip Somodevilla / Getty

Once touted as an environmental and economic 
cure-all, corn ethanol has had a rough year. The 
collapse in grain and oil prices, preceded by 
overinvestment in refineries over the past few 
years, badly hurt ethanol producers. Meanwhile, 
environmentalists have steadily chipped away at 
ethanol's green credentials. Far from being 
better for the planet than gasoline, many 
scientists now argue that ethanol actually has a 
sizable carbon footprint, because when farmers in 
the U.S. use their land to grow corn for fuel 
rather than food, farmers in the developing world 
end up cutting down more forests to pick up the slack.


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Now a new study makes the case that ethanol isn't 
even the greenest way to use biomass as a fuel. 
In an article published in the May 8 issue of 
Science, researchers from the Carnegie 
Institution, Stanford University and the 
University of California-Merced (UCM) used 
life-cycle analysis ­ which takes into account 
the entire impact of a biofuel from field to 
vehicle ­ to show that converting biomass to 
electricity (to power electric cars) produces 80% 
more transportation energy than turning it into 
ethanol (to power a flex-fuel car), with a carbon 
footprint that is half as small. (Bioelectricity 
is created the same way fossil fuel–generated 
electricity is: Biomass is usually burned to 
generate heat, turning water to steam and driving an electrical generator.)

For every acre of land planted with an energy 
crop ­ like corn or switchgrass ­ turning that 
biomass into electricity gives you more "miles 
per acre" than converting it to liquid ethanol, 
which is how biomass is used today, according to 
the study. A small SUV powered by bioelectricity 
could travel nearly 14,000 miles on the energy 
produced by an acre of switchgrass, while an 
ethanol-powered SUV could go only 9,000 miles. 
"It looks like converting biomass to electricity, 
instead of using it to make ethanol, makes the 
most sense for both transport and the climate," 
says Elliott Campbell, an environmental engineer 
at UCM and lead author of the study.

On carbon, too, bioelectricity was a winner. On 
average, the carbon offset from using 
bioelectricity is 100% bigger than the offset for 
using ethanol. (Even though biomass releases 
carbon when it is burned, just like oil, when new 
plants are growing they absorb carbon dioxide 
from the atmosphere, reducing the overall carbon 
footprint.) "It's simply the case that 
bioelectricity is just a lot more efficient than 
using ethanol, in most ways," says Campbell.

But the Science study doesn't take into account 
other impacts that bioelectricity might have 
compared to ethanol, like water consumption or 
air pollution. Growing biomass, even on marginal 
agricultural land, does require water, as does 
making electricity. There's a bigger problem ­ 
electric cars still remain few and far between, 
while there are already millions of U.S. vehicles 
on the road that can run on an ethanol blend. 
Creating the sort of infrastructure that can 
support electric cars on a mass scale won't be 
cheap, and it's not a cost that Campbell and his 
colleagues included in their study. "There's a 
lot more we have to look at on biomass," says Campbell.

Still, the ethanol industry's days may be 
numbered. Ethanol wouldn't exist but for 
government subsidies, yet in the 2007 energy 
bill, Congress ruled that to be eligible for 
support, corn ethanol has to emit 20% less 
climate pollution than gasoline. If you include 
the indirect land-use effects of ethanol ­ the 
increase in deforestation caused by using land to 
grow fuel ­ it's unlikely to hit that target. On 
May 5, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 
released a proposed rule that would take into 
account indirect land-use effects when judging 
just how green corn ethanol is. Unless the rule 
is changed ­ the powerful corn lobby will be 
working hard to make that happen ­ corn ethanol 
might not meet Congress's requirements, which 
could spell the end of subsidies. So, if there's 
any future in biofuels, it looks like it might have to be bioelectric.

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