The biofuels industry received a lift this week after a report emerged
showing that fuels made from a type of fast-growing grass can produce over six
times more energy than it takes to manufacture.
The five-year study of 'switchgrass' - a type of tall-growing field grass
that grows in North America - showed that the biofuels made from the crops
resulted in 94 per cent less CO2 emissions than gasoline.
The report, which appeared in the
Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences and was backed by the US Department of
Agriculture, found that just 0.4 hectares of grassland would be needed to
produce 320 barrels of bioethanol - making it far more efficient than corn-based
ethanol.
Co-author of the report, Ken Vogel, said the study was more comprehensive
than those conducted previously, whereby the viability of using grass for fuel
had been brought under question.
"Unlike corn, for which long-term data on grain yield and agricultural inputs
are available, data for switchgrass and other perennial herbaceous plants are
limited and are based largely on small-plot research," he said. "To obtain
relevant field-scale information for switchgrass managed as a biomass energy
crop, we conducted trials using fields on 10 farms in the mid-continental US."
Vogel added: "Improved genetics and agronomics may further enhance energy
sustainability and biofuel yield of switchgrass."
The report will be welcomed by the biofuel industry which has faced
consistent criticism over the past year for failing to deliver promised carbon
emission savings. Numerous studies have argued that far from being carbon
neutral emissions from the production and transport of biofuels as well as the
deforestation of land to make way for fuel crop plantations have resulted in a
significant carbon footprint.
However, advocates of the technology argue that the emergence of second
generation fuel crops such as switchgrass that grow rapidly, boast high yields
and do not require prime agricultural land means the controversial fuel can
ultimately deliver on its promise of major carbon savings.
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