Minneapolis, Minnesota
July 10, 2006Source:
University of Minnesota
The first comprehensive
analysis of the full life cycles of soybean biodiesel and corn
grain ethanol shows that biodiesel has much less of an impact on
the environment and a much higher net energy benefit than corn
ethanol, but that neither can do much to meet U.S. energy
demand.
The study will be published in
the July 11 Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences.
The researchers tracked all the
energy used for growing corn and soybeans and converting the
crops into biofuels. They also looked at how much fertilizer and
pesticide corn and soybeans required and how much greenhouse
gases and nitrogen, phosphorus, and pesticide pollutants each
released into the environment.
"Quantifying the benefits and
costs of biofuels throughout their life cycles allows us not
only to make sound choices today but also to identify better
biofuels for the future," said Jason Hill, a postdoctoral
researcher in the department of ecology, evolution, and behavior
and the department of applied economics and lead author of the
study.
The study showed that both corn
grain ethanol and soybean biodiesel produce more energy than is
needed to grow the crops and convert them into biofuels. This
finding refutes other studies claiming that these biofuels
require more energy to produce than they provide. The amount of
energy each returns differs greatly, however. Soybean biodiesel
returns 93 percent more energy than is used to produce it, while
corn grain ethanol currently provides only 25 percent more
energy.
Still, the researchers caution
that neither biofuel can come close to meeting the growing
demand for alternatives to petroleum. Dedicating all current
U.S. corn and soybean production to biofuels would meet only 12
percent of gasoline demand and 6 percent of diesel demand.
Meanwhile, global population growth and increasingly affluent
societies will increase demand for corn and soybeans for food.
The authors showed that the
environmental impacts of the two biofuels also differ. Soybean
biodiesel produces 41 percent less greenhouse gas emissions than
diesel fuel whereas corn grain ethanol produces 12 percent less
greenhouse gas emissions than gasoline. Soybeans have another
environmental advantage over corn because they require much less
nitrogen fertilizer and pesticides, which get into groundwater,
streams, rivers and oceans. These agricultural chemicals pollute
drinking water, and nitrogen decreases biodiversity in global
ecosystems. Nitrogen fertilizer, mainly from corn, causes the
'dead zone' in the Gulf of Mexico.
"We did this study to learn
from ethanol and biodiesel," says David Tilman, Regents
Professor of Ecology and a co-author of the study. "Producing
biofuel for transportation is a fledgling industry. Corn ethanol
and soybean biodiesel are successful first generation biofuels.
The next step is a biofuel crop that requires low chemical and
energy inputs and can give us much greater energy and
environmental returns. Prairie grasses have great potential."
Biofuels such as switchgrass,
mixed prairie grasses and woody plants produced on marginally
productive agricultural land or biofuels produced from
agricultural or forestry waste have the potential to provide
much larger biofuel supplies with greater environmental benefits
than corn ethanol and soybean biodiesel.
According to Douglas Tiffany,
research fellow, department of applied economics and another
co-author of the study, ethanol and biodiesel plants are early
biorefineries that in the future will be capable of using
different kinds of biomass and conversion technologies to
produce a variety of biofuels and other products, depending upon
market demands.
Hill adds that both ethanol and
biodiesel have a long-term value as additives because they
oxygenate fossil fuels, which allows them to burn cleaner.
Biodiesel also protects engine parts when blended with diesel.
"There is plenty of demand for
ethanol as an additive," Hill says. "The ethanol industry was
built on using ethanol as an additive rather than a fuel. Using
it as a biofuel such as E85 is a recent and currently
unsustainable development. As is, there is barely enough corn
grown to meet demand for ethanol as a 10 percent additive." |