The Strange Energy Budget of Ethanol Production 200
joeflies writes "The San Francisco Chronicle published an article regarding research on how much fuel is required to make Ethanol. The results indicate that it make take 6 times more energy than the end product delivers."
comparisons? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:comparisons? (Score:2)
"The fossil energy expended during production alone, he concluded, easily outweighs the consumable energy in the end product".
so that base is covered. ethanol is just a way to keep some farmers in business. it does cut down on smog too. but at what price?
Re:comparisons? (Score:2)
Maybe people are over reacting. Solution seems logical to me, any different ones?
Re:comparisons? (Score:2)
Re:comparisons? (Score:2)
I was about to say the same thing.
"(Ethanol production) may eat up far more energy during its creation than it winds up giving back."
Ok, sure, I won't dispute the findings. Ethanol gets us a 1/6 return in energy while with fossil fuels we get what return for investment? What's that, zero! You gotta be fucking kidding, me. When did zero become better than one sixth? How many investors would spend money on something guaranteed to not have any return on their investment over the possibility of getting 1/6th
Re:comparisons? (Score:3, Informative)
Scenario A: You dig up 1 barrel of oil. You burn the oil, VROOM-VROOM!
Scenario B: You dig up 6 barrels of oil, you use the oil to make 1 barrel of Ethanol, VROOM-VROOM!
What the article is saying is that wasting 6 barrels of oil to create one barrel of ethanol doesn't make any sense. And they are right - though you can argue whether their study is more valid than the USDA study which stated the opposite. I would look at the relative biases (the USDA gets money if they say
Re:comparisons? (Score:2)
Nitpick 2: The value of energy from plants doesn't have anything to do with their efficiency as solar cells. Any inefficiency is more than made up for when you consider that the things manufacture themselves.
Re:comparisons? (Score:5, Informative)
People seem to forget that we don't pump oil out of the ground and into our gas tanks, it requires some serious refining. I've also heard that ethanol processing essentially removes the sugars from the corn, leaving a high-protein slurry that can be used as animal feed. Since it's high in protein and low in carbohydrates it's a more efficient feed and causes lower emissions from the cows. Heh.
Re:comparisons? (Score:2)
It's called distillers grain and (interestingly enough), it has its own website: http://www.distillersgrains.org/ [distillersgrains.org]
And since no one will RTFLinkedA... (Score:2)
Fuel Energy yield* Net Energy (loss) or gain
Gasoline 0.805 (19.5 percent)
Diesel 0.843 (15.7 percent)
Ethanol 1.34 34 percent
Biodiesel 3.20 220 percent
* Life cycle yield in liquid fuel Btus for each Btu of fossil fuel energy consumed.
Re:comparisons? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:comparisons? (Score:2)
Re:comparisons? (Score:2)
If there was ever an argument to get me to go veg*an, that'd probably be it.
No reason to be exclusively vegetarian either, if you're not doing it for ethical reasons -- simply shifting to a mostly vegetarian diet can yield a lot of benefit.
[My mom used to buy "soy extended" hamburger meat when I was a kid, for budgetary reasons, but I absolutely love
Re:vegetarianism (Score:2)
On a more serious note, it would make a lot of sense to seriously cut down on the amount of meat we eat for more reasons than just the amount of energy it takes to grow it.
Re:comparisons? (Score:2)
1) Sun feeds plant production (very inefficient)
2) plants die, form coal
3) Coal is burned (again, very inefficient)
4) Heat from coal boils water, powers turbines (Oh you'd better believe that's inefficient)
5) electricity from turbines goes into power grid to homes (lots of loss there)
6) electricity powers computer (inefficient) belonging to slashdot reader at work (inefficient)
Besides, as fa
Re:comparisons? (Score:2)
A real article? Obviously you didn't read the original post. It's an article from the San Francisco Chronicle. For those of you outside of San Francisco, the Chron is a collection of press releases and marketing hype punctuated by the occasional column about some guy's cats. "Real" articles will only be found in real newspapers.
$$$ Money (Score:2)
The real future is not in corn (Score:5, Informative)
The future of energy is in superconductors (Score:2)
Currently we're far too low to be useful in an every day sort of way (around -211 deg. F I think)
[Lower energy loss means longer energy storage and more effective energy generation]
===
Fossil fuels are fossils, its time to move on up!
Re:The future of energy is in superconductors (Score:2)
Re:The future of energy is in superconductors (Score:2)
Not now.
When they are at a usable level, you won't be filling your gas tank anymore, chummer...
not particularly relevant... (Score:2)
sure, as long as there's oil, ethanol doesn't really look efficient or affordable except as a fuel oxygenator. but if the oil reserves were to run out sometime soon, ethanol could be poured into most of our existing infrastructure and ease the transition. that's why it's important -- not because it's inherently s
Re:not particularly relevant... (Score:5, Insightful)
Did you even read the article? You're missing the entire point! If the oil reserves run out you won't be able to get any ethanol to pour in your car either! Corn based ethanol requires far more energy in its production than it is capable of producing itself, almost all of which comes from fossil fuels. In fact, according to this article producing one unit of energy in ethanol requires 2.3 units of energy to produce. That's gotta come from somewhere, and right now its going to be fossil fuels.
The bottom line is that ethanol programs are, right now, nothing more than another farm subsidy. The politics such programs are beyond the scope of this article, but suffice it to say that touting ethanol as the solution to our energy problems is at best disingenuous, dishonest, and a potentially disasterous diversion from the real technologies we are going to need to maintain our current life styles in the future.
Re:not particularly relevant... (Score:3, Informative)
Fossil fuels != oil. Coal can be (and is being) used to fire ethanol plants. We have a larger supply of coal readily available - in the United States - than oil and essentially converting it to a liquid fuel (in the form of ethanol) would be useful for weaning the economy off of foreign oil.
Re:not particularly relevant... (Score:2)
Re:not particularly relevant... (Score:2)
True, but I'd be very surprised if it weren't more efficient to produce synthetic oil [americanen...ndence.com] directly from coal, rather than burn the coal to fuel the farming and distilling operations needed to produce ethanol.
Re:not particularly relevant... (Score:2, Interesting)
A more thorough article has been http://petroleum.berkeley.edu/papers/patzek/CRPS4
Re:not particularly relevant... (Score:2)
Where do you think your going to get this ethenol during an energy crisis? If it takes 5 gallons of refined oil to make 1 gallon of ethanol your still going to run out of oil to make the ethenol. And when you switch to ethenol as your power source to grow the ethenol, you'll run out of energy even faster.
Re:not particularly relevant... (Score:2)
The inefficiency of an existing manufacturing process is usually considered a reason to research it more, not to abandon it.
biodiesel and ethanol are compatable (Score:4, Interesting)
Don't forget that biodiesel and ethanol come from different parts of the corn plant. (Substitute your favorite plant) Ethanol is made from sugar/starch. Biodiesel is made from oil. You can extract the oil, without affecting how much sugar/starch is in the product. Then turn the sugar/starch to ethanol.
Don't only is this study heavily biased against ethanol by using outdated data, it ignores the biodiesel production (which is somewhat rare), and that the by products are useful in their own right.
Ethanol alone doesn't need to be energy positive (though it is - if you farm with modern methods), so long as you account for the energy left after producing ethanol.
This is flawed. (Score:5, Insightful)
He ignores the fact that, if we wanted to, we *could* arrange the production chain so that it was not dependent on fossil fuel. You could build your farming and fermentation facilities to use solar or hydro power, for example.
Sure, it's fossil-intensive *now*. But it's also not a major energy source yet. If we needed to we could clean up the energy chain - there's no part of the process that requires fossil fuel sources.
Re:This is flawed. (Score:2)
Re:This is flawed. (Score:2)
Re:This is flawed. (Score:2)
This proce
Re:This is flawed. (Score:2)
The energy must be stored somehow for use on demand. Putting it into a combustible liquid is one way. Putting into a battery is another - although at the moment the process of making and disposing of the batteries is very environmentally unsound.
Re:This is flawed. (Score:3, Insightful)
And you ignore the fact that regardless of the energy source, ethanol is *still* a net sink of energy
Re:This is flawed. (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course the Brazilian biofuel comes from sugar beat and so forth, which actually is somewhat efficient and gives a net energy win; which is why Brazil have been able to run lots of their cars on it for quite a while now.
So what this paper is really saying is not that biofuel is a waste of time, but that 'The American Government are morons' with their stupid corn-based ethanol subsidy. But you knew that already, unless you're a corn farmer.
Re:This is flawed. (Score:2)
The same reason we use high-fructose corn syrup for sweetener instead of sugar cane like the rest of the world.
It's a fixable problem, but we may have to endure a few years of the Brazilians laughing at us while we all push our cars to work for want of fuel.
Re:This is flawed. (Score:2)
Re:This is flawed. (Score:2)
Of course it would be rather open to abuse- I could rather imagine people from all around the world selling their sugar beet to Brazil; and them selling it on to the US government... :-)
Still, if you tied the buy quota to the size of the farmers field you'd do ok, together with spot checks (satellite?)
Re:This is flawed. (Score:3, Informative)
Also: Brazil isn't really a big cocaine producer. Brazil imports its cocaine from Peru. I honestly can't tell you why there isn't a big home-grown cocaine industry in Brazil.
Sorry for being pedantic. Your ultimate point is actually a solid one: "Hey, farmers around the world, maybe you can make more money growing fuel than growing drugs." Wouldn't that be nice? I dunno if it works out economically, but it'
Re:This is flawed. (Score:2)
Well, duh.
I'm not ignoring it - I know that energy is lost in state changes. But as I just pointed out to someone else, it's not the loss that's a bad thing - it's because the original Source of All our Energy, the Sun, doesn't shine at night.
We can't use solar or hydro power everywhere. We have no portable nuclear reactors for our Atom Cars. So we must used stored ene
Article end statement ignores early Iowa primary. (Score:3, Interesting)
Right there the article ignores the politics surrounding ethanol. The politics surrounding other energy sources/storage mechanisms don't have the power that ethanol backers do.
The journal article from Critical Reviews in Plant (Score:2)
This doesn't pass the smell test (Score:3, Interesting)
Also, they've been making ethanol for vehicle fuel in Brazil for years... if it was so very uneconomic I wouldn't expect them to do that.
As in, what gives? I smell politics.
Yeah, right. (Score:2)
Re:Yeah, right. (Score:2)
Looks like they grow sugarcane and other plants rather than corn, presumably grows slower, but it's probably easier and less energy intensive to process.
Re:Yeah, right. (Score:2)
Just a bit (Score:2)
Re:This doesn't pass the smell test (Score:4, Interesting)
Good nose. And when the politicians are bought and paid for by Archer Daniels Midland [admworld.com] and friends the result is government subsidies for corn-derived ethanol and a full-court press to keep Brazilian ethanol (sugar derived) out of the US (just google brazil ethanol imports).
Checking Slashdot's Sources (Score:3, Informative)
I agree, this did smell funny. So I went out and did some research.
It seems that the "scientist" in this story, Tad Patzek (a geologist), has been working for the oil industry quite a bit over the last [lbl.gov] few [berkeley.edu] years [ilcorn.org]. Odd that he should suddenly be switching his interest to agriculture and begin attacking Ethanol.
Or perhaps it all makes sense if you look at it from the correct prospective.
Mod Parent Up! (Score:2)
The Simple Solution. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:The Simple Solution. (Score:2)
When the nightly LOWS don't go below 90.
When the daily HIGHS don't go below 110 or 115.
Then bike or walk even the mile or two to the grocery store, and see how you feel. I'll visit you in the hospital where you'll be taken when you keel over from heatstroke. Oh wait, you'll be placing a burden on health care. Whoops.
Re:The Simple Solution. (Score:2)
Re:The Simple Solution. (Score:2)
When the nightly LOWS don't go below 90.
When the daily HIGHS don't go below 110 or 115.
Then bike or walk even the mile or two to the grocery store, and see how you feel. I'll visit you in the hospital where you'll be taken when you keel over from heatstroke. Oh wait, you'll be placing a burden on health care. Whoops.
As someone who has spent a lot of time living in the desert and doing various field work there, I feel fairly confiden
Re:The Simple Solution. (Score:2)
Re:The Simple Solution. (Score:2)
b) WTF are you doing living in a place you're so poorly adapted to?
Re:The Simple Solution. (Score:2)
Then I sure hope your mom like paying for gas. Oil prices seem to be trending up. Overall, there has to be a better method by just reducing one's radius of locality. Sleep/Work/Play in a smaller circle and you'll need your ass carted around less, and can bike/walk more.
Re:The Simple Solution. (Score:2)
Alternative Fuels (Score:2)
Re:Alternative Fuels (Score:2)
Re:Alternative Fuels (Score:2)
Re:Alternative Fuels (Score:2)
Dirty Little Secret (Score:2)
Ixnay. Politicians know ethanol is crap. It just gives them a better story when pushing for farm subsidies. For more information, see Homeland Defense Funding [answers.com]
In a nutshell (Score:4, Interesting)
Data about how much energy it takes to grow corn is irrelevant, because we won't be using corn. We'll be using lawn clippings, or pulverized construction waste, or re-re-recycled paper, or whatever.
Re:In a nutshell (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:In a nutshell (Score:2)
What about... (Score:2)
I smell some thermodynamics errors (Score:2)
Consider the process of making ethanol from corn. You plant some field corn and let it grow. There is some energy involved here but mostly human labor and sunlight is inv
Re:I smell some thermodynamics errors (Score:2)
Nope. Corn doesn't contain amylase or other starch-splitting enzymes, and none are produced by sprouting it, either. In brewing, corn must be mashed with a diastatic malt like barley or yo
The Strange Substance of Slashdot Stories (Score:2)
Flashy headline misses Meat of the article (Score:3, Informative)
look at the wording (Score:2)
If you look at the site a previous poster mentioned ( here [state.mn.us] ), you'll see that ethanol's energy yield is 1.34, while gasoline's is 0.805. Obviously, that is nowhere near a 6x difference.
Also, the thing about portable fuel sources vs how much energy it takes to make them gets people thinking the wrong way. I'll put it in terms nerds can understand. It's like a desktop machine vs a laptop. A des
Google for these guys, editors (Score:2)
(1) Making this case seems to be all Patzek ever does
(2) He may not be wholly unbiased.
Here's the Google search [google.com] and here's one of many interesting results... [ilcorn.org]
Re:Google for these guys, editors (Score:2)
Re:Google for these guys, editors (Score:2)
Why talk about energy, talk about money! (Score:2)
1) Let's factor out those credits. Say someone wants to make 90/10 gas/ethanol to take advantage of the tax credit. How much will the
Re:Why talk about energy, talk about money! (Score:2)
The problem with burning straight ethanol is that it will eat the rubber bits in the fuel system (at least that used to be the problem - perhaps newer cars can handle it?).
Re:Why talk about energy, talk about money! (Score:2)
Ethanol is not a problem if you car was made anytime since the late 1970s. Cars older than that had problems, but gas often contains 10% ethanol, and that is enough to cause problems. Therefore you can be sure any car on the road will have no problem with ethanol. At least as far as the rubber parts are concerned.
The problem with pure ethanol is you need a different mixture, most fuel injection systems and carburetors are set up for gas, which burns leaner than ethanol. Run E85 in a normal car for l
Re:Why talk about energy, talk about money! (Score:2)
It's difficult for us to use ethanol, mainly because we don't have the infrastructure to make, distribute, and burn it in our engines at more that 10% concentration. Yet. So that's the main problem. Switching over our cars, distribution infrastructure, and manufacturing facilities will be a huge cost. But we can look at Brazil to get some
Re:Why talk about energy, talk about money! (Score:3, Informative)
1: This is more complex than is seems. Ethanol has less energy than gasoline. (~70BTU vs ~109BTU) However ethanol is also about 108 octane (pump gas is 87-92 depending on the grade). If you assume you will never run on gas you can increase the compression, and get almost as much useable energy out of ethanol, even though your input is less.
No. It will be less (even if you up the compression as I suggested above). However even with standard compression, ethanol burns more efficient than gas, so i
Eco-econo-thermodynamics (Score:2)
Of course it's ineffecient. If it were efficient, it'd be cheap, and nobody could make money doing it, and so wouldn't do it on a scale useful to a population which is incapable of doing it for themselves.
Unaddressed is the complete cost of its use in terms of cleaning up the biosphere mess after. It's unaddressed because i
Portable vs. Nonportable energy. (Score:3, Insightful)
At the end of the day, we don't make electricity out of oil, so a process that uses electricity and produces oil/ethanol might be useful if we need oil, and have electricity to burn.
This is one of the primary justifications for things like widespread solar and nuclear power sources. Though they don't help our dependence on oil directly, by giving us a limitless/very large source of electricity, we are more able to undertake processes that consume electricity but produce oil/ethanol, helping to reduce the constraints on oil supplies.
Another good example of this is Hydrogen. Hydrogen production is important, but not because you'll run your car on it. It is used in all sorts of industry (including oil refining), and can easily be used with Thermal Depolymerization (TDP) to produce oil from all sorts of useless trash, literally. We currently make hydrogen from natural gas, so it's not worth it to use that hydrogen to make oil, but if we could make it from something else, then the whole equation changes. Lots of industry that burns natural gas or coal, or uses it chemically, could use the produced hydrogen instead, and the natural gas could be used to power vehicles, or even be directly converted into oil.
It's very much interconnected. Saving electricity doesn't really help here, as we would still be converting coal to oil, which isn't really so helpful from an environmental standpoint. Dramatic new sources of power, however, like widespread solar or nuclear allows us to convert effectively limitless energy to an oil like form, and would change things dramatically.
Once again, life is more complicated than what passes for journalism these days.
Ethanol for $13/barrel (Score:3, Informative)
TFA refutes itself! (Score:2)
This is true for biodiesel too (Score:2)
I was doing some research for a "Green Diesel" company, O2 Diesel and examine their competitors: Diesel+water, Diesel+ethanol, FT Diesel (from coal), Natural Gas (converted to diesel), Vegetable Oil. Every single time I looked at the figures, vegetable oil seemed to make the most sense. It is totally renewable, there is capacity (just about) and it has lower emissions at source(not as good as pure ethanol, but better than fossil oil) and, because your growing more foods, the total emmission cycle was signif
Re:Hmm (Score:3, Informative)
The TFA also disregards the uses of the rest of the byproducts of ethanol production (distillers grain and industrial gases).
The useful thing about ethanol and biodiesel is that we already have an infrastruc
Re:Hmm (Score:3, Informative)
No, they won't. Farmers don't grow corn they don't intend to sell, and manufacturers don't make fertilizer they don't intend to sell. Both have increased production expressly for this purpose. Without the e
Re:Hmm (Score:3, Interesting)
Corn (and soybeans) are commodity markets - so farmers will typically sell their crops into the market for what they can get. If there is an ethanol plant nearby, it reduces the basis (this is essentially the difference in the price of corn at the chi
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
Don't forget that fossil fuels had massive amounts of energy going into their production. Definitely more than 6x. It's just that we didn't have to do most of that work and that it happened on a million year time scale. I mean, we're talking millions of tons of biomass, millions of years, countless joules of solar energy, tectonic forces, etc. Not to mention the later drilling, excavating, pumping, hauling, etc. As such, the fact that Ethan
Re:Hmm (Score:5, Interesting)
Good question. In the early days of oil production, it took one barrel of oil to get ~50. Oil was easy to pump (not very deep), and of high quality (pick and choose your oilfield). Nowadays, one barrel of oil gets you somewhere around 5, less in some fields. The big exceptions to this are a few, very large, oilfields in Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and the former Soviet states. Some might find some insight into recent US foreign policy here.
Return On Energy is being affected by several factors. Oil is now deeper and stickier, and takes lots of force to suck out of the ground. The gushers have gushed. It is also of lower quality, and more energy is required to refine it.
The ROE calculation for a particular oilfield is difficult to do. Oil producers are very secretive about some numbers, so the margin of error is significant. But what is clear is that the ROE is dropping, and will continue to drop. When it hits 1:1, oil becomes useless.
I think the most interesting thing about this, is that we won't know until after the fact. Suddenly the worker will not have enough paycheck to get gas to go to work in the factory that makes refinery bits, or some convulted economic chain like that. Another reason the calculation is so hard to do.
If we were having an oil deathpool, I would guess 15 years.
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
When you are predicting your oil deathpool, you might want to google for shale oil, and its current cost/barrel.
If fuel prices stay as high as they are, shale oil starts to become competitive.
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
Even if it took the equivalent of two barrels of oil to get 1, we would still pump it! We have plenty of coal and other power sources that can run pumps (which are often electric, not oil powered). We need oil for the lubricating and plastic production.
We can make synthetic oil and plastics from other sources, but last I checked they were not as good.
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
Re:The killer ap for ethanol, right now. (Score:2)
Other ideas would be to run a huge air compressor and then produce liquid nitrogen and bottled oxygen. Whatever your power plant uses for fuel, unless its nucle
Re:The killer ap for ethanol, right now. (Score:2)
Iowa has a proposal to do this - use wind turbines to compress air (I think) into underground caverns during the winter and spring (when we have lots of wind) and draw it out to produce power during the summer (when it is hot and still). http://www.iamu.org/isep/Overview%20April%20-%20M a y%202005.ppt [iamu.org]
Re:The killer ap for ethanol, right now. (Score:2)
Well, thats an entirely different situation obviously. In that case you can't cut back on the power output so you need to shunt it or do something otherwise useful with it.
Cracking water would be pretty neat considering you'd obviously have plenty of water nearby, but on such a massive scale it might be challenging to implement.
Re:Uh... "make take"? (Score:2)