Volume 4, Issue 5 pp. 479-484
Invited Opinion

Crop-based biofuels and associated environmental concerns

Keith A. Smith

Corresponding Author

Keith A. Smith

School of GeoSciences, University of Edinburgh, West Mains Road, Edinburgh, EH9 3JN UK

Pomeroy Villas, Totnes, Devon, TQ9 5BE UK

Correspondence: Keith A. Smith, tel. +44 1803 865013, e-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
Timothy D. Searchinger

Timothy D. Searchinger

Princeton Environmental Institute and Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University, M27 Guyot Hall, Princeton, NJ, 08544 USA

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First published: 07 June 2012
Citations: 47

Abstract

Current Life Cycle Analysis (LCA) models indicate that crop-based biofuels generate greenhouse gas savings, compared with fossil fuels. We argue that they do so only because they ignore the emissions of CO2 from vehicles burning the biofuels without determining if the biomass is “additional,” and because they underestimate the ultimate emissions of N2O from nitrogen fertiliser use. Taking proper account of these factors would result in very different findings. It would be far better to derive biofuels from biomass, from waste feedstocks or high-yielding bioenergy crops with low nitrogen demand, grown on currently unproductive land.

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