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Ask the Ecologist:
by Belle Bergner
Q: Is ethanol really an environmentally
sound alternative to regular car fuel?
A: There are four main ecological issues with
ethanol: the energy, water consumption,
and land required to produce ethanol are
the three major impacts on the production
side, and the greenhouse gas emissions
coming out of the tailpipe is the fourth.
First, let’s consider energy. One camp of
researchers including Dr. David Pimental
at Cornell University have calculated that
it takes more energy to create ethanol than
what we get out of it as car fuel. Farmers
are using fossil-fuel-powered equipment
to plant, maintain and harvest the corn
and are using similar carbon-emitting
machinery to process that corn into
ethanol and then transport it to collection
points. (The corn-based fuel can’t run in
underground pipelines because it picks up
damaging impurities.) So the production of
this gasoline-alternative actually requires
the burning of large amounts of gasoline.
In the other camp, Dr. Michael Wang from
Argonne National Laboratory finds that one
unit of ethanol requires 0.74 units of fossil
fuels including transportation costs. That
would mean a net gain in energy, not a net
loss. A research group from UC-Berkeley
also calculates that ethanol is more energy
efficient than petroleum production.
Now let’s consider water. According to
a 2006 publication from the Institute for
Agriculture and Trade Policy, ethanol
requires an average of 4 gallons of water per
1 gallon of ethanol produced.
How about the land required for corn
production? Corn fields take a while to be
replenished due to both soil erosion and
irrigation issues, so those acres would be
out of commission for a period of time,
meaning no corn for ethanol and no usable
land for other food crops. To sustain an
ethanol-based fuel industry, more and
more farm land would have to be set aside
for corn alone. The ultimate result could
be a shortage of domestically grown food
and higher prices at the supermarket for all
sorts of produce.
And what’s happening at the end of the
exhaust pipe? It turns out that ethanol
is only 10-15% more efficient than fossil
fuel, thereby saving just a slim margin in
greenhouse gas emissions.
One possible solution is to develop
cellulosic ethanol which is made from
non-food products such as corn stalks,
wood chips and switchgrass. This is a much
more expensive process but it is in the early
stages of development and may become
more affordable. The water and energy
requirements are unclear because of the
limited availability of public data on this
technique.
To minimize the amount of water required,
ethanol plants could be sited next to
wastewater treatment facilities so that
the ethanol plant can reuse the greywater
from these facilities, which also reduces
the energy consumption requirements by
reducing the water pumping needs.
Unless the issues described here are
resolved, the answer to your question
appears to be no.
Send your ecological inquiries to our
resident ecologist at bergnerb@gmail.com
Riverwest Currents online edition - July, 2007 |