A Little Independent Energy Experiment on the Prairie
If you can fight your way through the dirt storms of Madelia, Minnesota, you may be able to find the future of renewable energy
- By Maggie Koerth-Baker
- Smithsonian.com, April 06, 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
The downside is that these two crops, and particularly corn, aren’t as great for soil and water quality as they are for farmers’ bank accounts. Corn is a greedy plant that needs a surprising amount of attention to grow. Mainly, corn needs fertilizer and lots of it. In 2007, U.S. corn farmers used more than 5 million tons of nitrogenous fertilizer. Yet while corn may have a big appetite for plant food, it’s about as efficient at “eating” as a toddler with a bowl of spaghetti. You know the kid will end up wearing as much food as she eats, and a corn field will often use as little as half of the fertilizer it’s fed. The rest sits on the soil until it’s washed away into the nearest creek by rain or irrigation.
Corn grows in tidy little rows—with tidy little root systems tucked underneath. In late May, a cornfield is still a sea of dirt, speckled with green shoots not much bigger than your average bunch of basil. When the wind begins to blow, that topsoil doesn’t stand a chance. Since the 19th-century dawn of corn farming, some eight vertical inches of Iowa have gone missing. For people who make their living on what they can grow in topsoil, this is very, very bad. The long-term professional danger to Midwestern farmers is no clearer than when one is picking particles of valuable topsoil out of one’s skin, hair and teeth. The dust storms I’d driven through on my way into Madelia were a product of corn farming. My car was caked in the lost future of U.S. agriculture.
Meschke thought she’d found the key to saving America’s prairie farmland: Third Crops. That was her term for, basically, anything that isn’t corn or soybeans. There was extra credit if it’s native and perennial. Her idea wasn’t unique. Some farmers already use a Third Crop system by rotating fields through corn first, soybeans second, and alfalfa or hay third, which helps keep the soil healthy and reduces the need for fertilizer. Yet Meschke wanted to take this further. First, she promoted planting a wider variety of Third Crops. When a lot of different plants are grown in one region, it becomes less of a Club Med for species-specific pests, which means a decreased need for farmers to buy expensive pesticides. Meschke also wanted farmers to put Third Crops on some land full time, not only in rotation schedules. Land that’s severely nutrient-deficient, land that’s sloped or has a lot of loose topsoil, and land that sits alongside creeks and drainage ditches could all benefit from the dense, water- and soil-retaining root systems of perennial plants.
The trouble for Meschke was how to make Third Crops profitable enough that farmers actually wanted to grow them. The perennials native to Minnesota’s prairie—mostly, various species of tall grasses—are fairly cheap to grow and are ecologically friendly, because they don’t need much fertilizer or irrigation, but they also aren’t worth very much. This was where Meschke’s interest in water quality and soil health dovetailed into her interest in local energy. There’s not really any money to be made in growing Third Crops for topsoil protection or to clean up a polluted stream. Meanwhile, large-scale biofuel production—which currently means corn ethanol—only adds to those ecological problems. You could grow native grasses and turn them into fuel. The technology already exists. In fact, there are many different ways to do the job. The problem is that so far, nobody’s been able to make any of those methods financially viable on a large scale—the kind of system that would allow big companies in the Midwest to produce barrels and barrels of fuel for use all across the country. To most people, that means corn-less biofuel simply isn’t ready for the real world yet. Linda Meschke, on the other hand, looked at that same problem and asked, “Why should people at Madelia worry about whether Florida has enough energy?”
A small refinery that could pay farmers for Third Crops, create some jobs for non-farmers, and produce enough fuel to sell within this one little region of Minnesota would do the trick, Meschke thought. Especially if gasoline prices continued to rise. If that wasn’t viable, she said, you could go smaller still. Even the opportunity to make fuel for their own use—a chance to save money, rather than earn it—could be enough to get at least a few more farmers growing Third Crops. Meschke supports local energy because it’s on the scale that prairie grass biofuel seems to work at, and because right now it offers the best opportunities to set the Madelia Model into motion.
Yet it’s not risk-free. The farms that surround Madelia are large, and they’re commodity-oriented, not a home for boutique cabbages. That doesn’t mean they’re corporate monoliths, though. These farms are family owned, by families who’ve lived in the region for generations. Sure, they might grow only corn. Over the decades, they might have absorbed acreage that used to house a more populous patchwork of smaller farms, but farming is still a family business and a very risk-averse family business at that. It would take three or four years, Meschke told me, to get a perennial Third Crop, such as prairie grass, established and ready for its first harvest. If a market for the grass failed to materialize, farmers would be left with a very pretty field and a big chunk of debt.
On the other hand, if the Madelia Model succeeded beyond everyone’s wildest dreams—if Madelia and the region around it became self-sufficient in fuel—it would drastically change the lives of the people who lived here. Success would change local farming. There would be an economic pressure to start growing new crops that had different needs and different growth cycles. Success would change life in Madelia. There would be new jobs, new businesses, and more consumer choices. Madelia would also be a busier town, with new residents who might be a little better off. Change, like cow pies, happens. How it happened here would depend a lot on whether average Madelians got involved in shaping the future of their community. Their silence on the matter is deafening.
Every fourth Friday at 3 p.m., Meschke told me, the city holds an open meeting designed to bring Madelia Model planners and the public together. It is a noble plan—and mostly theoretical. The meetings happen, but no more than a dozen people ever turn up.
During our interview, Meschke spoke apathetically about the low civic involvement. It didn’t surprise her. It didn’t worry her. I got the impression that were she not the driving force behind the Madelia Model and thus inherently interested, Meschke might be skipping the meetings as well. For all of her mesmerizing confidence, she held no illusions about how the grassroots grows. Most people, she said, were just busy with their day-to-day lives. They’d get interested, but only when the Madelia Model finally gave them something tangible to be interested in. “Right now, what do we have to offer?” she said.
I could see her point. The farmers I knew seldom responded well to maybe/possibly/someday. Either you do something and give us the sales pitch when it’s ready to go, or you don’t do anything, and you shut up about it. (Yoda would have made a great farmer.) “We’ve got the choir signed on,” Meschke said. “And we’ve got a tentative congregation watching to see what happens next.”
This past fall, the Madelians finally got to see some action. Ironically, their first glimpse of the future looked an awful lot like the past. Researchers from the University of Minnesota drove a pickup truck from St. Paul to the farm country around Madelia. Behind it, on a trailer not much bigger than a small camper, they towed a system that could turn just about any kind of plant or animal material into fuel. The technology was new, but the concept behind it was more than a century old.
Beginning in the 19th century, threshing machines traveled from farm to farm during harvest time. A mechanical system for separating grain from its stalk was too expensive to pick out for yourself from the Sears catalog, so the thresher was a portable business. Maybe one guy owned and operated the machinery as his job, or several farmers went in together on a piece of equipment that everyone shared. Either way, farmers paid to have their raw crops turned into something more valuable. The researchers at the University of Minnesota who want to bring a portable biofuel system to Madelia are hoping to repeat that history. Their technology, called microwave pyrolysis, is set to be Madelia’s first shot at making local energy.
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Comments (3)
Several topics that this article does not mention: How much energy goes into collecting and cooking the biomass vs. the energy output? How much Carbon is present in the liquid fuel and where does it go when burned? We desperately need alternative fuels but the bottom line will always abide by the laws of conservation of matter and conservation of energy. Simply track the Carbon and the BTU's to know if you have a real winner. There is no mention of the fact that SOYBEANS are a LEGUME that naturally fix their Nitrogen from the atmosphere. When SOYBEANS are converted to BIODIESEL there is a NET ENERGY GAIN of about 3.24:1. (Why did we loose the Biodiesel tax credit?) An analysis of net energy or Carbon cycle shows that Ethanol can't come close to the benefits of Biodiesel. In many parts of the U.S., farmers have long been using no-till practices that build soil and sequester Carbon. Crop residue stays on the surface where it protects the soil from weathering. Cover crops like Diakon Radish and Annual Ryegrass further protect the soil in the winter and recycle nutrients. It sounds like Minnesota needs no-till and cover crops. Native plants and wildflowers make good fodder for government programs and the media but if we really want to change our relationship with the planet, we need genetically modified plants - like Nitrogen fixing, drought tolerant corn and wheat.
Posted by Robbie Williams on April 22,2012 | 10:10 AM
"Charcoal is chemically made up of carbon joined to lots of oxygen molecules but" uh uh
Posted by Stuart21 on April 11,2012 | 11:24 AM
Somewhat confusing article: on page 2, the researchers are from Minnesota, on page 3, University of Michigan (maybe a collaboration?). And no links for further research. I found these: http://biorefining.cfans.umn.edu/ http://gekgasifier.com/ http://www.umb.no/statisk/umnumb/presentations/microwave_pyrolysis.pdf
Posted by John Valenti on April 9,2012 | 09:57 AM