Difference between revisions of "Biomass"

From Open Source Learning
Jump to navigationJump to search
 
(48 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
== Overview ==
+
Biomass is organic material that can be converted into biofuel or used to generate heat and electricity. The material used in biomass ranges from plants and trees to organic waste from factories or municipal dumps. Biomass is known as a renewable fuel because it is made from resources that naturally replenish themselves- yet it it still does release carbon into the atmosphere. However, its net emissions have a relatively small impact because biomass materials naturally release and ingest similar amounts of carbon through their carbon cycles. <Ref> Kimes, Laura. Biomass Conversion: Emerging Technologies, Feedstocks, and Products Washington D.C, U.S. environmental protection agency, 2007.</Ref>.
 +
(I wanted to link the wikipedia of carbon cycles, but didn't know how)
  
 +
In 2005, studies from the Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development, a leader in the field of biomass research,<Ref> BioEnergy Trade, Copernicus Institute: the Netherlands. Oct. 26th 2008, [http://bioenergytrade.org/t40members/0000009610121840e/copernicusinstitute/index.html]. </Ref>  concluded that approximately 10% percent of global energy consumption comes from biomass, “making biomass by far the most important renewable energy source used to date” <Ref> Faaij, Andre. "Modern Biomass Conversion Technologies.(Author abstract)." Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change 11.2 (March 2006): 335(33). Academic OneFile. Gale. Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT. 29 Oct. 2008 </Ref>. At the same time, we know that no one solution can us to safe number of parts per million of carbon in the atmosphere, it must be a "portfolio" of options<Ref> Pacala, S. and Socolow, R., "Stabilization Wedges: Solving the Climate Problem for the Next 50 Years with Current Technologies". 2004 www.sciencemag.org, October 28th, 2008.</Ref>. That being said, biomass could become a viable and effective way to combat global warming in the next few years, mainly because it is a technology that has already been developed. Certain obstacles, however, do need to be addressed.
  
BBiomass is organic material that has been converted into biofuel. The material used in biomass ranges from plants and trees to organic waste from factories or municipal dumps. Biomass is known as a renewable fuel because it takes energy from easily renewable sources, such as plants and waste. It still does emit carbon into the atmosphere, but less so than more conventional forms of fuel, such as fossil fuel. <Ref> Kimes, Laura. Biomass Conversion: Emerging Technologies, Feedstocks, and Products Washington D.C, U.S. environmental protection agency, 2007.</Ref>. Fossil fuels are more destructive than biomass to the balance of carbon in the atmosphere because of their carbon cycle – the time it takes for new coal or oil to develop and ‘ingest’ the carbon that it emits when used as a fuel.
 
  
In 2005, research from the Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development, recently noted as a leader in the field of biomass<Ref> BioEnergy Trade, Copernicus Institute: the Netherlands. Oct. 26th 2008, [http://bioenergytrade.org/t40members/0000009610121840e/copernicusinstitute/index.html]. </Ref>  concluded that approximately 10% percent of total energy used comes from biomass, “making biomass by far the most important renewable energy source used to date” <Ref> Faaij, Andre. "Modern Biomass Conversion Technologies.(Author abstract)." Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change 11.2 (March 2006): 335(33). Academic OneFile. Gale. Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT. 29 Oct. 2008 </Ref>. Although it might not be a permanent solution to climate change, biomass can become a viable and effective way to combat global warming because of its technological readiness, especially in the next few years. Certain obstacles, however, do need to be addressed.
 
  
 
== Technology ==
 
== Technology ==
  
  
The process of Biomass essentially mimics the natural process of carbon cycles, and, although it emits greenhouse gases, can create carbon neutral fuels if paired with forestation and protection of biodiversity (see: find correct Paragraph). When plants are alive, they consume carbon through photosynthesis, only to die and eventually release the carbon back into the atmosphere. This delicate balance is a symbiotic relationship – plants and trees need carbon to survive and the earth’s eco-system needs to maintain a certain level of carbon in order to function. Yet when humans began processing huge amounts of fossil fuels, such as coal or oil, it upset the balance of carbon in the atmosphere. In other words, the more biomass we create, the more unbalanced and non-renewable energy sources can be replaced with renewable ones.  
+
The process of converting plant and crop biomass into biofuel essentially mimics the natural process of carbon cycles. When plants are alive, they consume carbon through photosynthesis, and when they die they release the carbon back into the atmosphere. This delicate balance is a symbiotic relationship – plants and trees need carbon to survive and the Earth’s ecosystem needs to maintain a certain level of carbon in order to function. Yet when humans process huge amounts of fossil fuels, such as coal or oil, it upsets the balance by releasing carbon into the atmosphere that would have otherwise been stored. Fossil fuels have an extremely long carbon cycle (hence, fossil), meaning the carbon they emit isn't neutralized by new coal and oil for a long time.  Therefore, if we use biofuels instead of fossil fuels, overall carbon in the atmosphere can be reduced.
  
Waste biomass, on the other hand, goes through the same process as plants, trees, and crops, though it relies on a different justification.  By taking advantage of the inevitable carbon emissions that waste creates, biomass can create methane based biofuel, which doesn’t add any more carbon to the atmosphere than the waste would emit already<Ref>Shanmugam, P., and N.J. Horan. "Simple and rapid methods to evaluate methane potential and biomass yield for a range of mixed solid wastes.(Report)." Bioresource Technology 100.1 (Jan 2009): 471(4). Academic OneFile. Gale. Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT. 29 Oct. 2008</Ref>. This is because public and industrial waste can contain dangerous toxins and release similar amounts of methane when left on its own.  
+
Similarly, by taking advantage of waste biomass and the inevitable carbon emissions that waste creates, methane based biofuel can be created. This biofuel does not add any more carbon to the atmosphere than the waste would naturally emit<Ref>Shanmugam, P., and N.J. Horan. "Simple and rapid methods to evaluate methane potential and biomass yield for a range of mixed solid wastes.(Report)." Bioresource Technology 100.1 (Jan 2009): 471(4). Academic OneFile. Gale. Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT. 29 Oct. 2008</Ref>. Public and industrial waste can contain dangerous toxins and release similar amounts of methane when left on its own.  
  
More specifically, the biomass process consists of collection of the organic/ waste material, the conversion of that matter to liquid known as feedstock, and the subsequent conversion of feedstock into biofuel. There are many technologies to convert feedstock into biofuels; they are usually categorized into thermochemical, biochemical, and chemical processes. Thermochemical strategies use heat to break down the feedstock, biochemical strategies use enzymes and bacteria, while chemical strategies use chemical reactions. Specific processes are usually chosen according to the matter the feedstock is comprised of<Ref>Kimes, Laura. Biomass Conversion: Emerging Technologies, Feedstocks, and Products Washington D.C, U.S. environmental protection agency, 2007.</Ref>.  For a more detailed summary of biomass techniques, see here:[[Image: BiomassTechniques.pdf ]].
+
More specifically, the biomass process consists of collection of the organic material, the conversion of that matter to liquid known as feedstock<Ref>Kimes, Laura. Biomass Conversion: Emerging Technologies, Feedstocks, and Products Washington D.C, U.S. environmental protection agency, 2007.</Ref>, and the subsequent conversion of feedstock into biofuel. There are many technologies to convert feedstock into biofuels; they are usually categorized into three categories based on how the feedstock is broken down. Thermochemical strategies use heat to break down the feedstock, biochemical strategies use enzymes and bacteria, while chemical strategies use chemical reactions. Specific processes are usually chosen according to the matter the feedstock is comprised of<Ref>Kimes, Laura. Biomass Conversion: Emerging Technologies, Feedstocks, and Products Washington D.C, U.S. environmental protection agency, 2007.</Ref>.  For a more detailed summary of biomass techniques, see this file: [[BiomassTechniques.pdf]] <Ref>Kimes, Laura. Biomass Conversion: Emerging Technologies, Feedstocks, and Products Washington D.C, U.S. environmental protection agency, 2007.</Ref>.
 +
 
 +
                              A Biomass plant that uses trees as feedstock (From Scotland):
 +
 
 +
                                    [[Image:Biomassplant.jpg]]
  
 
== Environmental Implications ==
 
== Environmental Implications ==
  
  
It is difficult to assess the environmental impact of biomass on a regional or national level because of the unique complexity of each individual biomass facility. Every unit has different ecosystems, whether agricultural, natural, or industrial, to draw resources from. As a result, the overall carbon output is a large part due to how well the biofuel material used from ecosystems is replenished so that that it can neutralize the carbon emitted by biomasses<Ref>Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Biomass and Agriculture: Sustainability, Markets and Policies. Paris: OECD, 2004, p. 151.</Ref>. So what can be said with confidence about the environmental effectiveness of biofuel? There is more consensus about the need for biofuel in the transportation sector, mainly because other renewable energies lack the technological efficiency needed to power transport. Biofuel does emit considerably less carbon than fossil fuel<Ref> "Scientists set sights on biomass to reduce fossil fuel dependence". 2006, Imperial College London. October 29th, 2008. http://www.physorg.com/news10331.html</Ref>, and can be implemented on a wider scale fairly easily.  
+
It is difficult to assess the environmental impact of biomass on a regional or national level because each individual biomass facility is uniquely complex. Every unit draws resources from different systems, whether they be natural, agricultural, or industrial. As a result, the overall carbon output depends on how efficiently those ecosystems are used and taken care of. For instance, the carbon footprint of a biomass plant that uses forestry as feedstock can only be determined by how efficiently the facility reforests the area it takes from.  <Ref>Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Biomass and Agriculture: Sustainability, Markets and Policies. Paris: OECD, 2004, p. 151.</Ref>. Given this, what can be said about the environmental effectiveness of biofuel? First, there ''is'' more of a consensus about the need for biofuel in the transportation sector, mainly because other renewable energies lack the technological efficiency needed to power transport. Biofuel does allow for a lower net carbon stock in the atmosphere and can be implemented on a wider scale fairly easily<Ref> "Scientists set sights on biomass to reduce fossil fuel dependence". 2006, Imperial College London. October 29th, 2008. http://www.physorg.com/news10331.html</Ref>.
 +
 
 +
Biomass can play an important role in two related fields: [[sequestration]] of CO2 and renewable [[hydropower]]. Sequestration is the capture of carbon that occurs after fuel has been created so that it doesn’t enter the atmosphere. If done in conjuction with biomass, sequestration could potentially solve one of its major obstacles – biomass could then be both renewable and close to carbon neutral. In fact, the combination of biomass and sequestration has the ability produce overall negative carbon emissions<Ref>Faaij, Andre. "Modern Biomass Conversion Technologies.(Author abstract)." Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change 11.2 (March 2006): 335(33). Academic OneFile. Gale. Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT. 29 Oct. 2008.</Ref>.
 +
 
 +
If hydrogen, a potentially useful renewable energy <Ref>Pacala, S. and Socolow, R., "Stabilization Wedges: Solving the Climate Problem for the Next 50 Years with Current Technologies". 2004 www.sciencemag.org, October 28th, 2008.</Ref>, is used as the feedstock sequestration from biomass can become a truly powerful force in solving this crisis. Renewable hydrogen power can be extracted through the biomass process. Since carbon is easily seperated from hydrogen<Ref>Faaij, Andre. "Modern Biomass Conversion Technologies.(Author abstract)." Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change 11.2 (March 2006): 335(33). Academic OneFile. Gale. Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT. 29 Oct. 2008.</Ref>, creating hydrogen biofuel using sequestration strategies can truly find an environmentally effective way to utilize biomass<Ref> Turner, A. John,"Sustainable Hydrogen Production". 2004, www.sciencemag.com, October 28th, 2008.</Ref>.
 +
 
 +
== Socio-economic and Geographic Implications ==
 +
 
 +
 
 +
As mentioned above, the effectiveness of biomass largely depends on its geographical placement. Since biofuel on its own does produce carbon emissions, there needs to be a balance of agricultural protection and protection against deforestation.  For example, Middlebury College, in Middlebury, Vermont, is constructing a biomass plant with the surrounding ecosystem in mind.  Simultaneously, the college has decided to focus on “sustainable forestry methods,”<Ref> Ray, Sarah, "New biomass facility to reduce greenhouse gases by almost 12,500 tons a year". 2006, Middlebury College, October 15th, 2008. http://www.middlebury.edu/about/pubaff/news_releases/2006/news632951384540792349.htm</Ref>, to combat the carbon emissions that the facility will produce<Ref> Biomass Assessment Team, "Biomass Fuel Assessment for Middlebury College" (2004)</Ref>. Through strategies similar to the one used by Middlebury College, biomass plants can even have a positive impact on biodiversity and job-creation <Ref>Faaij, Andre. "Modern Biomass Conversion Technologies.(Author abstract)." Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change 11.2 (March 2006): 335(33). Academic OneFile. Gale. Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT. 29 Oct. 2008.</Ref>.
  
Biomass can play an important role in two related fields: sequestration of CO2 and renewable hydrogen power. Sequestration (hyperlink) is the capture of carbon that occurs after fuel has been created so that it doesn’t enter the atmosphere. If done in conjuction with biomass, sequestration could potentially solve one of its major obstacles – biomass could then be both renewable and close to carbon neutral. In fact, it is thought that combining biomass and sequestration can produce overall negative carbon emissions<Ref>Faaij, Andre. "Modern Biomass Conversion Technologies.(Author abstract)." Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change 11.2 (March 2006): 335(33). Academic OneFile. Gale. Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT. 29 Oct. 2008.</Ref>.  If combined with hydrogen power, another important piece of the puzzle in solving global warming<Ref>Pacala, S. and Socolow, R., "Stabilization Wedges: Solving the Climate Problem for the Next 50 Years with Current Technologies". 2004 www.sciencemag.org, October 28th, 2008.</Ref> sequestration from biomass can become a truly powerful force in solving this crisis. Renewable hydrogen power can be extracted through the biomass process, and since carbon is simply extracted from hydrogen<Ref>Faaij, Andre. "Modern Biomass Conversion Technologies.(Author abstract)." Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change 11.2 (March 2006): 335(33). Academic OneFile. Gale. Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT. 29 Oct. 2008.</Ref>, creating hydrogen power using sequestration strategies can truly find an environmentally effective way to utilize biomass<Ref> Turner, A. John,"Sustainable Hydrogen Production". 2004, www.sciencemag.com, October 28th, 2008.</Ref>.
+
There are many comprehensive plans for biomass based on specific regions. These plans can range from communal to continental in scale. They work to ensure that the biomass-specific crops and plants harvested by farmers are guaranteed to be sold or subsidized. The plans would also provide farmers detailed instruction on how to most efficiently farm for their region, since biomass farming techniques are not commonly known. Generally, though, farmers would happily participate in any of these plans as long as they are given the opportunity to succeed financially<Ref> Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Biomass and Agriculture: Sustainability, Markets and Policies. Paris: OECD, 2004, p. 354.</Ref>.  
  
== Socio-cultural and Geographic Implications ==
+
In the European Union the most successful plans seem to be on a national scale, both for farmers and for biofuel production. A nationally focused strategy has been implemented particularly well in Austria <Ref>Rosillo Callé, Francisco. The Biomass Assessment Handbook: Bioenergy for a Sustainable Environment. London: Earthscan, 2007.</Ref>, where a concept called “systematic management” has made the implementation of biomass for heating homes a commonplace. Systematic management is a complex  system that takes into account both the social and economic structures of an area in order to figure out the best way to introduce new technology. Austria has used this system to introduce more than 600 biomass plants in the last 20 years<Ref>Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Biomass and Agriculture: Sustainability, Markets and Policies. Paris: OECD, 2004, p. 307.</Ref>. Although comprehensive approaches such as this are difficult to achieve, Austria has shown that it is by no means impossible.
  
 +
Yet opportunity for farmers is not the only socio-economic factor in the implementation of biofuel. There also needs to be a balance between food production and crops for biomass. An example of an unbalanced surge in the biomass crop was the food crisis in 2007.  Across the globe, farmers were taking advantage of the new and expanding biomass market, selling corn crops to the renewable energy sector in order to make ethanol. Because there was little regulation, and even in some cases subsidies for selling biomass-intended crops, food prices shot up<Ref>Wahlberg, Katarina. Are We Approaching a Global Food Crisis? Between Soaring Food Prices and Food Aid Shortage. 2008, http://www.globalpolicy.org/socecon/hunger/general/2008/0303foodcrisis.htm, October 29th, 2008.</Ref>. The price rise affected people and countries everywhere, but it most devastatingly affected the people of low socio-economic statuses in developed countries<Ref> http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/26/AR2007012601896_pf.html</Ref>. Despite this crisis, biomass does not have to affect people in developing countries this negatively. In fact, these countries might be well prepared to make the transition to larger scale biomass plants. This is because more conventional forms of cooking and heating used in those countries, such as firewood stoves, are part of the spectrum of biomass. <Ref>Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Biomass and Agriculture: Sustainability, Markets and Policies. Paris: OECD, 2004, p. 93.</Ref>.
  
As mentioned above, the effectiveness of biomass largely depends on its geographical placement. Since biomass on its own does produce carbon emissions, there needs to be a balance of agricultural protection (keeping crop-land, forests, other eco-systems diverse and lush) and protection against deforestation (since wood is such an excellent source of biomass).  In Middlebury, Vermont, for example, the local college is constructing a biomass plant with their surrounding eco-system in mind.  At the same time that the plant is being constructed, they have decided to focus on “sustainable forestry methods,”<Ref> Ray, Sarah, "New biomass facility to reduce greenhouse gases by almost 12,500 tons a year". 2006, Middlebury College, October 15th, 2008. http://www.middlebury.edu/about/pubaff/news_releases/2006/news632951384540792349.htm</Ref>, to combat the inevitable carbon emissions that the plant will produce<Ref> Biomass Assessment Team, "Biomass Fuel Assessment for Middlebury College" (2004)</Ref>. If planned with the nearby ecosystems in mind, biomass plants can even have a positive impact on biodiversity through initiatives such as reforestation<Ref>Faaij, Andre. "Modern Biomass Conversion Technologies.(Author abstract)." Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change 11.2 (March 2006): 335(33). Academic OneFile. Gale. Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT. 29 Oct. 2008.</Ref>.
+
==Political Implications==
  
Comprehensive plans for biomass based on specific communities and regions can also have economic benefits for farmers. In the European Union, farmers seem to be quite willing to participate, whether on a communal or continental level. However, it is up to the specific regions and communities to ensure that the crops and plants harvested by farmers, which will likely be specifically for biomass, are guaranteed to be sold or subsidized. Farmers would also need detailed instruction on how to most efficiently farm for their region, since biomass is such new territory. Generally, farmers need to be given the opportunity to succeed in order for biomass to grow on any geographical scale<Ref> Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Biomass and Agriculture: Sustainability, Markets and Policies. Paris: OECD, 2004, p. 354.</Ref>. This kind of approach has happened particularly well in Austria, where a concept called “systematic management” has been made the implementation of biomass for heating homes a success. Systematic management is a complex system that takes into account social structures of an area in order to figure out the best way to introduce new technology. Austria has used this system to introduce more than 600 biomass plants in the last 20 years<Ref>Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Biomass and Agriculture: Sustainability, Markets and Policies. Paris: OECD, 2004, p. 307.</Ref>. Although comprehensive approaches such as this are difficult to achieve, Austria has shown that it is by no means impossible.  
+
None of the benefits of biomass can be accomplished without the implementation of governmental policy. As seen in the case of Austria, biomass can be efficiently employed on a national level. Despite that, the U.S.A has been less effective in instituting renewable energies, including biomass facilities. Current legislation related to biomass includes security for farmers willing to sell to the biomass industry, as well as federal promotion and research. The Farm Security and Rural Development Act of 2002, which addresses the need for “biobased products to stimulate the initial development”<Ref>Biomass and Agriculture: Sustainability, Markets and Policies. Paris: OECD, 2004</Ref> of biomass facilities, was one of the largest recent steps in promoting biomass, yet not much has come from it.  
  
Yet economic opportunity is not the only social necessity in the implementation of biofuel. There also needs to be a balance between food production and crops for biomass. An example of an unbalanced surge in biomass crop was the food crisis in 2007. Across the globe, farmers were taken advantage of the new and expanding biomass market, selling crops like corn and sugarcane usually put on the food market to the renewable energy sector. Because there was little regulation, and even in some cases subsidies for selling biomass-intended crops, food prices shot up<Ref>Wahlberg, Katarina. Are We Approaching a Global Food Crisis? Between Soaring Food Prices and Food Aid Shortage. 2008, http://www.globalpolicy.org/socecon/hunger/general/2008/0303foodcrisis.htm, October 29th, 2008.</Ref>. The price rise affected people and countries everywhere, but it most devastatingly affected the poor in developed countries (CITATION, ethanol source). Despite this crisis, biomass does not have to affect people in developing countries this negatively. In fact, since more conventional forms of cooking and heating used in those countries, such as firewood, are part of the spectrum of biomass, these countries might be well prepared to make the transition to larger scale biomass plants<Ref>Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Biomass and Agriculture: Sustainability, Markets and Policies. Paris: OECD, 2004, p. 93.</Ref>.
+
In the 2007 U.S. Senate hearing conducted by the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, there was only one mention of biomass. In order to reach the goal of emissions cutting set by the government, all the Committee had to say was, “The use of coal, biomass, and natural gas for liquid fuels production must be accounted for in order to balance net supply against net consumption for each primary fuel.”<Ref> United States. 2007 Annual Energy Outlook: Hearing Before the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, United States Senate, One Hundred Tenth Congress, First Session, to Examine Energy Information Administration's New Annual Energy Outlook, March 1, 2007. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 2007.</Ref>.  
NOTE: I haven't included political and economic yet because I wasn't sure if that could be interweaved into the essay or made their own topic, but I have all the info.
 
  
'''NOTES: You have a lot of good information in this site as a whole, but I think you could benefit from reading what you've written out loud. I ended up getting lost a lot in some of your sentences. You know what you're talking about, so try to write it just like you would say it. By shortening up what you have and making it more concise, you would have room to write separate paragraphs on the economic/political implications of biomass use, just like what you were wondering about.  The economic and political aspects are really important, so I wouldn't try to mix them into your other sections. '''
+
However, the 2008 U.S. Presidential Election is nearing, and both party nominees present real plans to find solutions to global warming, nationally and internationally. It is likely that biomass will be a useful and effective part of either of their solutions, and in the re-ratification of the Kyoto Protocols in Copenhagen in 2009.
  
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>

Latest revision as of 18:31, 3 November 2008

Biomass is organic material that can be converted into biofuel or used to generate heat and electricity. The material used in biomass ranges from plants and trees to organic waste from factories or municipal dumps. Biomass is known as a renewable fuel because it is made from resources that naturally replenish themselves- yet it it still does release carbon into the atmosphere. However, its net emissions have a relatively small impact because biomass materials naturally release and ingest similar amounts of carbon through their carbon cycles. [1]. (I wanted to link the wikipedia of carbon cycles, but didn't know how)

In 2005, studies from the Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development, a leader in the field of biomass research,[2] concluded that approximately 10% percent of global energy consumption comes from biomass, “making biomass by far the most important renewable energy source used to date” [3]. At the same time, we know that no one solution can us to safe number of parts per million of carbon in the atmosphere, it must be a "portfolio" of options[4]. That being said, biomass could become a viable and effective way to combat global warming in the next few years, mainly because it is a technology that has already been developed. Certain obstacles, however, do need to be addressed.


Technology

The process of converting plant and crop biomass into biofuel essentially mimics the natural process of carbon cycles. When plants are alive, they consume carbon through photosynthesis, and when they die they release the carbon back into the atmosphere. This delicate balance is a symbiotic relationship – plants and trees need carbon to survive and the Earth’s ecosystem needs to maintain a certain level of carbon in order to function. Yet when humans process huge amounts of fossil fuels, such as coal or oil, it upsets the balance by releasing carbon into the atmosphere that would have otherwise been stored. Fossil fuels have an extremely long carbon cycle (hence, fossil), meaning the carbon they emit isn't neutralized by new coal and oil for a long time. Therefore, if we use biofuels instead of fossil fuels, overall carbon in the atmosphere can be reduced.

Similarly, by taking advantage of waste biomass and the inevitable carbon emissions that waste creates, methane based biofuel can be created. This biofuel does not add any more carbon to the atmosphere than the waste would naturally emit[5]. Public and industrial waste can contain dangerous toxins and release similar amounts of methane when left on its own.

More specifically, the biomass process consists of collection of the organic material, the conversion of that matter to liquid known as feedstock[6], and the subsequent conversion of feedstock into biofuel. There are many technologies to convert feedstock into biofuels; they are usually categorized into three categories based on how the feedstock is broken down. Thermochemical strategies use heat to break down the feedstock, biochemical strategies use enzymes and bacteria, while chemical strategies use chemical reactions. Specific processes are usually chosen according to the matter the feedstock is comprised of[7]. For a more detailed summary of biomass techniques, see this file: BiomassTechniques.pdf [8].

                              A Biomass plant that uses trees as feedstock (From Scotland):
                                    Biomassplant.jpg

Environmental Implications

It is difficult to assess the environmental impact of biomass on a regional or national level because each individual biomass facility is uniquely complex. Every unit draws resources from different systems, whether they be natural, agricultural, or industrial. As a result, the overall carbon output depends on how efficiently those ecosystems are used and taken care of. For instance, the carbon footprint of a biomass plant that uses forestry as feedstock can only be determined by how efficiently the facility reforests the area it takes from. [9]. Given this, what can be said about the environmental effectiveness of biofuel? First, there is more of a consensus about the need for biofuel in the transportation sector, mainly because other renewable energies lack the technological efficiency needed to power transport. Biofuel does allow for a lower net carbon stock in the atmosphere and can be implemented on a wider scale fairly easily[10].

Biomass can play an important role in two related fields: sequestration of CO2 and renewable hydropower. Sequestration is the capture of carbon that occurs after fuel has been created so that it doesn’t enter the atmosphere. If done in conjuction with biomass, sequestration could potentially solve one of its major obstacles – biomass could then be both renewable and close to carbon neutral. In fact, the combination of biomass and sequestration has the ability produce overall negative carbon emissions[11].

If hydrogen, a potentially useful renewable energy [12], is used as the feedstock sequestration from biomass can become a truly powerful force in solving this crisis. Renewable hydrogen power can be extracted through the biomass process. Since carbon is easily seperated from hydrogen[13], creating hydrogen biofuel using sequestration strategies can truly find an environmentally effective way to utilize biomass[14].

Socio-economic and Geographic Implications

As mentioned above, the effectiveness of biomass largely depends on its geographical placement. Since biofuel on its own does produce carbon emissions, there needs to be a balance of agricultural protection and protection against deforestation. For example, Middlebury College, in Middlebury, Vermont, is constructing a biomass plant with the surrounding ecosystem in mind. Simultaneously, the college has decided to focus on “sustainable forestry methods,”[15], to combat the carbon emissions that the facility will produce[16]. Through strategies similar to the one used by Middlebury College, biomass plants can even have a positive impact on biodiversity and job-creation [17].

There are many comprehensive plans for biomass based on specific regions. These plans can range from communal to continental in scale. They work to ensure that the biomass-specific crops and plants harvested by farmers are guaranteed to be sold or subsidized. The plans would also provide farmers detailed instruction on how to most efficiently farm for their region, since biomass farming techniques are not commonly known. Generally, though, farmers would happily participate in any of these plans as long as they are given the opportunity to succeed financially[18].

In the European Union the most successful plans seem to be on a national scale, both for farmers and for biofuel production. A nationally focused strategy has been implemented particularly well in Austria [19], where a concept called “systematic management” has made the implementation of biomass for heating homes a commonplace. Systematic management is a complex system that takes into account both the social and economic structures of an area in order to figure out the best way to introduce new technology. Austria has used this system to introduce more than 600 biomass plants in the last 20 years[20]. Although comprehensive approaches such as this are difficult to achieve, Austria has shown that it is by no means impossible.

Yet opportunity for farmers is not the only socio-economic factor in the implementation of biofuel. There also needs to be a balance between food production and crops for biomass. An example of an unbalanced surge in the biomass crop was the food crisis in 2007. Across the globe, farmers were taking advantage of the new and expanding biomass market, selling corn crops to the renewable energy sector in order to make ethanol. Because there was little regulation, and even in some cases subsidies for selling biomass-intended crops, food prices shot up[21]. The price rise affected people and countries everywhere, but it most devastatingly affected the people of low socio-economic statuses in developed countries[22]. Despite this crisis, biomass does not have to affect people in developing countries this negatively. In fact, these countries might be well prepared to make the transition to larger scale biomass plants. This is because more conventional forms of cooking and heating used in those countries, such as firewood stoves, are part of the spectrum of biomass. [23].

Political Implications

None of the benefits of biomass can be accomplished without the implementation of governmental policy. As seen in the case of Austria, biomass can be efficiently employed on a national level. Despite that, the U.S.A has been less effective in instituting renewable energies, including biomass facilities. Current legislation related to biomass includes security for farmers willing to sell to the biomass industry, as well as federal promotion and research. The Farm Security and Rural Development Act of 2002, which addresses the need for “biobased products to stimulate the initial development”[24] of biomass facilities, was one of the largest recent steps in promoting biomass, yet not much has come from it.

In the 2007 U.S. Senate hearing conducted by the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, there was only one mention of biomass. In order to reach the goal of emissions cutting set by the government, all the Committee had to say was, “The use of coal, biomass, and natural gas for liquid fuels production must be accounted for in order to balance net supply against net consumption for each primary fuel.”[25].

However, the 2008 U.S. Presidential Election is nearing, and both party nominees present real plans to find solutions to global warming, nationally and internationally. It is likely that biomass will be a useful and effective part of either of their solutions, and in the re-ratification of the Kyoto Protocols in Copenhagen in 2009.

References

  1. Kimes, Laura. Biomass Conversion: Emerging Technologies, Feedstocks, and Products Washington D.C, U.S. environmental protection agency, 2007.
  2. BioEnergy Trade, Copernicus Institute: the Netherlands. Oct. 26th 2008, [1].
  3. Faaij, Andre. "Modern Biomass Conversion Technologies.(Author abstract)." Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change 11.2 (March 2006): 335(33). Academic OneFile. Gale. Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT. 29 Oct. 2008
  4. Pacala, S. and Socolow, R., "Stabilization Wedges: Solving the Climate Problem for the Next 50 Years with Current Technologies". 2004 www.sciencemag.org, October 28th, 2008.
  5. Shanmugam, P., and N.J. Horan. "Simple and rapid methods to evaluate methane potential and biomass yield for a range of mixed solid wastes.(Report)." Bioresource Technology 100.1 (Jan 2009): 471(4). Academic OneFile. Gale. Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT. 29 Oct. 2008
  6. Kimes, Laura. Biomass Conversion: Emerging Technologies, Feedstocks, and Products Washington D.C, U.S. environmental protection agency, 2007.
  7. Kimes, Laura. Biomass Conversion: Emerging Technologies, Feedstocks, and Products Washington D.C, U.S. environmental protection agency, 2007.
  8. Kimes, Laura. Biomass Conversion: Emerging Technologies, Feedstocks, and Products Washington D.C, U.S. environmental protection agency, 2007.
  9. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Biomass and Agriculture: Sustainability, Markets and Policies. Paris: OECD, 2004, p. 151.
  10. "Scientists set sights on biomass to reduce fossil fuel dependence". 2006, Imperial College London. October 29th, 2008. http://www.physorg.com/news10331.html
  11. Faaij, Andre. "Modern Biomass Conversion Technologies.(Author abstract)." Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change 11.2 (March 2006): 335(33). Academic OneFile. Gale. Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT. 29 Oct. 2008.
  12. Pacala, S. and Socolow, R., "Stabilization Wedges: Solving the Climate Problem for the Next 50 Years with Current Technologies". 2004 www.sciencemag.org, October 28th, 2008.
  13. Faaij, Andre. "Modern Biomass Conversion Technologies.(Author abstract)." Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change 11.2 (March 2006): 335(33). Academic OneFile. Gale. Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT. 29 Oct. 2008.
  14. Turner, A. John,"Sustainable Hydrogen Production". 2004, www.sciencemag.com, October 28th, 2008.
  15. Ray, Sarah, "New biomass facility to reduce greenhouse gases by almost 12,500 tons a year". 2006, Middlebury College, October 15th, 2008. http://www.middlebury.edu/about/pubaff/news_releases/2006/news632951384540792349.htm
  16. Biomass Assessment Team, "Biomass Fuel Assessment for Middlebury College" (2004)
  17. Faaij, Andre. "Modern Biomass Conversion Technologies.(Author abstract)." Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change 11.2 (March 2006): 335(33). Academic OneFile. Gale. Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT. 29 Oct. 2008.
  18. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Biomass and Agriculture: Sustainability, Markets and Policies. Paris: OECD, 2004, p. 354.
  19. Rosillo Callé, Francisco. The Biomass Assessment Handbook: Bioenergy for a Sustainable Environment. London: Earthscan, 2007.
  20. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Biomass and Agriculture: Sustainability, Markets and Policies. Paris: OECD, 2004, p. 307.
  21. Wahlberg, Katarina. Are We Approaching a Global Food Crisis? Between Soaring Food Prices and Food Aid Shortage. 2008, http://www.globalpolicy.org/socecon/hunger/general/2008/0303foodcrisis.htm, October 29th, 2008.
  22. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/26/AR2007012601896_pf.html
  23. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Biomass and Agriculture: Sustainability, Markets and Policies. Paris: OECD, 2004, p. 93.
  24. Biomass and Agriculture: Sustainability, Markets and Policies. Paris: OECD, 2004
  25. United States. 2007 Annual Energy Outlook: Hearing Before the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, United States Senate, One Hundred Tenth Congress, First Session, to Examine Energy Information Administration's New Annual Energy Outlook, March 1, 2007. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 2007.