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Are Biofuels Still Economically Feasible?

thefickler writes "With falling gas prices, and the end of capitalism as we know it (otherwise known as the credit crisis), the biofuels industry is not looking as viable as it once was. Indeed biofuel production has fallen well short of expectations, with biofuel companies closing down or reducing production capacity. It appears that the industry's only hope is government support."

3 of 186 comments (clear)

  1. Re:They never were by compro01 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Corn is not the only way to make ethanol. There are far better ways. Just look at how many different sources you can make drinking alcohol from. Ethanol is the same thing, just distilled to 200 proof.

    you got whiskey (corn), rum (sugar, and you can grow sugar beets just fine in most of the US), wine (grapes or practically any fruit or berry. France actually is doing this with a lot of their surplus wine.), sake (rice), vodka (grains, potatoes), etc. All of those are potential fuel ethanol sources.

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  2. Re:They never were by tuxgeek · · Score: 4, Informative

    The biofuels of which you speak have always produced more pollution through their manufacture than they have saved through reduced car emissions, so their future is largely political, not economical.

    Typical AC, you are absolutely wrong.

    There are many companies existing right now that can turn landfill waste into bio-deisel. The process is completely self generating meaning they use energy from the process to run the system. Many designs are completely sealed systems meaning they do not vent anything into the environment.
    Google: "biodiesel from landfill" and see for yourself. Another: http://www.cleanenergyprojects.com/

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  3. Re:Are the alternatives economically viable? by MidnightBrewer · · Score: 5, Informative

    You might want to watch the story of Brazil's petroleum independence and almost total conversion to ethanol:

    http://current.com/items/89112645/the_world_s_sugar_daddy.htm

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