2006, a watershed year for biofuels in the US
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In a comprehensive overview, Bioconversion Blog's C. Scott Miller shows that for the US too, 2006 was the year of biofuels. Fears about war, global warming, and pocketbook issues will affect public opinion, action, and purchases for decades to come, he says. Starting with the President's "addiction to oil" admission in his State of the Union address and the rising carnage in the Middle East, followed by the spring/summer oil price spike and "The Inconvenient Truth" of global warming, the gordian knot of interrelated problems seems insurmountable.
And yet, Scott writes:
ethanol :: biodiesel :: biomass :: bioenergy :: biofuels :: energy :: sustainability :: bioconversion :: US ::
In a comprehensive overview, Bioconversion Blog's C. Scott Miller shows that for the US too, 2006 was the year of biofuels. Fears about war, global warming, and pocketbook issues will affect public opinion, action, and purchases for decades to come, he says. Starting with the President's "addiction to oil" admission in his State of the Union address and the rising carnage in the Middle East, followed by the spring/summer oil price spike and "The Inconvenient Truth" of global warming, the gordian knot of interrelated problems seems insurmountable.
And yet, Scott writes:
as former CIA Director James Woolsey contends, national security can be greatly enhanced in the short term by building a cellulosic ethanol industry based on biomass conversion to ethanol. This would simultaneously reduce our addiction to fossil fuels using cheap feedstock and reduce runaway greenhouse gas emissions, while increasing our national self-reliance on clean renewable energy. The only question is a matter of will - do we have the commitment and persistence to fight for a future virtually free of dependence on foreign oil? The consequences of sticking with the status quo are too onerous to contemplate.Given the growing activities in the sector, Scott has neatly divided his sharp analyses on the developments of the American biofuels and bioenergy industry in three separate websites, which are presented in the 2006 review; one on biomass feedstocks (BioStock), one the processes and technologies involved in transforming the biomass (BioConversion) and finally one in which he looks at the useable, finished bio-products that result from these processes (BioOutput). Scott's work remains one of the best resources to track what's happening on the bioenergy front in the US.
ethanol :: biodiesel :: biomass :: bioenergy :: biofuels :: energy :: sustainability :: bioconversion :: US ::
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