Microbial Technology for Bioethanol Production from Agricultural and Forestry Wastes
Carbon dioxide accumulation in the atmosphere is a major contributor to global warming and climate change. When bioethanol is used instead of gasoline as an automobile fuel, C 0 2 emissions are reduced by 90% (Tyson et al., 1993). However, ethanol from biomass reduces net C 0 2 emissions since ferme...
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Published in | Microbial Biotechnology in Agriculture and Aquaculture, Vol. 1 pp. 459 - 490 |
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Main Author | |
Format | Book Chapter |
Language | English |
Published |
United Kingdom
CRC Press
2005
Taylor & Francis Group |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Carbon dioxide accumulation in the atmosphere is a major contributor to
global warming and climate change. When bioethanol is used instead of
gasoline as an automobile fuel, C 0 2 emissions are reduced by 90% (Tyson
et al., 1993). However, ethanol from biomass reduces net C 0 2 emissions since
fermentation C 0 2, produced during ethanol production, is part of the global
carbon cycle (Wyman, 1994). There is also potential to use ethanol as oxy
genate to replace methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE) in its capacity to reduce CO
emissions by improving oxidative combustion (Blackburn et al., 1999;
Unnasch et al., 2001). A disadvantage of ethanol is that it has only 65-69% of
the energy density of hydrocarbon fuels (Lynd, 1996). Com ethanol is being
used to supplement gasoline at a rate of up to 10% in the United States and
Canada, supported by tax incentives. For example, the US highway bill in
cludes an extension to the ethanol tax incentive program to 2007, which
adds about SOc-gal·1 to the value of ethanol for the fuel market, allowing
ethanol to sell for US$ 1.20-1.40-gal·1 (Sheehan and Himmel, 1999). Ulti
mately, technological developments must be such as to eliminate the need
for the tax incentive. Brazil is the only other country that produces large
quantities of fuel ethanol-in this case, from sugarcane. In fact, the first
major fuel-ethanol program (ProAlcool) started in Brazil in 1975, followed
by programs in the USA in 1978 and more recently in Canada (Wheals et al.,
1999). However, as in North America, only tax credits make fuel ethanol
commercially viable. |
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ISBN: | 1578083672 9781578083671 |
DOI: | 10.1201/9781482280302-19 |