We all know that it takes a lot of fuel to
keep our country running, right?
Cars, trucks, planes, trains …
What if we could develop a homegrown, renewable
source for those fuels?
Well, good news — we already are!
We can create clean, renewable transportation
fuels from plants, trees, and a range of other
organic materials — in other words, biomass.
Okay, so biomass is organic material — from
forest thinnings and wastes … from crops
grown to produce energy … and from other
renewable energy sources like algae — that
can all be converted into fuels.
Scientists and engineers are finding new ways
to make biofuels that can take the place of
conventional fuels like gasoline, diesel,
and jet fuel.
Here’s where biofuels have a great advantage:
they can be made from leftovers, or waste
products.
For example, nonedible biomass sources like
wheat straw and corn cobs are often left over
from agricultural production … and some
can actually be used to create fuel.
And in the near future, crops can be grown
specifically for energy, like fast-growing
trees and grasses.
Right now, biorefineries with new technologies
are being built to convert biomass into fuel,
power, and even bioproducts like plastics,
soaps, and cosmetics.
And many biofuels can be seamlessly integrated
into existing vehicles and fueling systems
for diesel, gasoline, and even jet engines.
So, how does it work?
Essentially, biomass solids are broken down
and then refined into biofuels.
There are lots of ways to do this.
Enzymes can be used to break down biomass
into liquid sugars.
Then, microbes like yeast ferment those sugars
into renewable fuel.
Extreme heat can break down biomass, too.
When you take oxygen out of the mix, biomass
is rapidly broken down into a bio-crude oil
that can be refined into biofuels.
Add a little bit of oxygen to extreme heat,
and biomass solids are converted to a gas.
And that gas can be converted into biofuel.
As technology develops, researchers at the
U.S. Department of Energy and its national
laboratories are working to make more biofuels
more efficient.
Sustainable biomass resources, more effective
enzymes, organisms and catalysts, all help
to bring down the costs of producing biofuels.
The end result is fuel you can use anywhere
— or any way that you would use petroleum-based
fuel.
Homegrown biofuels: clean and renewable … and
a big step forward for America’s energy
security.
