
Biofuels could increase global warming
Date: Friday, September 21, 2007 @ 23:52:07 UTC Topic: Science
Biofuels could increase global warming with laughing gas, says Nobel prize-winning chemist
Growing and burning many biofuel crops may actually raise, rather than
lower, greenhouse gas emissions. That’s the conclusion of a new study
led by Nobel prize-winning chemist Paul Crutzen, best known for his
work on the ozone layer.
He and his colleagues have calculated that
growing some of the most commonly used biofuel crops releases around
twice the amount of the potent greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N2O,
also known as ‘laughing gas’) than previously thought – wiping out any
benefits from not using fossil fuels and, worse, probably contributing
to global warming.
‘The significance of it is that the supposed benefits of biofuels
are even more disputable than had been thought hitherto,’ Keith Smith,
a co-author on the paper and atmospheric scientist from the University
of Edinburgh, told Chemistry World magazine. ‘What we are saying is
that [growing many biofuels] is probably of no benefit and in fact is
actually making the climate issue worse.’
The work is currently subject to open review in the journal
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, and Crutzen himself has declined to
comment until that process is completed. But the paper suggests that
microbes convert much more of the nitrogen in fertilizer to nitrous
oxide than previously thought – 3 to 5 per cent, which is twice the
widely accepted figure of 2 per cent used by the International Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) to calculate the impact of fertilizers on climate
change.
For rapeseed biodiesel, which accounts for about 80 per cent of the
biofuel production in Europe, the relative warming due to nitrous oxide
emissions is estimated at 1 to 1.7 times larger than the relative
cooling effect due to saved fossil CO2 emissions. For corn
bioethanol, dominant in the US, the figure is 0.9 to 1.5. Only cane
sugar bioethanol – with a relative warming of 0.5 to 0.9 – looks like a
better alternative to conventional fuels.
In the wake of the findings comes a recent
report prepared by the OECD for a recent Round Table on Sustainable
Development, which questioned the benefits of first generation biofuels
and concluded that governments should scrap mandatory targets. Richard
Doornbosch, the report’s author, says both the report and Crutzen’s
work highlights the importance of establishing correct full life-cycle
assessments for biofuels. ‘Without them, government policies can't
distinguish between one biofuel and another – risking making problems
worse,’ he said.
Read the full text of this Chemistry World exclusive at: http://www.rsc.org/chemistryworld/News/2007/September/21090701.asp
The full research paper is available here: http://www.atmos-chem-phys-discuss.net/7/11191/2007/acpd-7-11191-2007.html
Source: Royal Society of Chemistry Via: http://www.physorg.com/news109581631.html
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