Limits to biofuels

Biofuel production is dependent upon agriculture and forestry systems, and the expectations of future biofuel potential are high. A study of the global food production and biofuel production from edible crops implies that biofuel produced from edible parts of crops lead to a global deficit of food....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Johansson S.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2013-06-01
Series:EPJ Web of Conferences
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/20135401014
id doaj-5fb9567fd9df4ac38a2f6c33d92c50a1
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5fb9567fd9df4ac38a2f6c33d92c50a12021-08-02T10:30:17ZengEDP SciencesEPJ Web of Conferences2100-014X2013-06-01540101410.1051/epjconf/20135401014Limits to biofuelsJohansson S.Biofuel production is dependent upon agriculture and forestry systems, and the expectations of future biofuel potential are high. A study of the global food production and biofuel production from edible crops implies that biofuel produced from edible parts of crops lead to a global deficit of food. This is rather well known, which is why there is a strong urge to develop biofuel systems that make use of residues or products from forest to eliminate competition with food production. However, biofuel from agro-residues still depend upon the crop production system, and there are many parameters to deal with in order to investigate the sustainability of biofuel production. There is a theoretical limit to how much biofuel can be achieved globally from agro-residues and this amounts to approximately one third of todays’ use of fossil fuels in the transport sector. In reality this theoretical potential may be eliminated by the energy use in the biomass-conversion technologies and production systems, depending on what type of assessment method is used. By surveying existing studies on biofuel conversion the theoretical limit of biofuels from 2010 years’ agricultural production was found to be either non-existent due to energy consumption in the conversion process, or up to 2–6000TWh (biogas from residues and waste and ethanol from woody biomass) in the more optimistic cases. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/20135401014
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Johansson S.
spellingShingle Johansson S.
Limits to biofuels
EPJ Web of Conferences
author_facet Johansson S.
author_sort Johansson S.
title Limits to biofuels
title_short Limits to biofuels
title_full Limits to biofuels
title_fullStr Limits to biofuels
title_full_unstemmed Limits to biofuels
title_sort limits to biofuels
publisher EDP Sciences
series EPJ Web of Conferences
issn 2100-014X
publishDate 2013-06-01
description Biofuel production is dependent upon agriculture and forestry systems, and the expectations of future biofuel potential are high. A study of the global food production and biofuel production from edible crops implies that biofuel produced from edible parts of crops lead to a global deficit of food. This is rather well known, which is why there is a strong urge to develop biofuel systems that make use of residues or products from forest to eliminate competition with food production. However, biofuel from agro-residues still depend upon the crop production system, and there are many parameters to deal with in order to investigate the sustainability of biofuel production. There is a theoretical limit to how much biofuel can be achieved globally from agro-residues and this amounts to approximately one third of todays’ use of fossil fuels in the transport sector. In reality this theoretical potential may be eliminated by the energy use in the biomass-conversion technologies and production systems, depending on what type of assessment method is used. By surveying existing studies on biofuel conversion the theoretical limit of biofuels from 2010 years’ agricultural production was found to be either non-existent due to energy consumption in the conversion process, or up to 2–6000TWh (biogas from residues and waste and ethanol from woody biomass) in the more optimistic cases.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/20135401014
work_keys_str_mv AT johanssons limitstobiofuels
_version_ 1721233910762831872