Corn Ethanol: A Health WarningPollutants emitted as a result of corn biofuel production could have serious impacts.
Switching from gasoline or corn-based biofuels to cellulosic ethanol--made from the stalks and stems of plants--could have more health and environmental benefits than previously recognized, according to a study of different types of transportation fuels.
The environmental and health costs associated with cellulosic ethanol are less than half those of gasoline and of corn ethanol, the study found. The analysis looked at the impacts of cellulosic and corn-based biofuels and of gasoline. It accounted for many possible impacts, including those from the energy used in refineries, the pollutants pumped out of car tailpipes, and the consequences of cultivating corn or other plants used to make biofuel. This is the first study to focus not just on the environmental impacts of fuels, which have already been the subject of considerable scrutiny and debate, but also on the consequences for human health. Air pollutants emitted as a result of fuel production and consumption can cause breathing problems and aggravate asthma, and have been linked to premature death. "We wanted to see which fuels are in the best interests of society to develop," says Jason Hill, a resident fellow in the University of Minnesota's Institute on the Environment and the lead author of the study, which was published online in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on February 2. Cellulosic ethanol was the clear winner in the analysis. Switching to cellulosic ethanol from gasoline could significantly reduce the amount of pollutants emitted during fuel production and consumption, Hill and his colleagues found. Ethanol burns more cleanly than gasoline, and crops cultivated to produce biofuel also absorb carbon dioxide. Cellulosic ethanol is a better alternative to corn ethanol because it requires less fertilizer than corn ethanol to produce, and there's no energy required for heat at biorefineries. Biorefineries that produce cellulosic ethanol actually generate excess electricity by burning lignin. Biofuel produced from corn grains has environmental and health costs that are equal or greater than those of gasoline, depending on whether natural gas, coal, or corn stover is used to generate heat during the production process, the study found. The findings aren't unexpected, according to Roger Sedjo, a senior fellow with Resources for the Future, a nonprofit group that conducts independent research on environmental, energy, and natural-resource issues. But he adds that they are "interesting and important." Lester Lave, a Carnegie Mellon University professor who has written extensively on energy economics, lauds Hill and his colleagues for their efforts to quantify fuel impacts. "It's a brave paper," he says. "It does as good a job as you can do at this stage." To estimate the environmental and health costs of fuel production and consumption, Hill and his colleagues focused on the two most harmful emissions: fine particulate matter, which can aggravate lung diseases and has been linked to heart attacks in people with heart problems, and greenhouse gases. They used an analysis from the U.S. EPA to monetize the health impacts of fine particulate matter, including lost work days, hospital visits, and early deaths. They also used independent estimates of carbon mitigation costs, carbon market prices, and the social cost of carbon to calculate the cost of greenhouse gases. Hill and his colleagues calculated the emissions associated with a billion-gallon increase in ethanol production and consumption, or the equivalent amount of gasoline--about the same as the rise in U.S. gasoline production from 2006 to 2007. For gasoline, the combined climate-change and health costs of that increase are $469 million, the researchers concluded; for corn ethanol, they range from $472 million to $952 million, depending on the production method; and for cellulosic ethanol, they are between $123 million and $208 million, depending on the plant material that's used to produce it. |










Comments
Where is the comparison with isobutanol or propanol, both which are superior fuels to ethanol?
Why isn't it mentioned that the ethanol industry can't survive on its own? It needs taxpayer subsidies, a tarriff to protect it from competition, and percentage mandates. Now it has asked for $1 billion in taxpayer "stimulus" money, and $50 billion in loans to build MORE ethanol plants. The industry is asking for a mandatory % increase up to 30%, despite the automakers saying it will further damage engines, and the EPA saying the environmental costs are too high.
RD
02/17/2009
Posts:125
phoenix
02/17/2009
Posts:172
z0rr0
02/17/2009
Posts:59
dtheisen
02/18/2009
Posts:4
deannagay
02/20/2009
Posts:6
rhansing
02/26/2009
Posts:40
The organic straw needs to be plowed back into the ground to increase and maintain, its organic contend. Plant one pea in clay and another in rich black soil and the results are dramatic.
rhansing
02/26/2009
Posts:40