The World After Oil
As the planet warms up, eco-friendly fuels can't get here fast enough
- By Eric Jaffe
- Smithsonian.com, April 01, 2007, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
A Bumpy Road
The technological wheels that will carry us into this post-oil world are in full motion, and no brakemen need apply. Farmers, however, might want to have their resumes handy. More biofuel production first requires more plant and crop biomass, and the agricultural industry is in the midst of such a spike. On March 30, the day Horgan and her crew split for the south, the Department of Agriculture predicted that farmers would grow more than 90 million acres of corn in 2007—the highest total since World War II.
The amount of jobs and money funneling into the American Midwest could be an economic boon, the ripple effects of which might be felt by every taxpayer, says Somerville. "We've gone from a couple to 150 corn-grain ethanol plants in 3 years," he says. He describes the tale of one farmer and his neighbor, who raised $50 million for such a plant in nine hours. "There's a fascinating re-adjustment of the agricultural economy going on right now." This agricultural renaissance could diminish the government subsidies that have supported the industry since the Depression.
Some critics have wondered whether enough land exists for this growing crop load, though most experts dismiss this concern, particularly once plants like Miscanthus gain wider use. (The crop is so efficient at harnessing energy, writes Somerville in a recent issue of Current Biology, that, in the right conditions, covering about 3 percent of the world's surface with it could satisfy all human energy needs.) If and when Miscanthus and other high-yield crops displace corn, farmers should have no problem switching to energy crops, Somerville says. "I personally think this is good socially."
For Iowa farmers, that might be true. But abroad, Miscanthus, switchgrass and similar plants might create as many problems as they solve, says Daniel Kammen of the University of California, Berkeley, which in February received a $500 million grant from British Petroleum to open an alternative fuel research facility, the Energy Biosciences Institute. Kammen, already director of Berkeley's Renewable and Appropriate Energy Lab, will direct the social impact side of biofuels when the new institute begins operation this summer. Crops like Miscanthus aren't edible, so if farmers—particularly those in poor countries—find themselves without a biofuel buyer they can't go and sell the plants to food suppliers, Kammen says. Unless those directing the biofuel market require certain amount of crops that are less efficient energy resources but can also be sold as food, we could see a repeat of the green revolution of the 1960s. At that time, an increase in food production drove up the cost of things like irrigation and fertilizer so much that rich farmers prospered at the expense of the poor.
"We can find ways to make poor people have to choose between food and fuel, and that would be a disaster," Kammen says. "We have to be better than we've been in the past."
Buying in to Biofuel
The barriers to a bio-based fuel supply start way before cellulosic ethanol plants are built and global policy is crafted. They begin in the average garage. All cars can run on fuel that contains up to 10 percent ethanol. But only 2 or 3 percent of the whole automotive fleet can take the high amount of ethanol needed to make a major difference, estimates Sandalow. "It's critical to have vehicles on the road that will take ethanol," he says. These "flex-fuel" cars can take up to 85 percent ethanol, dubbed E85. Even as major motor companies produce such cars in greater numbers—it's quite possible you have one without knowing it—only about 900 stations across the country offer E85, and the majority of them are in the Midwest (one third are in Minnesota alone).
Before people will buy flex, however, they will have to buy in to the importance of biofuel. That's why, just a week after the Greaseball Challengers headed into Central America to learn about on-the-ground biofuel programs, President Bush set course a bit further south to visit Brazil—a country with perhaps the strongest background in biofuel, and one that provides a working model for stirring national pride in the alternative fuel revolution.
The Brazilian government began promoting ethanol use in the mid 1970s to avoid rising oil prices and to create a new market for sugar, the price of which had entered a period of global decline. Almost immediately, the state loaded the country with reasons to use ethanol. They offered low-interest loans on refinery construction, signed agreements with manufacturers to build ethanol-friendly cars, even gave taxi drivers incentives to convert their fleet.
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Comments (5)
Yes the future is here.
The gas and petroleum is getting expensive at the level that other energy sources are cheaper.
We also can make the cars working with normal oil as showed in
http://vegeoil.com
Posted by Vegeoil on March 18,2010 | 08:38 PM
whats even funnier is that back in 1920 or 1930 i cant remembr which, we used to use HEMP (marijuana) for paper, OIL, and many other things untill the jelous oil compaanies spent millions of dollars lobbying to make it illegal... now look... we are trying to get rid of oil. why not use HEMP which is... grown... green... COMMON SENSE PEOPLE WAKE UP!!!!
Posted by UNKNOWN on March 18,2010 | 06:38 PM
Good article, unfortunately it is too short to address the problem of net energy produced by a fuel and it's relationship to our current oil based world economy and culture and climate change. Don't forget that we are probably at peak oil around now and may soon be on the downslope of Hubbert's curve for world oil production. If you really are interested, and not afraid, in learning what the future has a good chance of being like I would suggest reading John Michael Greer's books. He has incredible insight and rigorous discipline in his logic. Peace be with you all, jesubmar
Posted by Jesubmar on March 18,2010 | 05:39 PM
I'd like to see more detailed coverage about battery electric cars. They are already proving to be a better solution, everything can be run off the grid, or powered at home. People don't understand this potential because not enough media institutions write about it, and if they do, it's usually not fact-based or intelligently covered. I know Smithsonian can do that though!
Posted by meanderingthemaze on March 18,2010 | 01:33 PM
I believe this article is truely interesting. I never even knew half of the things, both pros and cons about oil, and our future if what is happenning to it keeps going on. It was fun to learn somthing new. Thank you, Smithsonian!
Posted by yamilette on March 18,2008 | 12:14 PM