Biofuels such as ethanol offer an alternative to
petroleum for powering our cars, but growing energy crops to produce them
can compete with food crops for farmland and clearing forests to expand
farmland will aggravate the climate change problem. How can we maximize our
"miles per acre" from biomass?
"There is a big strategic decision our country and
others are making: whether to encourage development of vehicles that run on
ethanol or electricity."
-- Elliott Campbell, University of California, Merced
Researchers writing in the online edition of the May 7 Science magazine
say the best bet is to convert the biomass to electricity, rather than
ethanol. They calculate that, compared to ethanol used for internal
combustion engines, bioelectricity used for battery-powered vehicles would
deliver an average of 80% more miles of transportation per acre of crops,
while also providing double the greenhouse gas offsets to mitigate climate
change.
"It's a relatively obvious question once you ask it, but nobody
had really asked it before," says study co-author Chris Field, director of
the Department of Global Ecology at the Carnegie Institution. "The kinds
of motivations that have driven people to think about developing ethanol
as a vehicle fuel have been somewhat different from those that have been
motivating people to think about battery electric vehicles, but the
overlap is in the area of maximizing efficiency and minimizing adverse
impacts on climate."
Field, who is also a professor of biology at
Stanford University
and a senior fellow at
Stanford's Woods Institute for the Environment, is part of a research
team that includes lead author Elliott Campbell of the
University of
California, Merced and David Lobell of
Stanford's Program on Food Security and the Environment. The
researchers performed a life-cycle analysis of both bioelectricity and
ethanol technologies, taking into account not only the energy produced by
each technology, but also the energy consumed in producing the vehicles
and fuels. For the analysis, they used publicly available data on vehicle
efficiencies from the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency and other organizations.
Bioelectricity was the clear winner in the
transportation-miles-per-acre comparison, regardless of whether the energy
was produced from corn or from switchgrass, a cellulose-based energy crop.
For example, a small SUV powered by bioelectricity could travel nearly
14,000 highway miles on the net energy produced from an acre of
switchgrass, while a comparable internal combustion vehicle could only
travel about 9,000 miles on the highway. (Average mileage for both city
and highway driving would be 15,000 miles for a biolelectric SUV and 8,000
miles for an internal combustion vehicle.)
"The internal combustion engine just isn't very efficient, especially
when compared to electric vehicles," says Campbell. "Even the best
ethanol-producing technologies with hybrid vehicles aren't enough to
overcome this."
The researchers found that bioelectricity and ethanol also differed in
their potential impact on climate change. "Some approaches to bioenergy
can make climate change worse, but other limited approaches can help fight
climate change," says Campbell. "For these beneficial approaches, we could
do more to fight climate change by making electricity than making
ethanol."
The energy from an acre of switchgrass used to power an electric
vehicle would prevent or offset the release of up to 10 tons of CO2 per
acre, relative to a similar-sized gasoline-powered car. Across vehicle
types and different crops, this offset averages more than 100% larger for
the bioelectricity than for the ethanol pathway. Bioelectricity also
offers more possibilities for reducing greenhouse gas emissions through
measures such as carbon capture and sequestration, which could be
implemented at biomass power stations but not individual internal
combustion vehicles.
While the results of the study clearly favor bioelectricity over
ethanol, the researchers caution that the issues facing society in
choosing an energy strategy are complex. "We found that converting biomass
to electricity rather than ethanol makes the most sense for two
policy-relevant issues: transportation and climate," says Lobell. "But we
also need to compare these options for other issues like water
consumption, air pollution and economic costs."
"There is a big strategic decision our country and others are making:
whether to encourage development of vehicles that run on ethanol or
electricity," says Campbell. "Studies like ours could be used to ensure
that the alternative energy pathways we chose will provide the most
transportation energy and the least climate change impacts."
This research was funded through a grant from the Stanford University
Global Climate and Energy Project, with additional support from the
Stanford University Food Security and Environment Project, The University
of California at Merced, the Carnegie Institution for Science and a NASA
New Investigator Grant.
Alan Cutler is a science writer at the Carnegie Institution for
Science in Washington, D.C.