Better than corn: native grass

From an article in Scientific American: Grass Makes Better Ethanol than Corn Does:

Farmers in Nebraska and the Dakotas brought the U.S. closer to becoming a biofuel economy, planting huge tracts of land for the first time with switchgrass–a native North American perennial grass (Panicum virgatum) that often grows on the borders of cropland naturally–and proving that it can deliver more than five times more energy than it takes to grow it.

The bolding was mine. Growing native plants to help solve the energy and pollution problem. That has potential for good things in so many ways. However, we live on planet Earth. The Department Of Energy is still talking about using a GMO variety of switch grass and using petroleum based fertilizers:

But even a native prairie grass needs a helping hand from scientists and farmers to deliver the yields necessary to help ethanol become a viable alternative to petroleum-derived gasoline, Vogel argues. “To really maximize their yield potential, you need to provide nitrogen fertilization,” he says, as well as improved breeding techniques and genetic strains. “Low input systems are just not going to be able to get the energy per acre needed to provide feed, fuel and fiber.”

Even so, I think it is important to remember that most of use are blind in our daily lives to the costs of our current system. This is a step up politically from buying foreign oil. Highly GMO corn is already grown on that land and with petroleum based fertilizers. Instead we can have something much closer to the native fauna, with more energy than corn can produce for the same amount of fertilizer. If managed right it can also mean lower carbon emissions.

I wonder how switch grass compares to algae?

I read that Malaysia and Austrailia are cutting down woodlands for land to build algae ponds on. That sucks. I’m not an expert but I have the impression algae ponds can be built on waste lands, put on roof tops, or that algae can even be grown in tanks. I guess there are other factors involved, probably monetary for doing things in a more destructive way.

The key thoughts of the day are “if managed properly” and “an improvement on the current system”.

It is time for people who care to be more vigilant than ever now. The end of the domination of oil for energy is a crisis and as the old Chinese saying goes a crisis is a time of opportunity. We can use the crisis to get a better, new way of doing things or if we ignore what is going on we can get a sucky new way of doing things.

King Corn

King Corn is a documentary about two friends graduating college who decide to have their hair analyzed. Hair analysis is good for detecting anything that was taken into a body going back years. The men discover that like most Americans their bodies are made out of corn.

The friends decide to go back to their ancestral home town in Iowa and spend a year planting an acre of corn and then following their crop to see what happens to it.

Seasoned environmentalists, vegans, and those who are interested in agricultural issues will find no surprises, but the beauty of this documentary is that it is tailored to and suitable for people new to the issues.

While King Corn has the playful, fun style of most contemporary documentaries it avoids becoming a “mockumentry”. The documentary does not try to indict anyone or give a conclusion. King Corn presents the information to the viewer, being respectful to everyone involved and lets the viewer form his/her own conclusions.

If you search youtube under “King Corn” you will find some interesting interviews with the producers and you can rent “King Corn” from netflix.

Algae versus Soy

More interesting information about biodiesel from algae rather than food :

Matt’s company is taking CO2 from local industry and pumping it into specially built algae ponds, which are harvested every three to five days. While one acre of soy can produce about a barrel of biodiesel a in a year, the same land dedicated to this unique process produces between 1500-2000 barrels of B100 a year, depending on how sunny it is. Talk about solar power!