Switchgrass: The magic wand that transforms crappy biofuels policy into gold, part 2

Now they’re burning coal to make ethanol 13

TheWatt and Treehugger both flag a story in the Christian Science Monitor that makes my sense of uneasiness about biofuels even ... uneasier.

Here's the deal: An ethanol plant that opened last year in Iowa is burning 300 tons of coal a day. You heard me: coal. And it's not an isolated case:

The trend, which is expected to continue, has left even some ethanol boosters scratching their heads. Should coal become a standard for 30 to 40 ethanol plants under construction -- and 150 others on the drawing boards -- it would undermine the environmental reasoning for switching to ethanol in the first place, environmentalists say.

It's a farce to call ethanol a clean, renewable fuel if it involves burning coal, right? What do you have to say for yourself, ethanol industry? What could you say, what ... term could you use, to answer these terrible charges?

Wait for it ... wait for it ... feel the love coming ...

Switchgrass, baby!

Coal may end up being merely a transitional fuel in the run-up to cellulosic ethanol, including switch grass and wood, says another [industry-group Renewable Fuels Association] spokesman. ...

Cellulosic ethanol ... could turn the tide on coal, too, by burning plant dregs in the boiler with no need for coal at all.

Whew! Well, I feel better. You?

Here's the essence of my problem with biofuels: As a society -- most importantly, as a set of fund-allocating local, state, and federal governments -- we should be making it very clear that reducing the use of fossil fuels is the goal. Ethanol is not the goal. Hybrids are not the goal. Wind and solar aren't the goals. Green architecture is not the goal.

The goal is reducing fossil-fuel use. To the extent any of those things help, great. If they don't, so much the worse for them.

Ethanol is close to becoming a goal unto itself. Once that happens, once ethanol subsidies start flowing and ethanol use starts being mandated, ethanol will be produced in the cheapest way possible, to maximize profit. Such is the nature of the market. If domestic subsidies are not sufficient to defray the difference in cost, somebody will start importing sugar-cane or palm-oil ethanol from overseas. If coal is a cheaper fuel for ethanol plants than natural gas or methane, coal will be used.

If ethanol is the goal, the market will ruthlessly and effectively find the cheapest route to ethanol, environmental considerations be damned.

Here's a little piece of Econ 101: if you want less of something, tax it. We want less carbon? Tax carbon. Everything else is sound and fury.

David Roberts is staff writer for Grist. You can follow his Twitter feed at twitter.com/drgrist.

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  1. Ana Unruh Cohen Posted 12:49 pm
    08 Mar 2006

    Worth talking aboutThe Center for American Progress hosted a one-day conference examining a similar proposition back in December. I don't think the idea is "conventional wisdom" inside the beltway yet, but some people are talking about it. Changing farm policy is still a huge political challenge.
  2. CowsEatGrass's avatar

    CowsEatGrass Posted 1:05 pm
    08 Mar 2006

    Bright Side?Although I'm not committing to be in favor of said magic wand, or any agricultural subsidy for that matter, a few things in this post offer more hope than you afford.


    Corn production does not have to be as damaging as it currently is.  Given, square-miles of monocultres of any sort present an ecological threat, but the current practices could be reformed incrementally to greatly reduce their impact.  And when the crops are to processed into fuel, there is the possibility that polycultures could be developed that would be more productive, less harmful, and yeild as much energy as corn alone.  Processing would, of course, be a challenge here.
    The corn oil byproduct could also be used as fuel for transportation.

  3. David Roberts's avatar

    David Roberts Posted 2:43 pm
    08 Mar 2006

    marketsPut aside for a moment the dubious merits of corn as a primary source of ethanol -- perhaps it's true that once production gets ramped up, other crops will get rotated in and some of the damage could be reduced.
    But if present farm subsidies were simply dumped into the auto fuels market, how would that not massively distort that market (as badly as the ag market is now distorted)?
    And what chance would we ever have of reducing personal transportation in general if "America's farmers" were depending on us to burn their products?

    www.grist.org
  4. amazingdrx Posted 2:55 pm
    08 Mar 2006

    CompetitionEven with large ethanol from corn subsidies, 1 dollar per gallon is the figure now, maybe green competition to agribizz monoculture/chemical switchgrass or corn could fool these sneaky lobbyists and their government henchmen.
    A solar and wind powered algae based biofuel system can produce a lot more fuel and actually recycle waste and reduce CO2 from power plants doing it.  Will these projects get the 1 dollar per gallon subsidy?
    If not, why not?  And shouldn't biodiesel from waste or algae get that same subsidy?
    Level the playing field and agri-bizz might be beaten in the market place with  ultra low cost biofuel production from waste using solar and wind power.  With clean water and green electric power as  byproducts.

    http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog
  5. Biodiversivist's avatar

    Biodiversivist Posted 12:51 am
    09 Mar 2006

    No one seems to realize thatethanol production from cellulose is still in the experimental stage, like fusion power. All of this discussion over a fuel that has yet to be proven commercially viable seems premature to me, but what do I know?

    In the end, it all comes down to biodiversity. Help acquire and protect ecological hotspots, give to a conservation organization: http://www.saveourbiodiversity.com
  6. Ana Unruh Cohen Posted 1:10 am
    09 Mar 2006

    not quite fusionIogen and Shell are working on building the first cellulosic refinery. They might have all the financing worked out this year. And a DuPont backed group is also working on building a plant. These will be critical in proving the ability of the technology to scale up.
    Fusion folks are still trying to figure out how to produce energy for longer than a tiny fraction of a second.
  7. Biodiversivist's avatar

    Biodiversivist Posted 4:10 am
    09 Mar 2006

    True, AnaNote here who their major partners are, and be sure to read the disclaimer if anyone out there feels confident enough to invest in some of these ventures. I was not suggesting that the two energy schemes were on equal footing for becoming commercially viable. I was just using fusion as an example of a scheme that has yet to prove commercially viable. According to this report:
    Even with the dramatic reduction in cost, enzymes for cellulose conversion to ethanol are still several times more expensive than those for the production of starch-based ethanol.
    Keep in mind that these will be facilities to test commercial viability, they may not prove viable.
    I don't' view the potential for cellulosic ethanol in the same light that I view biodiesel grown with soybeans or in cleared rainforests. Although the jury is still out. The enthusiasm for this is similar though. Try doing a Google search to verify that biodiesel releases ten times more smog forming nitrogen oxides into the air than gasoline cars (suggesting another reason that trading a gasoline car for a biodiesel one may not be too smart). It is illegal to sell diesel cars in some states because of smog forming pollutants. Try doing the same to verify that using biodiesel will stuff 11.6 football fields worth of soybeans into your gas tank annually. We are acting like a bunch of sheep, running wildly in one direction, then another. In this instance the stampede was started by Bush's speech. This research has been going on for a quarter of a century.
    Will a new enzyme breakthrough completely destroy the biodiesel industry that is now enthusiastically using billions of dollars of government money to build an infrastructure? Will the farmers who invested in biodiesel refineries go bankrupt if enough (they won't all do so) diesel consumers switch to a cleaner, cheaper ethanol fuel? What will all of my friends and neighbors who ran out to buy diesel Jettas to save the planet do with their cars then? The same thing might happen to cellulosic fuels if battery technology (or something else) comes along to give cars an equivalent gas mileage of 120 MPG.
    Personally, I'm betting on a viable hybrid electric car, and I intend to back that bet up with a purchase.

    In the end, it all comes down to biodiversity. Help acquire and protect ecological hotspots, give to a conservation organization: http://www.saveourbiodiversity.com
  8. Biodiversivist's avatar

    Biodiversivist Posted 4:30 am
    09 Mar 2006

    Thus trumping Odo and his stinking PriusHigh gas mileage will be the new status symbol. Mark my words somebody.

    In the end, it all comes down to biodiversity. Help acquire and protect ecological hotspots, give to a conservation organization: http://www.saveourbiodiversity.com
  9. odograph Posted 5:01 am
    09 Mar 2006

    ah!But I still have my bicycles ;-)
    (You guys who ride in snow already trump me.)
  10. amazingdrx Posted 5:46 am
    09 Mar 2006

    Studded tiresThe studded bicycle tires work great odo, but then there's slush and cars sliding all over.
    Cellulosic ethanol, not so great.  Conservation lands put into monocrop switchgrass that needs oil based chemical fertilizer, herbicides, and farming energy  is not a good solution to transportation energy problems.
    Furthermore the processing energy will come from fossil or nuclear power.
    And as Lester Brown points out water is the big problem with energy farming, it is the limiting factor.  When fuel crops raise the price of food because of water shortage it will be too late, society will already be dependent on fuel farming.
    When burned ethanol is only slightly cleaner than gasoline, still producing plenty of greenhouse gases.
    Isn't global climate change most of the problem we now have?  Imported energy that entails constant war is a close second, but the main problem must be solved along with the secondary problem.  Switchgrass won't do that, and it drains precious capital from the real effort.

    http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog
  11. wordwright Posted 3:31 pm
    09 Mar 2006

    Biodiesel emissionsI'm baffled by the number of references I've seen lately, in this thread and others, to the increase in nitrous oxide emissions caused by biodiesel (relative to petrodiesel and especially to gasoline).  Has no one heard of a catalytic converter?

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