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Farm Fields Could Yield Jet Fuel of the Future

By Heather Lammers, NREL
November 9, 2011   |   11 Comments

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11 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 11
November 9, 2011
Agave Americana(Sisal Agave) is rich in cellulose including lignin? Why not it be tapped for biofuel as Mexico is doing.

Dr.A.Jagadeesh Nellore(AP),India
E-mail: anumakonda.jagadeesh@gmail.com
Comment
2 of 11
November 11, 2011
Absolutely classic - yet another human created dillemma - 1 billion people officially in food poverty around the world, responsible family planning a 'dirty word' that must not be mentioned and here we go lets stop growing food to eat and use it to create fuel so we can 'jet' about. Yes perhaps it has to be done to diversify energy supply but why dont people recognise that the long term issue is unlimeted and totally accepted inevitable human population growth (as the TABOO subject) which is going to cause more and more problems unless it is faced responsibly in the same manner as all this investment in alternative 'fuels' etc.
Comment
3 of 11
November 11, 2011
The interesting part about population comment is that the European, Australian and North American countries have the most stable population yet produce the most pollution per head of population. Poor countries with limited resources for education are suffering the droughts as a result of global warming. If you want to reduce the population growth rate these people need a way out of poverty, here in Kenya we have had unstable weather since the el-ninio of the late '90's and two protracted droughts in the past decade the latest being the lowest rainfall in recorded history. Yes we need green fuel and we need it now to reduce the pollution from the developed countries. We also need compensation for the damage done which we can invest in forestry, new systems of agriculture and green energy.

Trevor Kent
Air Aid Ltd
Kenya
Comment
4 of 11
November 11, 2011
So 7 bilion people (and rising rapidly) will all be consuming at the same levels as those in the 'rich' west - I wonder where all that energy and finite resources will come from???
Comment
5 of 11
November 11, 2011
Honeywell has joined SynGest for the production of fossil fuel free ammonia & Biochar from biomass
(SynGest, http://www.syngest.com/ ).

AliphaJet, Inc.(www.AliphaJet.com), This new decarboxylation process for drop-in fuels from Bio-Oil looks to have strong backing and is lead by Jack Oswald of SynGest.

A Virgin Dynamotive & GE Wedding
Richard Branson has the driving will and the airplanes, GE the ecomagination, engines & capital, Dynamotive, who's Bio-oil has been left at the market altar for years, have now joined. Let us hope this Menage a Trois will issue the first born carbon negative air travel.
GE joined the Consortium established to develop bio fuels in Australia. Full
release by GE follows:
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/dynamotive-announces-that-ge-joined-consortium-established-to-develop-australian-biofuel-2011-09-02-94200

Note, that a few months ago GE also backed "CoolPlanet Biofuels", with IIRC, Conoco & Google , to the tune of $8M.
CoolPlanet Biofuels
http://www.coolplanetbiofuels.com/

Big Wig consortiums like Catchlight Energy LLC, a joint venture of Chevron Corp and Weyerhaeuser Co, with Kior , go to show that main streamcorporations are showing much more than just interest in Biochar systems.

What we can do now with "off the shelf" technology, what I proposed at the Commission for Environmen­tal Cooperatio­n (CEC).
The most cited soil scientist in the world, Dr. Rattan Lal at OSU, was impressed by this talk given to the EPA chiefs of North America, commending me on conceptual­izing & articulati­ng the concept.

The Establishm­ent of Soil Carbon as the Universal Measure of Sustainabi­lity

A full Report on my talk at CEC, and complete text & links are here:
http://tec­h.groups.y­ahoo.com/g­roup/bioch­ar-policy/­message/32­33
Comment
6 of 11
November 11, 2011
@Anumakonda,
Agave Border Initiative (ABC),
Arturo Velez sent his Agave-Derived Biofuels creation of a Bi-National Border Consortium to foster large-scale use of agave as energy crop. Government agencies, private initiative, farmers/ranchers/foresters associations, academia/researchers, NGO and entrepreneurs are welcome to participate.

The Western US States produce only ~0.3% of the total USA biomass production, but by planting 25 million hectares of agave on marginal dryland, these States could produce 1.6+ Billion tonnes of dry biomass every year, the same amount the whole US currently produces.
In Mexico he is working with CONOSIL, with six hundred and seventy thousand members. They own at least 40 million hectares of land. They are VERY interested in the Agave Project. Especially the States with more semiarid and arid land (upper half of Mexico).
CONOSIL is a member of the International Family Forestry Alliance.
CONOSIL: http://www.conosil.org.mx/ ,Arturo is the National Administrative Coordinator.

http://www.slideshare.net/agaveproject/Agave-Project-Presentation


PRO-NATURA INTERNATIONAL has the largest numbers of agroforestry soil-C & Biochar projects. Certainly the largest NGO, across the global south. They are very sensitive in both design and co-opting local social values for creating self perpetuated systems. Like the Exponential growth of biologic systems. http://pronatura.org/index.php

The Biochar Fund has doubled subsistence farmer's incomes;
Exceptional results from biochar experiment in Cameroon
The broad smiles of 1500 subsistence farmers say it all, that , and the size of the Biochar corn root balls
http://www.biochar-international.org/cameroon

Craig Sams' Charcolate; Cocao growers in Belize showing fruiting trees in just 3 years with biochar protocols.; http://www.carbongold.com/
No image available
Comment
7 of 11
Anonymous
November 11, 2011
*Holds up finger*
One thing...why corn stover? Can't that already be shredded and sold as fuel pellets or something?

Why not break down some representative mix of ALL waste bio-mass from food processing, or perhaps run a parallel batch using the Agave noted above?

And why not setup another processing line using that Switchgrass that was identified years ago as an ideal 'other' crop for land throughout the US that is not currently producing profitable food crops?

There is just no reason I can see other than "because it is there" as a direct result of misplaced handouts to politically connected companies like ADM for subsidizing ethanol plants designed solely to use CORN as a feedstock. So the last round of taxpayer-subsidized stupidity sets up the next round of low-yield supply feedstock. And this process - awesome as their intentions are - will need to be re-tweaked for a better enzyme and different processing, temperatures, times, and so on to take advantage of something far superior later on. After millions are wasted trying to figure out what to do with corn waste that shouldn't even be there.

Of course...if you never get the government away from paying off their Corn-buddies, and develop a bio-fuel plant that buys mass amounts of Agave or switchgrass, no farmer will dedicate years of his life and fields to grow it, and no bank will finance the different farm harvesting vehicles to cut it and transport it, and so on...
Comment
8 of 11
November 12, 2011
Heather: You just do not get it ! biofuels still burn to generate a greenhouse gas-carbon dioxide ! Aircraft flying
at the high altitudes, is generating hundreds of tons of carbon dioxide per day.


In 1966, NASA developed and fueled a B-52 with hydrogen. Branson of Virgin Atlantic Airways is toying with the idea
of hydrogen fueled jet engines. Several companies have developed high pressure hydrogen tanks specfically for aircraft. Boeing is considering developing a hydrogen aircraft.


Dr. Reynolds
Comment
9 of 11
November 15, 2011
warren2 wrote:

"Heather: You just do not get it ! biofuels still burn to generate a greenhouse gas-carbon dioxide ! Aircraft flying
at the high altitudes, is generating hundreds of tons of carbon dioxide per day. "

When biofuel is burned it does generate CO2. But when the feedstock is grown, C02 is absorbed from the atmosphere, making the fuel carbon neutral.
Comment
10 of 11
November 16, 2011
John-Bronson: What you may not know is that carbon dioxide has
a 10-year "half-life" in the atmosphere. This means that half of the original amount is taken up by the ocean and plants in 10 years ! It takes 6 "half-lives" or 60 years for 97% of the the original carbon dioxide to be reduced.

The ocean pH is dropping from 7.5 down to below 7.0 or acidic side due to this carbon dioxide. This acidic ocean is dissolving coral and killing other ocean plant life.


So switch to hydrogen.

Dr. Reynolds
No image available
Comment
11 of 11
Anonymous
November 17, 2011
Why waste this on such an inefficient means of transportation! Train (approximate) 1500 BTU/ton mile, truck 3400 BTU/ton mile, air 28,000 BTU/ton mile. Oh but hey, this may add to cloud cover and cool the planet!
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