Posted on 12/14/2007 6:39:16 AM PST by Tvrm
We know about air quality issues and the joined at the hip relationship of energy and water, but what, you ask, does dirt have to do with energy?
Nothing.
Nothing.
This is until some enlightened souls decided the way to save the plant was to provide incentives to convert biomass into ethanol, thus reducing our dependence on fossil fuel. Not a bad idea on the face of it, particularly if youre talking about converting organic wastes whose handling costs have been absorbed by existing waste management activities.
But enter the US Department of Agriculture with buckets of full of tax dollars for agribusiness buddies under the guise of saving the planet, and Ive got some serious concerns.
The benefits? There are none. I mean zero/zip with the possible exception of the pocketbooks of the agribusiness folks. Instead of increasing our energy resources, the corn-huckstering business is an energy sink, not only in terms of Btus-out versus Btus in but in a whole host of energy related markers, most of which have to do with economic dislocations.
In their study on the energy input/yield ratios from various biomass feedstocks (corn, switchgrass and wood for ethanol; soybean and sunflower plants for biodiesel) David Pimentel, professor of ecology and agriculture at Cornell, and Tad W. Patzek, professor of civil and environmental engineering at Berkeley, concluded there was .no energy benefit from using plant biomass for liquid fuel. [The report is published in Natural Resources Research (Vol. 14:1, 65-76)]
Comparing energy output with energy input for ethanol production, the study found that: corn requires 29%, switchgrass 45%, and wood biomass 37% more fossil energy than the fuel produced: while for biodiesel production, soybean plants require 27% and sunflower plants 118% more fossil energy than their biodiesel derivative.
While something in the neighborhood of 20% of the nations crop was used to produce ethanol in 2006, corn-based ethanol supplanted less that 4% of the gasoline supply (less than 3% of the energy contribution).
Okay, so energys sort of a bust how does the environment fare?
Greenhouse gases conventional wisdom hold that the carbon dioxide absorbed by the corn should balance the carbon dioxide release from the ethanols conversion to work. Nice idea, except that fossil fuels come into plan in virtually every step of the production cycle. Moreover, the nitrogen found in fertilizers often yields nitrous oxide, which as a greenhouse gas is 300 times more potent than carbon dioxide.
Water use It takes roughly 4 gallons of water to produce 1 gallon of ethanol, a number that grows dramatically where irrigation is required. The water impact is compounded by its degradation by soil erosion and fertilizer and pesticide use.
Fertilizer use Nitrogen fertilizer use is associated with increased global warming gasses and its runoff causes dead area in the sea. Nitrogen fertilizer is made from natural gas, which is in declining supply in the US.
Soil erosion the vast majority of US cropland estimates point to around 90% - is losing soil amounting to more than tenfold the sustainable rate. A case in point is the state of Iowa, whose topsoil loss is 30 times the rate of its formation. In the 150 years since plows first broke the plains, Iowa has lost half its topsoil, and the rate of loss shows no sign of slacking.
Even as we struggle with finding sustainable means of increasing energy resources to meet increasing worldwide demands, I think we all hold some level of confidence that science, ingenuity, and investment will rise to the challenge. Ditto the maintenance of our precious air and water resources.
But dirt is another matter. Unlike air and water, topsoil is not a renewable. When its gone, in human terms its really gone. When you consider that only one-seventh of the Earths surface is landmass, that of this, perhaps 60% is presently arable, and that lousy stewardship on our part is carving swathes from this at an accelerating rate, youll see that the bottom line really is the dirt beneath our feed, and that senseless, politically motivated, feel-good practices cannot be tolerated.
It's the only plant we've got.
But dirt is another matter. Unlike air and water, topsoil is not a renewable.
I hate it when my Gournal Power fails.......
I still remember talking with a soil scientist from the 30’s. They had an experiment where they plowed up hill and actually had negative erosion.............
“topsoil is not a renewable.”
I don’t know about that. The democrats produce a lot of dirt. How come they don’t go into farming, given the amount of BS they create also?
God made dirt, dirt can’t hurt.
Tvrm, Is this your comment or part of the article?
I think that's just wrong. The one little thing I like about the green movement is the Composting literature. I still use the green bin to get rid of green waste that is too hard for me to process but I've composted about twice as much into soil ammendment for my yard. It's really surprising how much mass is reduced as it decomposes. I'm a fan of Aerobic mulching.
I'm a little leary of the movement to use all the biomass for either Fuel generation or Electical generation. Using it for Electrical generation seems to produce little more than slag for road bed material, and that doesn't seem to improve soil.
Regards,
Bonehead
There are only 30 years of innovation that could be incorporated into a new one.
Regardes
Bonehead
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