Sunday, November 8, 2009

Energy and Environment

Energy Secretary Chu Announces Biofuel Investment

The secretary of energy said that agriculture is one of the great resources in the United States

Posted May 5, 2009

Energy Secretary Steven Chu this morning announced that the Department of Energy is investing nearly $800 million of stimulus funds in advanced biofuel research, development, and test projects.

Of that spending, about $480 million will be directed at demonstration-scale biorefineries to help test new ethanol technologies and attract private investment. "If you look at the great resources in the U.S., our agriculture resources are one of them," Chu said. "We have an incredible capacity to grow not only the food we need" but also "a considerable amount of the energy we use."

Chu noted that the new funding, totaling $786.5 million, will be spent partly on boosting existing biofuel research as well as on new initiatives, such as an algae biofuels consortium to help commercialize biofuels made from algae.

Citing a recent government study examining the potential to convert agriculture waste into energy on a large scale, Chu said, "100 billion gallons of ethanol...would go a long way to wiping out our need to import oil." He said that corn-based ethanol was "a good start" but added that "research will lead the way to give us much better options."

Chu's announcement was part of a broader move today by the administration to unite the efforts of the Department of Energy, the Department of Agriculture, and the Environmental Protection Agency to develop and support domestic biofuels.

Under a new order from President Obama, the three agencies will form a biofuels working group. It will be headed by Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack. "In the past, we've been stove-piping all of the discussion," Vilsack said. "What the president is suggesting is the need for integration within these departments."

Reader Comments

Ethanol, as the fuel of the future!!!!

You must be joking! It takes more energy to make ethanol from corn (more energy = more emissions), so in order to save the planet by burning the so called "green fuel" we would be using up more energy and emitting more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, ironic!!!!!!!

One more piece of information, Chu's previous research was based on bio-fuels, i guess hence the bias!!! There are other technologies out there that are more energy efficient and more sustainable than conversion of corn to ethanol......

Biofuel / Biodiesel

We keep talking about ethanol, no mention of bio diesel which has multiple uses. Not only in a conventional diesel engine configuration, but in a turbine config. Turbine usage varies to scale, from something that can be the power source in a hybrid, to a city sized commercial unit.

Ethanol

If it takes more than a gallon of imported oil to produce one gallon of ethanol, how will this ever cut down on our need for oil imports?

Add your thoughts

Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our Comments FAQ.

advertisement

Crossword Puzzle

Do You Like Crosswords?

We've added a new feature to our weekly digital magazine: an exclusive crossword puzzle!

advertisement

Public Poll

Do you think the U.S. should drill offshore?

View Results

Washington Whispers

Washington Whispers

Irony in Jarrett Trip to Chamber of Commerce

Adviser Jarrett should watch for trap doors at Chamber of Commerce, a group she has slapped.

Put U.S. News on Your Site

Keep up with the latest headlines by adding our news widget to your website.
Get this widget ยป


advertisement

Use of this Web site constitutes acceptance of our Terms and Conditions of Use and Privacy Policy.
Make USNews.com your home page.