And that excessive use of water is a good reason to try marine algae as a 
source for biofuel, and not use land-based crops for biofuel. In Qatar we are 
testing a system to cultivate marine diatoms for that purpose by providing them 
the required silica from the enhanced weathering of olivine, Olaf Schuiling

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] 
On Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: donderdag 11 juni 2015 1:00
To: [email protected]; geoengineering
Subject: RE: [geo] Switching to biofuels could place unsustainable demands on 
water use

<="" td="">



Mark E. Capron, PE
Ventura, California
www.PODenergy.org<http://www.PODenergy.org>



-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [geo] Switching to biofuels could place unsustainable demands
on water use
From: Andrew Lockley <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Date: Tue, June 09, 2015 1:02 am
To: geoengineering 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Poster's note : relevant to BECCS
Switching to biofuels could place unsustainable demands on water use
http://gu.com/p/49896?CMP=Share_AndroidApp_Gmail
could place unsustainable demands on water use
Arjen Y. Hoekstra
Published: 12:07 GMT+01:00 Thu 28 May 2015
11
Decarbonising our economy must go hand in hand with lowering our water 
footprint.
Transition away from fossil fuels is underway, but without assessing demands on 
land and water resources we put the future health of our planet at risk
As the world moves towards renewable sources of energy, it faces an 
accompanying challenge: water scarcity. The intensive water use in the coal, 
oil, gas and nuclear industries is well-documented, but if we want to encourage 
a faster transition to renewables we must also contemplate the water use of the 
alternatives.
Some 40% of UK’s food imports from areas of high water risk
It is a great challenge to limit the drain on land and water resources now the 
transition has taken off. Bioenergy, hydropower, and wind, solar and geothermal 
energy all require substantial amounts of land and water resources. Given 
limitations to the availability of land and water, what energy scenarios are 
feasible in the long run?
With fossil fuels we have learned to worry about energy scarcity as a major 
concern for economic development and national security. In contrast, renewable 
energy seems inexhaustible: incoming solar radiation, for example, is far 
beyond what we need. The fact that renewable energy is available into infinity 
reinforces this idea of limitlessness. This, however, is a misunderstanding: we 
will replace energy scarcity by land and water scarcity.
Biofuels
Bioenergy production in particular requires vast amounts of land and water. 
Besides, with current energy-intensive agricultural practices, net energy 
output is far lower than gross energy production, sometimes even near zero. If 
only 10% of fossil fuels in the global transport sector were replaced by 
bioethanol from relatively efficient crops, global water demand would increase 
by 6-7%.
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The production of biofuels at the rate we are used to consuming fossil fuels 
will require more land and water than sustainably available. Already today we 
have land and water footprints beyond maximum sustainable levels and bioenergy 
increasingly competing with food.
Hydropower and the dam debate
Hydropower, accounting for 16% of the world’s electricity supply, is regarded 
as a clean form of energy. However, we cannot simply increase hydroelectric 
capacity. Dams can heavily impact on riparian ecosystems and societies, and any 
further damming of rivers should be subject to careful consideration.
Will mega dams turn Bhutan's happiness sour?
Building new dams and reservoirs is often difficult because the required land 
is generally already in use for other purposes. For the Three Gorges Dam in 
China, over one million people were displaced. Besides, hydropower can be a 
large water consumer because of the additional evaporation from the reservoir 
created, which affects downstream water availability for other purposes. 
Damming rivers has therefore become a contentious topic.
Solar, wind and geothermal energy
Per unit of energy, the water footprint of bioenergy and hydroelectricity is 
two to three orders of magnitude larger than that of fossil fuels and nuclear. 
The water footprint of photovoltaic (PV) and wind energy is one to two orders 
of magnitude smaller.
Electricity from concentrated solar power has a similar water footprint to 
fossil fuels, while geothermal can be an order of magnitude smaller or even 
less. From a water consumption and scarcity perspective, it matters greatly 
whether we shift from fossil energy to bio and hydro or to solar, wind and 
geothermal energy.
All existing “green” energy scenarios, called “green” because of their 
considerable fractions of renewable energy, are based on considerable growth of 
bio and hydro in the mix, which means that the water footprint of the energy 
sector will grow sky-high if we follow such scenarios. True green scenarios, 
with a declining rather than increasing water footprint, must be primarily 
based on solar, wind and geothermal energy.
The transition to electricity
Solar energy is more efficient than biomass from a land use perspective because 
PV panels and concentrated solar power systems are more efficient at capturing 
incoming solar radiation than photosynthesis, thus generating more energy per 
square metre.
Food companies are unprepared for global water scarcity, says new report
Photosynthesis, however, has the advantage that it results in storable 
bioenergy and can be turned into energy-dense biofuels, while PV results in 
non-storable electricity. Concentrated solar power systems can store energy by 
use of thermal energy storage, but the final product will still be electricity, 
not fuel.
Since substantial growth of bioenergy – beyond using rest streams of organic 
material – is impossible, our economies need to be further electrified: 
electric transport, but also electric heating, at least where surplus heat from 
industrial processes or geothermal energy doesn’t offer a solution. We need to 
find ways to store energy and design electrical grids that can handle the large 
variability of both electricity demand and supply.
Solar and wind power and earth’s heat offer possibilities to achieve energy 
self-sufficiency at much smaller scales than we are used to in our globalised 
fossil fuel economy. The time is ripe for a transition away from fossil fuels. 
Let’s be smart enough to invest in real sustainable solutions, which excludes 
biofuels that have been so much at the centre of attention in government 
policies. Decarbonising our economy can be combined with lowering our water 
footprint, let’s go for that choice.
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