All exploited from
the ethanol waste products of an existing fuel and feed infrastructure.
Not exact matches
That method could make a difference in cellulosic biofuel plants, which produce
ethanol from
waste products — corn husks and cobs — rather than edible kernels, a major advance in addressing the tradeoff of using agricultural land to grow corn for fuel rather than for food.
Ethanol fuel is produced from sugar cane in Brazil and from the cellulose of a wide variety of plants, including cornstalks, poplar trees, and switch grass, as well as
waste left over from the forest
products industry, wheat, oat, and barley straw.
The one caveat in all this is that
ethanol is partly produced from corn
waste and by -
products that is not normally used as food http://minnesota.publicradio.org/display/web/2013/08/25/business/
ethanol-plant-using-corn-
waste-moves-forward
We could adapt ALL of our over 200
ethanol plants to produce Algae from their
waste products.
So «
ethanol» too, is non-renewable, unless its very small scale and uses its
waste products for heat.
Ethanol and biodeisel will also soon be made from algae, which will be grown on (among other things) the waste products of existing corn ethanol refineries: CO2, waste heat, production power exhaust, and corn rinse ef
Ethanol and biodeisel will also soon be made from algae, which will be grown on (among other things) the
waste products of existing corn
ethanol refineries: CO2, waste heat, production power exhaust, and corn rinse ef
ethanol refineries: CO2,
waste heat, production power exhaust, and corn rinse effluent.
There are a number of new approaches to producing corn - based
ethanol, using more renewable energy in the production of
ethanol (such as methane from
waste products or wind energy).