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On 25 Apr 2006 11:27:15 -0700, "tillius" wrote:
I'm not saying bio-fuels are the sole answer. As far as replacing petro based fuel with bio-fuels, it would take between 300,000,000 and 500,000,000 acres to produce enough biomass to replace our current petroleum use. Keep in mind those figures given in my previous post did not consider the additional fuel produced from conversion of waste biomass (corn stalk, rice straw, etc) into bio-fuel. There are currenly over 600,000,000 acres of viable farmland not currenlty being farmed. This farmland is capable of producing high-level feedstocks such as corn and is not being used because of lack of demand. That alone is more than enough to replace our gasoline supply with bio-fuels. Other biomass feedstock can be grown on those arid lands where water is a problem, look at Jatropha or even Hemp which can easily grow on those lands. Hemp is a potential feedstock I didn't mention before, primarily because of the reaction mentioning hemp gets, but hemp is capable of yeilding 1000-1500 gallons of bio-fuel per acre. I do agree, proper utilization of hydro, solar, wind and nuclear energy is critical to satisfying our energy needs going forward. I also agree we need to commit more resources to developing hydrogen fuel cell technology. There is absolutely no reason future vehicles could use a hybrid IC/electrical propulsion system using bio-fuels such as butanol and hydrogen-fuelcell technology. As a matter of fact, with the newest methods of producing butanol, the primary byproduct of the process is hydrogen, which can easily be reclaimed as the primary fuel source for bio-fuel production. Till When I grew up on the farm, we always had about 40 acres (out of the 160) in the 'soil bank'. The land was not used to grow corn or other crop for income or feed, but it was *used*. A crop such as clover would be planted in the field, allowed to grow fully, and then plowed under. The purpose was to fertilize the soil. Without this process commercial fertilizer would be required, or the land would become 'worked out'. -- 'Til next time, John H ****************************************** ***** Have a Spectacular Day! ***** ****************************************** |