17BackHome Magazine Sept/Oct 2007
Proponents of biofuels have always
maintained that sourcing energy
from domestic renewables such
as plant biomass and bio-based wastes
reduces our dependence on imported
petroleum, diversifies our energy base,
and...
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17BackHome Magazine Sept/Oct 2007
Proponents of biofuels have always
maintained that sourcing energy
from domestic renewables such
as plant biomass and bio-based wastes
reduces our dependence on imported
petroleum, diversifies our energy base,
and offers cleaner end-use emissions.
One particular biofuel—liquid biodiesel derived from soybeans, waste
cooking oil, or animal fats—has received prominent national attention and
enough investment that the number of
commercial production facilities has
grown from 65 in mid-2006 to 145 in
June of this year.
But critics aren’t so convinced.
Their
concern is that biodiesel fuel is not
sustainable on a large scale.
First, they
question whether the energy invested
in growing, harvesting, and processing
soybean feedstocks will surpass or even
approach the energy available from the
finished product.
Further, they hold
that the by-products of manufacture—
glycerin and wash water from the fuelcleaning process—have limited value
and are ess
Less