What is Bioethanol?
The principle fuel used as a petrol substitute for road transport vehicles is bioethanol. Bioethanol fuel is mainly produced by the sugar fermentation process, although it can also be manufactured by the chemical process of reacting ethylene with steam.
The main sources of sugar required to produce ethanol come from fuel or energy crops. These crops are grown specifically for energy use and include corn, maize and wheat crops, waste straw, willow and popular trees, sawdust, reed canary grass, cord grasses, jerusalem artichoke, myscanthus and sorghum plants. There is also ongoing research and development into the use of municipal solid wastes to produce ethanol fuel.
Ethanol or ethyl alcohol (C2H5OH) is a clear colourless liquid, it is biodegradable, low in toxicity and causes little environmental pollution if spilt. Ethanol burns to produce carbon dioxide and water. Ethanol is a high octane fuel and has replaced lead as an octane enhancer in petrol. By blending ethanol with gasoline we can also oxygenate the fuel mixture so it burns more completely and reduces polluting emissions. Ethanol fuel blends are widely sold in the United States. The most common blend is 10% ethanol and 90% petrol (E10). Vehicle engines require no modifications to run on E10 and vehicle warranties are unaffected also. Only flexible fuel vehicles can run on up to 85% ethanol and 15% petrol blends (E85).
What are the benefits of Bioethanol?
Bioethanol has a number of advantages over conventional fuels. It comes from a renewable resource i.e. crops and not from a finite resource and the crops it derives from can grow well in the UK (like cereals, sugar beet and maize). Another benefit over fossil fuels is the greenhouse gas emissions. The road transport network accounts for 22% (www.foodfen.org.uk) of all greenhouse gas emissions and through the use of bioethanol, some of these emissions will be reduced as the fuel crops absorb the CO2 they emit through growing. Also, blending bioethanol with petrol will help extend the life of the UK’s diminishing oil supplies and ensure greater fuel security, avoiding heavy reliance on oil producing nations. By encouraging bioethanol’s use, the rural economy would also receive a boost from growing the necessary crops. Bioethanol is also biodegradable and far less toxic that fossil fuels. In addition, by using bioethanol in older engines can help reduce the amount of carbon monoxide produced by the vehicle thus improving air quality. Another advantage of bioethanol is the ease with which it can be easily integrated into the existing road transport fuel system. In quantities up to 5%, bioethanol can be blended with conventional fuel without the need of engine modifications. Bioethanol is produced using familiar methods, such as fermentation, and it can be distributed using the same petrol forecourts and transportation systems as before.
In a world of permanently declining oil & gas reserves, the search for alternative liquid transportation fuels has taken on a new and heightened sense of urgency. From producers and consumers to the institutions that govern them, parties involved overwhelmingly agree that the fuel alternatives in question need to be economical, sustainable and capable of seamless integration into the existing commercial infrastructure while addressing two significant concerns: energy security and environmental impact.
A daunting task yet the solution is clear: BIOFUEL
Biofuels are recognized as the only liquid alternatives capable of mitigating the effects of peak fossil fuel decline while simultaneously addressing the world’s need for secure and environmentally friendly transportation.
The heavyweight of the biofuel industry is ethanol. A clear, clean burning, biodegradable alcohol used primarily as an oxygenate in reformulated gasoline. A superb motor-fuel in its own right, ethanol can be made domestically from renewable resources. Typically fermented from corn or sugar cane, ethanol proponents have long sought a more economical and higher yielding ethanol production path utilizing green waste feedstocks such as biogas, wood waste and agricultural residues. This search, for what many in the scientific community have deemed to be the holy grail of energy production, has been difficult. Considerable time and resources have been spent testing a host of competing technologies and production paths, however, the most promising technology to surface to date has been catalytic conversion of gasified carbonaceous material.