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NaturalPedia > Biofuel
Quotes about Biofuel from the world's top natural health / natural living authors
"The palm provides oil for cooking and now is being looked at as a source of biofuel, as the world cooking oil market has become saturated. The rubber trees were being tapped to make the condoms of the world, as that impervious substance had made a comeback in the face of the relentless HIV/AIDS crisis.
Each small town seemed to have the same pattern of development. A mosque, a few cafes and restaurants, and an agricultural supply store. Outside of one of the general stores stood a pallet stacked with paper sacks emblazoned with the large block letters SEMEN." - Dean Cycon, Javatrekker: Dispatches From the World of Fair Trade Coffee (Get the book.)
| "The new system will efficiently create and use a free biofuel?
digester gas produced from grease—and increase the amount of "green power" generated by the cogeneration plant by 40 percent.
The electricity generated from so-called waste actually reduces the city's requirement for about 1.5 million kilowatt-hours from the local utility each year. Of course, this in turn reduces everybody's dependency on oil." - David Steinman, Safe Trip to Eden: Ten Steps to Save Planet Earth from the Global Warming Meltdown (Get the book.)
| "Though widespread application of these solutions won't be possible for some time, a Brazilian company has manufactured a crop-duster plane that runs on ethanol, and the University of North Dakota's Energy and Environmental Research Center recently developed a carbon-neutral biofuel that could be suitable for aircraft use —in some respects, it's actually better than kerosene, which jet fuel is traditionally made from. This fuel will potentially cost less than petroleum-based aviation fuel." - Alex Steffen, Worldchanging: A User's Guide for the 21st Century (Get the book.)
"Fast-forward thirty years and Malaysia is the world's largest producer of palm oil—and is offering West Africa advice on how to upgrade its palm-oil industry, including how to produce the oil as a biofuel.
One of the best ways to facilitate these collaborations is to progressively introduce them into both traditional and evolving media gateways—from newspapers and television to solar-powered radio stations and cell phones."
- Alex Steffen, Worldchanging: A User's Guide for the 21st Century (Get the book.)
"Of course, the carbon dioxide doesn't just magically go away—it is released when the cars burn the biofuel —but Berzin's process does transform C02 that would otherwise simply be pollution into a (temporary) resource, at least making the carbon dioxide perform double-duty. And being half as bad to the climate would be a whole lot better than the status quo. JJF & j:
Bioplastics wmmm Experimental corn-based plastics have been around since the 1930s, but industry has found it difficult to make plastics that are easily extracted from and returned to the natural ecosystem without harm."
- Alex Steffen, Worldchanging: A User's Guide for the 21st Century (Get the book.)
"The algae produce biodiesel effectively enough (a single acre of algae ponds can produce 15,000 gallons [56,781 liters] of biodiesel) that full conversion to biofuel for transportation might be achievable. Berzin's company, GreenFuel, has multiple test installations under way, and expects to have a full-scale plant up and running by 2008 or 2009."
- Alex Steffen, Worldchanging: A User's Guide for the 21st Century (Get the book.)
| "It would take hundreds of cider-drinking human harvesters using muscle power to do the work of one oil-drinking combine harvester using mechanical power (cider was surely the ultimate sustainable biofuel!).
Still more oil is used in processing raw materials into edible foodstuffs, packaging them, and trucking the finished products to market. The system by its nature uses vastly more energy than a pre-industrial one, and is also very inefficient: far more calories of energy from fossil fuels are put in than we get out as calories of food." - Mark Lynas, Six Degrees: Our Future on a Hotter Planet (Get the book.)
"Other biofuel advocates point to waste straw or wood chippings as a way to manufacture ethanol from cellulose, perhaps using genetically engineered enzymes. This seems to hold more potential in terms of carbon displacement, as it could be far more efficient than producing ethanol from food crops. However, the techniques are still being developed, and would take years to scale up enough to make any serious dent in emissions."
- Mark Lynas, Six Degrees: Our Future on a Hotter Planet (Get the book.)
| "Recycling Used Cooking Oil into Fuel
With the expected coming scarcity of fossil fuels and the ever-escalating costs of securing dwindling petroleum resources, there is much activity around the world focused on creating biofuel alternatives. The most widely used biofuel in the United States currently is ethanol, an alcohol fermented and distilled from corn that is typically mixed with gasoline. Any carbohydrate can be similarly fermented, and projects are under way around the world fermenting abundant carbohydrates into ethanol." - Sandor Ellix Katz, The Revolution Will Not Be Microwaved (Get the book.)
| "Why not leave the forests out of the equation and use an annual farm crop as a biofuel source? In that case, the best option is hemp. There are two major sources of biofuel to be derived from hemp: the seed oil and the stalk. We will consider each of these in turn.
HEMP SEED AS AN ENERGY SOURCE
Vegetable oils are superior to petroleum on several counts, and hemp seed produces one of nature's finest oils. It is also easily converted into diesel fuel. Since the oil is not intended for human consumption, rancid oil can be used." - Rowan Robinson, The Great Book of Hemp: The Complete Guide to the Environmental, Commercial, and Medicinal Uses of the World's Most Extraordinary Plant (Get the book.)
"One deterrent to using hemp as a biofuel is that it is so valuable for its other uses. In the course of processing hemp into fiber or cel-lulosic pulp, however, a significant amount of waste is produced that has value as an energy-feed stock. If a manufacturer has an integrated system that utilizes all parts of the plant, this approach becomes a moot point because there is no waste.
Hemp's Practical Fuel Potential
All things considered, it appears that hemp does have good potential as a biofuel resource."
- Rowan Robinson, The Great Book of Hemp: The Complete Guide to the Environmental, Commercial, and Medicinal Uses of the World's Most Extraordinary Plant (Get the book.)
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