E-Mail Address: Password:
Forgot password?
Click here to register
[login]
Home Articles Stocks Faq About Us Contact Us RSS Feeds February 10, 2012
SEARCH: 
Energy Tribune Jobs
(click here)
Featured Stories
Guest Opinions
Americas
Europe
Russia
Middle East
China
Australasia
East Mediterranean
Africa
Nuclear
Commentary
Print Issues
Fracking Natural Gas
Wyoming CO2 Sequestra...
Israel-Iran: Reaching...
Cheniere to Export LN...
Harry Reid and the Ke...
Germany’s ‘Godfather ...
Venezuela, Colombia L...
All Those Billions, B...
Refinery Closures Lea...
Understanding E = mc2

Industrial Agrofuels Have No Future; Does Food?

Posted on Aug. 23, 2007

The E.U. has set absurdly high targets for agrofuels in its transportation fuel mix. By 2020, the E.U. intends to sate 10 percent of its transportation demand with agrofuels, and it is counting on cellulosic ethanol for most of that new fuel.

It won’t work. Advocates claim that cellulosic ethanol has a positive energy return – that is, the magnitude of energy required for biomass production and conversion is smaller than the magnitude of energy displaced by the ethanol produced. And this claim has been carefully crafted to convey the idea that (a) cellulosic ethanol can replace fossil fuels, and that (b) we should be happy with this new technology, because cellulosic ethanol is an energy-positive fuel and therefore, the more we drive the more we save.

This is clearly not the case. The positive energy return proposition assumes that fossil fuels alone are the limiting factor in the production of an agrofuel, and that all other factors are limitless, and therefore irrelevant. In particular, it is assumed that:
1. The Earth provides us with an infinite and instantaneous supply of pure air, fertile soil, and clean, nutrient-rich water.
2. Nature can purify all the water and air we pollute, and regenerate all the soil we erode or otherwise destroy.
3. Mother Earth can feed 7 to 12 billion people, 1 billion cows and all other non-human consumers of plant and animal matter indefinitely.
4. She can also indefinitely feed 1 billion cars and trucks (620 million produced since 1961).

These assumptions were shown to be false by the early 19th century scientists; therefore, a proposition based on them is also false and must be rejected. Interestingly, many 21st century economists still live on an infinite Earth, truly believing that her resources are limitless.

If the positive energy-return proposition is indefensible, what might replace it? A defensible proposition may read like this:
1. Every large ecosystem on Earth must approach a steady state, characterized by zero net ecosystem productivity (NEP, explained below).
2. When humans are not a natural part of an ecosystem (meaning that they subsist, die, and are recycled in it), large-scale biomass harvesting by humans leads to an eventual breakdown of that ecosystem.
3. Remedial actions (waste cleanup, erosion control, and nutrient applications) become necessary to slow down – but never stop – the ecosystem deterioration.
4. These actions require massive inputs of fossil energy and are utterly unsustainable.

From the energy viewpoint, ecosystems are characterized as follows:
1. The amount of carbon dioxide converted by plant photosynthesis into biomass is called gross primary productivity (GPP).
2. The amount of energy plants and animals eat to live is called respiration.
3. The amount of energy in biomass built in one year by the plants is called net primary productivity (NPP). NPP is equal to GPP minus plant respiration.
4. The amount of energy produced in an ecosystem in one year from animals, plants and decomposers is called net ecosystem productivity (NEP). NEP is equal to NPP minus animal respiration.

It turns out that plants eat roughly half of whatever they sequester and animals eat 95 percent of the rest. On average, therefore, the net productivity of established ecosystems oscillates around zero. Consequently, for agriculture, from which we extract biomass each year, we must put in substantial amounts of fossil energy. (Which we do through large inputs of ammonia fertilizer manufactured via the Haber-Bosch process.)

Why is net ecosystem productivity zero? Why is there no biowaste or surplus production in a large established ecosystem that does not receive subsidies from outside?

The fundamental reason for this law of nature comes from physics. Because of gravity, mass cannot leave the Earth – only some heat can. Therefore, all ecosystems on the planet must recycle all mass efficiently and emit only waste heat. Otherwise, chemical wastes would build in these ecosystems and destroy them. Humans have interrupted most natural cycles, and replaced them with irreversible and perpetually declining linear depletion (mining) processes. For example, fields with pastures and cows naturally recycle 85 percent of what cows eat. Move cows to remote feedlots, and we have a huge fertilizer problem in agriculture and a corresponding problem with toxic manure waste in the feedlots. Agrofuels are products of the incredibly fast and harmful environment-mining processes that are by definition unsustainable.

So how much of the global net primary productivity do we consume? According to NASA, in many parts of Asia (India, China, Indonesia, etc.), most of Europe, the eastern United States, and coastal areas of South Africa, we already use 100 to 200 percent of the local NPP. In big cities this number jumps to 40,000 percent, and on average we command about 60 percent of global NPP.

Europeans are finally realizing this fact. Thus the OECD and some European governments have proposed freezing all agrofuel production. They are also reassessing the best ways to reduce CO2 emissions and uncouple agriculture subsidies from agrofuels. Germany, for example, has introduced the most sophisticated science-based government policy on agrofuels and might freeze their purchase. In contrast, the U.S. remains rooted in the settler mentality of the endless frontier.

Sooner or later, the E.U. and the U.S. will wake up to the grim reality of the agrofuel delusion. Let’s hope it doesn’t take too long.

Stumble It!
Share on Facebook   Share on Twitter
Back Home   Back to Top
Related Articles
Germany’s ‘Godfather of Green’ Turns Ske...
By James Delingpole 
Feb. 9 2012, 12:39 EST
B.C. Aims to Sell Cleaner LNG
By Geoffrey Styles 
Feb. 8 2012, 12:40 EST
All Those Billions, Blowing in the Wind
By Marita Noon 
Feb. 6 2012, 11:44 EST
Refinery Closures Lead to Rising Gas Pri...
By Robert Rapier 
Feb. 3 2012, 3:28 EST
In The Head Of U.S. Energy Secretary Chu
By Professor Ferdinand E. Banks 
Feb. 2 2012, 12:41 EST
The Volt: What Happens When Ideology Get...
By Marita Noon 
Feb. 1 2012, 3:04 EST
Ninety Seven Percent Is Not What You Thi...
By Art Horn 
Jan. 31 2012, 1:07 EST
State of the Union: "All Out, All o...
By Geoffrey Styles 
Jan. 30 2012, 1:04 EST
Iran Sanctions
By Andrés Cala 
Jan. 27 2012, 5:30 EST
Time, Newsweek Bury Keystone
By Michael J. Economides & Peter C Glover 
Jan. 26 2012, 11:08 EST
Super Fracking & the Next Shale Gale
By Peter C Glover 
Jan. 24 2012, 11:55 EST
The Falklands and Other Dangerous Disput...
By Steve H. Hanke 
Jan. 23 2012, 12:42 EST
CLOSE
MORE
Should Plastic Bags Be Banned?
By Kate Galbraith 
Feb. 9 2012, 3:46 EST
Deep Discounts Fuel Canadian Oil Flow In...
By Jeffrey Jones 
Feb. 9 2012, 12:06 EST
Oil, Food, Water: Is Everything Past Its...
By Eric Roston 
Feb. 9 2012, 11:14 EST
Energy Spurs A Recovery In Houston
By Kristina Shrevory 
Feb. 8 2012, 3:56 EST
Azeri, Iranian Gas Supply Failure Fuels ...
By Todays Zaman 
Feb. 8 2012, 3:37 EST
America’s Solar PV Market: Growth And U...
By Kirsten Korosec  
Feb. 8 2012, 12:55 EST
Crude Glut In U.S. Suppresses Canadian O...
By Shawn Mccarthy  
Feb. 8 2012, 12:42 EST
Top 5 Largest Shale Deposits Yet To Be F...
By Pierre Bertrand 
Feb. 8 2012, 12:37 EST
Oil Producers ‘Will Meet Demand’
By Times of Oman 
Feb. 8 2012, 12:34 EST
Global Warming Has Stopped?
By Peter Gleick 
Feb. 7 2012, 1:12 EST
Saudis Aren’t Keeping Lid On 100 Dollar ...
By Sharon Epperson 
Feb. 7 2012, 11:42 EST
Fracking Is Not A ‘Fait Accompli’ For 20...
By Mireya Navarro  
Feb. 7 2012, 11:35 EST
CLOSE
MORE
Brazil Delays Nuclear Plans After Japan ...
By Diana Kinch  
Feb. 9 2012, 1:34 EST
Venezuela Approves Joint Venture
By MSN 
Feb. 9 2012, 11:41 EST
Venezuela’s PDVSA to Boost Orinoco Crude...
By Nathan Crooks 
Feb. 8 2012, 12:29 EST
Colorado Sportsmen Back Oil And Gas Disc...
By Denver Post 
Feb. 7 2012, 10:26 EST
NM Regulators Repeal Carbon Cap And Trad...
By CBS News 
Feb. 7 2012, 10:23 EST
Florida State Unveils Natural Gas Car
By Delmershae Walker 
Feb. 6 2012, 12:21 EST
Pemex Seeks To Add Conoco, Shell Subsidi...
By Laurence Iliff 
Feb. 3 2012, 1:55 EST
Petrobras Shuts Fifth Most Productive We...
By Lucia Kassai and Peter Millard  
Feb. 1 2012, 12:41 EST
US Refiners, Union Prepare For Possible ...
By Fox Business News 
Feb. 1 2012, 12:12 EST
Marathon Weighs Pipeline Option
By Gina Chon and Ryan Dezember  
Feb. 1 2012, 11:45 EST
Obama: Meeting US Energy Needs Will Requ...
By EV Wind 
Jan. 31 2012, 2:24 EST
Union Tells US Refinery Workers To Prepa...
By CNBC 
Jan. 30 2012, 5:55 EST
CLOSE
MORE
BG Group To Cut US Shale Gas Drilling
By Fox Business News 
Feb. 9 2012, 12:46 EST
Turkey Turns To Coal And Nuclear Power
By Steel Guru 
Feb. 8 2012, 12:26 EST
World’s Largest Wind Farm Erects First W...
By Jessica Shankleman  
Feb. 7 2012, 11:27 EST
E.U. Rebuffs China’s Challenge To Airlin...
By James Kanter 
Feb. 6 2012, 5:24 EST
Italian Refineries To Shut Down Over Ira...
By Press TV 
Feb. 3 2012, 2:00 EST
Bulgarian Coal Miners Call Off Strike
By Reuters 
Jan. 23 2012, 11:59 EST
Chevron Gas Discovery Boosts LNG Plans
By News 
Jan. 20 2012, 3:08 EST
Ukraine Seeks Compromise With IMF
By James Marson  
Jan. 20 2012, 12:10 EST
Shell Joins Nova Scotia’s Offshore
By Daily Staff Biz 
Jan. 20 2012, 11:29 EST
UAE To Set Up Clean Energy Project In Af...
By Haseeb Haider  
Jan. 18 2012, 4:01 EST
Bulgaria Bans Chevron From Fracking For ...
By Carin Hall 
Jan. 18 2012, 10:49 EST
Norway Awards 60 New Oil Production Lice...
By Kjetil Malkenes Hovland 
Jan. 17 2012, 11:35 EST
CLOSE
MORE
Russia’s Sechin Proposes State Oil Field...
By Fox Business 
Feb. 7 2012, 10:34 EST
Fire At Moscow Nuclear Institute, Russia...
By Alexei Anishchuk 
Feb. 6 2012, 4:33 EST
Rosneft Gets License For Three Oil And G...
By Jake Rudnitsky 
Jan. 31 2012, 12:28 EST
Russia Unveils Ambitious Coal Industry P...
By Svetlana Kalmykova 
Jan. 25 2012, 5:23 EST
Russia Orders Oil Companies To Freeze Ga...
By Fox Business 
Jan. 23 2012, 1:40 EST
3rd Reactor Shut Down In Czech Republic
By Voice of Russia 
Jan. 23 2012, 12:06 EST
Miners Strike In Bulgaria Continues
By Sofia Echo 
Jan. 18 2012, 3:18 EST
Russia Concerned About Iran’s Uranium En...
By CBS News 
Jan. 10 2012, 2:38 EST
Putin Speaks Of Atomic Energy ‘Renaissan...
By Washington Post 
Dec. 12 2011, 3:46 EST
Russia Rejects Iran Oil Ban
By Daniel Fineren 
Dec. 7 2011, 12:15 EST
Floating Nuclear Power Station Helps Bal...
By RT 
Dec. 6 2011, 4:21 EST
Japan And Korea Cooking On Russian Gas
By RT 
Dec. 1 2011, 11:03 EST
CLOSE
MORE
India Increases Iran Oil Imports
By Benoit Faucon FAUCON 
Feb. 8 2012, 12:24 EST
Iraq-Turkey Oil Exports Resume After Bla...
By Times of Oman 
Feb. 7 2012, 10:38 EST
Iran To Start Early Production At Joint ...
By Tehran Times 
Feb. 6 2012, 12:05 EST
Iraq’s Oil Law May Be Pushed Till End Of...
By Kadhim Ajrash and Nayla Razzouk 
Feb. 3 2012, 2:18 EST
Iran Pipeline To Supply Gas By End Of 20...
By Kalbe Ali  
Feb. 1 2012, 1:00 EST
Explosion ‘Rocks Syrian Oil Pipeline’
By Eoin O’Cinneide 
Feb. 1 2012, 12:36 EST
US Lawmakers Take Next Step On New Iran ...
By CNBC 
Jan. 31 2012, 2:35 EST
BP To Start Jordan Gas Exploration Soon
By Mohammad Tayseer 
Jan. 30 2012, 5:20 EST
Abu Dhabi To Tap Nat Gas To Meet Fuel De...
By Steel Guru 
Jan. 27 2012, 4:48 EST
Iran Says It May Cut Off Its Oil Exports...
By Rick Gladstone and J. David Goodman  
Jan. 27 2012, 3:24 EST
Iran To Provide Ethanol Fuel Soon
By ISNA 
Jan. 26 2012, 4:00 EST
India Offers Pak Oil Pipeline
By Pawan Bali  
Jan. 26 2012, 1:10 EST
CLOSE
MORE
Global Oil Demand May Rise 1 Million Bar...
By Bloomberg News 
Feb. 9 2012, 11:44 EST
Pakistan, Qatar Reach Agreement For Impo...
By International Herald Tribune 
Feb. 7 2012, 11:17 EST
Chinese Move On Uranium Explorer
By NZ Herald 
Jan. 25 2012, 5:38 EST
Chinese Company Sinopec Ready To Boost L...
By Neil Wilson 
Jan. 23 2012, 12:46 EST
China’s Shenhua To Open Coal Mine In Aus...
By Reuters 
Jan. 19 2012, 1:43 EST
China To Retrieve More Natural Gas
By Zhou Yan  
Jan. 12 2012, 12:01 EST
Japan Asks Qatar To Ensure Stable LNG
By Mainichi News 
Jan. 10 2012, 12:41 EST
Indonesia To Begin Renegotiating With CN...
By Platts 
Jan. 9 2012, 12:38 EST
CNNC Unit Gets Regulatory Approval For I...
By Economic Times 
Jan. 6 2012, 1:30 EST
PetroChina Buys Full Stake In Oil Sands ...
By AP 
Jan. 4 2012, 11:46 EST
China Buys Russia, Vietnam Oil As Iran S...
By Florence Tan 
Jan. 3 2012, 4:38 EST
Cnooc, Sinopec Vie Over Fracking
By Dinny McMahon 
Dec. 15 2011, 3:54 EST
CLOSE
MORE
Shell Opens Office In Papua New Guinea
By Platts 
Feb. 9 2012, 1:07 EST
April Date Set For Restart Of First Nucl...
By China Post 
Feb. 8 2012, 12:49 EST
BHP To Produce More Shale Oil In U.S.
By James Paton 
Feb. 8 2012, 12:32 EST
North Korean Leader Kim Backs Natural-Ga...
By Henry Meyer 
Feb. 3 2012, 5:04 EST
Japan Protests China’s Possible East Chi...
By Mainichi Daily News 
Feb. 1 2012, 2:00 EST
Japan Finds Water Leaks At Stricken Nucl...
By Reuters 
Jan. 30 2012, 5:52 EST
Rio Tinto Denies Australian Coal Force M...
By Platts 
Jan. 30 2012, 5:45 EST
Asians Resist Notion Of Iran Oil Cuts
By RFERL 
Jan. 30 2012, 4:36 EST
Another Japanese Nuclear Reactor Suspend...
By Times Live 
Jan. 25 2012, 5:27 EST
IAEA Begins Review Of Japan’s Nuclear St...
By Reuters 
Jan. 23 2012, 12:03 EST
Edano: Japan Bracing For Nuclear-Free Su...
By Mitsuru Obe 
Jan. 19 2012, 11:42 EST
Petronas And Shell Sign Oil Recovery Dea...
By Today Online 
Jan. 18 2012, 3:26 EST
CLOSE
MORE
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
CLOSE
MORE
Trafigura In South Sudan Oil Row
By BBC News 
Feb. 8 2012, 12:59 EST
Nigerian Militants Claim Attack On Oil P...
By Emirates 247 
Feb. 6 2012, 12:17 EST
South Sudan, Kenya Sign Agreement To Bui...
By Jared Ferrie 
Jan. 25 2012, 3:56 EST
Explosion Rocks Chevron’s Oil Rig In Bay...
By Osa Okhomina 
Jan. 17 2012, 10:51 EST
Mozambique Protest Blocks Coal Train Lin...
By AFP 
Jan. 13 2012, 12:46 EST
Pengassan To Shut Gas, Oil Production On...
By Taiwo Ogunmola  
Jan. 13 2012, 12:22 EST
Nigeria Oil Union Threatens Oil And Gas ...
By Washington Post 
Jan. 12 2012, 10:58 EST
Shell Restarts Production At Bonga Oil F...
By Sarah Kent 
Jan. 5 2012, 3:05 EST
Violence Erupts In Nigeria Over Petrol P...
By Independent 
Jan. 4 2012, 12:27 EST
Nigeria Gas Price Protest Turns Violent
By CBS  
Jan. 3 2012, 4:49 EST
Shell Offshore Spill Affecting 115 Miles...
By Washington Post 
Dec. 22 2011, 11:46 EST
Petrobras To Expand Pre-Salt Oil Drillin...
By Rodrigo Orihuela 
Dec. 21 2011, 10:44 EST
CLOSE
MORE
US Approves First New Nuclear Plant In A...
By CNBC 
Feb. 9 2012, 2:33 EST
Senators Irked By India’s Iran Ties
By Chidanand Rajghatta 
Feb. 9 2012, 2:07 EST
Russia Says Bushehr Nuclear Powerplant C...
By Trend 
Feb. 8 2012, 12:40 EST
Russia Prepares Privatization Of Nuclear...
By PSKN 
Feb. 7 2012, 11:32 EST
TVA Looks Again At Watts Bar Schedule
By World Nuclear News 
Feb. 6 2012, 4:30 EST
Nuclear Approvals To Be Resumed At Slowe...
By Liu Yiyu 
Feb. 1 2012, 4:48 EST
Unusual Event At U.S. Nuclear Plant Not ...
By People Daily 
Jan. 31 2012, 2:29 EST
S. Korea President Lee To Visit Turkey
By CRI 
Jan. 30 2012, 5:49 EST
Indo-Pak Civil Nuclear Cooperation Possi...
By Daily Times 
Jan. 27 2012, 4:53 EST
Turkey, Iran Calls On Quick Resumption O...
By Xinhua News 
Jan. 20 2012, 5:39 EST
Italian Minister Says Reject Nuclear Pow...
By EurActiv 
Jan. 19 2012, 4:10 EST
Vietnam Joins World In Peaceful Use Of N...
By People Daily 
Jan. 18 2012, 3:43 EST
CLOSE
MORE
Approval Expected for Reactors in Georg...
Feb. 9 2012, 1:00 EST
 
Turkey Turns to Coal and Nuclear Power
Feb. 9 2012, 1:00 EST
 
US to Invest More in Solar Power
Feb. 9 2012, 1:00 EST
 
Freeze Forces Germany to Restart Nuclear...
Feb. 9 2012, 1:00 EST
 
Gasoline Consumption Falls in US
Feb. 9 2012, 1:00 EST
 
Texas’ Electric Capacity Under Scrutiny
Feb. 9 2012, 1:00 EST
 
Dems on Keystone: Only in America
Feb. 9 2012, 1:00 EST
 
How Oil is Propping up Putin
Feb. 9 2012, 1:00 EST
 
India Increases Iran Oil Imports
Feb. 9 2012, 1:00 EST
 
Volt Doesn’t Make ’12 Greenest Cars List
Feb. 8 2012, 12:32 EST
 
Geoscientists Call for Honest Dialogue o...
Feb. 8 2012, 1:00 EST
 
N. American Natural Gas Market Set to Sk...
Feb. 8 2012, 1:00 EST
 
CLOSE
MORE
Approval Expected for Reactors in Ge...
Feb. 9 2012, 1:50 EST
[Read More]
Turkey Turns to Coal and Nuclear Pow...
Feb. 9 2012, 1:49 EST
[Read More]
US to Invest More in Solar Power
Feb. 9 2012, 1:38 EST
[Read More]
Freeze Forces Germany to Restart Nuc...
Feb. 9 2012, 1:37 EST
[Read More]
Gasoline Consumption Falls in US
Feb. 9 2012, 1:32 EST
[Read More]
Texas’ Electric Capacity Under Scrut...
Feb. 9 2012, 1:31 EST
[Read More]
Dems on Keystone: Only in America
Feb. 9 2012, 1:28 EST
[Read More]
How Oil is Propping up Putin
Feb. 9 2012, 1:25 EST
[Read More]
India Increases Iran Oil Imports
Feb. 9 2012, 1:22 EST
[Read More]
[ click here ]
FaceBook  |   Twitter
Home | Subscribe | Articles | Commentary | Stocks | Faq | About Us | Contact Us | Subscribers Only | RSS | All News
Advertise With Us