Renewable Resource: Biomass and Biofuels. What is biomass? Any organic matter that can be used for...

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Renewable Resource: Biomass and Biofuels

Transcript of Renewable Resource: Biomass and Biofuels. What is biomass? Any organic matter that can be used for...

Page 1: Renewable Resource: Biomass and Biofuels. What is biomass? Any organic matter that can be used for fuel. – Wood = #1 biomass fuel used globally. – Crops,

Renewable Resource: Biomass and Biofuels

Page 2: Renewable Resource: Biomass and Biofuels. What is biomass? Any organic matter that can be used for fuel. – Wood = #1 biomass fuel used globally. – Crops,

What is biomass?

• Any organic matter that can be used for fuel.– Wood = #1 biomass fuel used globally.– Crops, seaweed, compost, animal waste

• Biomass get energy from sun through the process of photosynthesis.

Page 3: Renewable Resource: Biomass and Biofuels. What is biomass? Any organic matter that can be used for fuel. – Wood = #1 biomass fuel used globally. – Crops,

US biomass

Page 4: Renewable Resource: Biomass and Biofuels. What is biomass? Any organic matter that can be used for fuel. – Wood = #1 biomass fuel used globally. – Crops,
Page 5: Renewable Resource: Biomass and Biofuels. What is biomass? Any organic matter that can be used for fuel. – Wood = #1 biomass fuel used globally. – Crops,

Biofuels:• Biomass that is altered into the form of

combustible liquids (ethanol or biodiesel)• Reasons behind push for biofuels:– Abundance of biomass• These plants can be grown throughout the world.• Would help us get away from foreign oil imports

– Reduce overall impact on climate change.• Since plants are part of the fast carbon cycle they would

have no net increase in CO2 in atmosphere

– Little impact on current infrastructure

Page 6: Renewable Resource: Biomass and Biofuels. What is biomass? Any organic matter that can be used for fuel. – Wood = #1 biomass fuel used globally. – Crops,

But biofuels aren’t all they are cracked up to be…

• If biofuel production is done on a large scale then a decrease in biodiversity may occur.– Clearing of natural land to create biofuel crops– Soil erosion through large scale clearing– Increase in food prices– Nutrient leaching of soils.

• Increased water use in arid regions• Alternate forms besides corn can be expensive

Page 7: Renewable Resource: Biomass and Biofuels. What is biomass? Any organic matter that can be used for fuel. – Wood = #1 biomass fuel used globally. – Crops,

THE FOLLOWING SLIDES ARE THE PROS AND CONS OF VARIOUS BIOFUELS

Page 8: Renewable Resource: Biomass and Biofuels. What is biomass? Any organic matter that can be used for fuel. – Wood = #1 biomass fuel used globally. – Crops,

Biodiesel

PROS• Decreased the waste stream

from various restaurants because used the waste oil from cooking.

• Easy to convert gas cars to biodiesel cars, and diesel cars would need no alteration.

Cons• Requires government

subsidies to be done on a large scale

• If plants are grown solely for this purpose than large land areas are needed for crops

• Increase fertilizer and pesticide runoff

• Energy needed in the conversion to usable energy

Produced from vegetable oil from soybeans, rapeseeds, sunflowers, oil palms, jatropha shrubs.

Page 9: Renewable Resource: Biomass and Biofuels. What is biomass? Any organic matter that can be used for fuel. – Wood = #1 biomass fuel used globally. – Crops,

Corn ethanol

PROS• Currently being produced

on commercial scale in the US.– E10 = 90% gasoline and 10%

ethanol– E15 = 85% gasoline and 15%

ethanol

CONS• Large government subsidies

to make commercial scale ethanol competitive

• ENERGY INTENSE process to distill ethanol

• Costly• If all corn were used to

create ethanol we would still only create about 18% of required energy.

Conversion of plant starches into simple sugars that can be made into ethanol.

Page 10: Renewable Resource: Biomass and Biofuels. What is biomass? Any organic matter that can be used for fuel. – Wood = #1 biomass fuel used globally. – Crops,
Page 11: Renewable Resource: Biomass and Biofuels. What is biomass? Any organic matter that can be used for fuel. – Wood = #1 biomass fuel used globally. – Crops,

Cellulose

PROS• Uses the “waste” of the

plants and not edible parts• Could utilize 80% of the

waste • Create 30% US

transportation fuel

CONS• Cellulose is a complex sugar

that is extremely tough to break down.

• Only one commercial enzyme available to break down and it is expensive.

• Environmental impact removes nutrients from soil since they aren’t left to decompose.

Uses the waste material of plants (husk, stems, non edible parts)

Page 12: Renewable Resource: Biomass and Biofuels. What is biomass? Any organic matter that can be used for fuel. – Wood = #1 biomass fuel used globally. – Crops,
Page 13: Renewable Resource: Biomass and Biofuels. What is biomass? Any organic matter that can be used for fuel. – Wood = #1 biomass fuel used globally. – Crops,

Algae

PROS• More efficient at

photosynthesis than plants.• Can be grown in almost any

area• Can utilize waste water

CONS• If grown in open surface

water may impact other organisms.

• Require a great deal of nitrogen and phosphorus, which can pollute other water supplies.

• Very energy intense to break the cell walls

Page 14: Renewable Resource: Biomass and Biofuels. What is biomass? Any organic matter that can be used for fuel. – Wood = #1 biomass fuel used globally. – Crops,
Page 15: Renewable Resource: Biomass and Biofuels. What is biomass? Any organic matter that can be used for fuel. – Wood = #1 biomass fuel used globally. – Crops,

SYNTHETIC ORGANISMS

PROS• DNA technology has come a

long way and we can alter genes to work in our favor

CONS• Costly• We don’t know the long

term impact and if other genes can react.

Page 16: Renewable Resource: Biomass and Biofuels. What is biomass? Any organic matter that can be used for fuel. – Wood = #1 biomass fuel used globally. – Crops,
Page 17: Renewable Resource: Biomass and Biofuels. What is biomass? Any organic matter that can be used for fuel. – Wood = #1 biomass fuel used globally. – Crops,

Overall

• Biofuels are not an ideal solution to supplying our transportation energy needs.– Costly and would not be able to compete without

great government subsidies– Energy intense process so become a negative

energy gain.– Quantity and production, there is no way to create

an equivalent amount of energy required for fueling our cars.