Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
who knows for sure here? none of us are biofuel scientists and we all have to rely on what we are told or what we can research ourselves.
big business is terrified of some ideas because the same ideas could be used to generate energy locally and take power out of their hands. that kind of self serving capitalism sadly drives a lot of research: "what can we design that will give us a monopoly?"
btw: what specific 'shit' i mention? none of it was shit
actually glycerine is a very useful product and has a large number of uses:
http://journeytoforever.org/biodiesel_glycerin.html
III and Joni almost agreeing on something
run for cover the sky is falling
"When you think of it,
Lifes a bowl of ....MERDE"
Yup, high grade glycerine is marketable, but the prices are already dropping as a result of over-supply. Also, the un-processed by-product of biofuel manufacture from animal fats is far from pure. It can be made so, obviously, but the cost of doing so makes it cost-negative for all but large industrial process systems. The market within NZ is also shrinking, with Colgate Palmolive and several other major users disappearing offshore.
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
The most efficient source of bio-fuel is cellulose - trees, but at present the technology is only at laboratory level. There is research being done to see if willow saplings will work here in NZ as a source.
One big problem isthe eficency of bio-fuel vs oil. A litre of oil provides 14 times as much energy as is required to produce it. Bio-fuel provides from 0.8 to 1.2 times the amount of energy. In other words depending on how efficent your plant is, it costs more energy or at best is just above a zero sum game for bio-fuel.
Why would rational selfish humans choose bio-fuel over oil? That is the big problem.
Yes, but that doesn't mean it's the wrong option. There will be alternatives to oil/petroleum, but it's not going to happen until it's commercially viable.
At the moment none of the alternatives(as far as I am aware), can't compete with oil on a cost to produce or energy storage capability.
Personally I think that economy and effeciency (conservation I guess) are what manufacturers can concentrate on. Besides if we were truly worried about the energy thing we wouldn't be riding motorcycles or sitting in front of PCs.
Well, no we don't actually. Many people presume that because it rains all the time and that the Waikato is generally green when they're trolleying down to Ruapehu for a weekend on the piste, that there is plenty of water around for irrigating agricultural production. And our "grasslands" are basically hydroponics. New Zealand's soils are geologically new, compared to those found in other countries, and often deficient in trace elements or contain soil minerals (e.g. allophane) that lock up essential plant-growing minerals like phosphate.
It is only really the west coasts or more westerly aspects of New Zealand that have comparatively reliable rainfall. Expansion of dairying and other water-hungry production systems into east coast regions is putting increasing pressure on scarce river-run and, more worryingly, groundwater aquifers, to a point where regions like Canterbury and North Otago are already overusing available freshwater. Indeed in many instances dairy farmers are overtly wasting water.
Countries like Brazil that have been manufacturing biofuels for many years rely fast-growing tropical crops like sugar cane. New Zealand does not (yet) have even a sub-tropical climate, so let's not get too far ahead of ourselves.
We need to be firmly committed to sustainability in everything we do. And the manufacture of biofuels should be no exception.
"Standing on your mother's corpse you told me that you'd wait forever." [Bryan Adams: Summer of 69]
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