Using cellulosic ethanol in vehicles may benefit human health and environment
February 3rd, 2009 - 2:36 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Feb 3 (ANI): A new research has determined that using cellulosic ethanol as the fuel that drives our vehicles, may be much better for human health and the environment than previously recognized.
The research, by scientists from the University of Minnesota, found that cellulosic ethanol has fewer negative effects on human health because it emits smaller amounts of fine particulate matter, an especially harmful component of air pollution.
Earlier work showed that cellulosic ethanol and other next-generation biofuels also emit lower levels of greenhouse gas emissions.
Our work highlights the need to expand the biofuels debate beyond its current focus on climate change to include a wider range of effects such as their impacts on air quality, said lead author Jason Hill, a resident fellow in the University of Minnesotas Institute on the Environment.
The study is the first to estimate the economic costs to human health and well-being from gasoline, corn-based ethanol and cellulosic ethanol made from biomass.
The researchers found that depending on the materials and technology used in production, cellulosic ethanols environmental and health costs are less than half the costs of gasoline, while corn-based ethanols costs range from roughly equal to about double that of gasoline.
Total environmental and health costs of gasoline are about 71 cents per gallon, while an equivalent amount of corn-ethanol fuel costs from 72 cents to about 1.45 dollars, depending on the technology used to produce it.
An equivalent amount of cellulosic ethanol, however, costs from 19 cents to 32 cents, depending on the technology and type of cellulosic materials used.
The researchers looked at pollutants emitted at all stages of the life cycles of the three types of fuel, including when they are produced and used.
They considered three methods of producing corn-based ethanol and four methods of producing cellulosic ethanol.
To understand the environmental and health consequences of biofuels, we must look well beyond the tailpipe to how and where biofuels are produced. Clearly, upstream emissions matter, Hill said.
The research also points out that other potential advantages of cellulosic biofuels, such as reducing the amount of fertilizer and pesticide runoff into rivers and lakes, may also add to the economic benefit of transitioning to next-generation biofuels. (ANI)
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Tags: air pollution, air quality, cellulosic materials, climate change, corn ethanol, economic costs, ethanol fuel, fine particulate matter, fuel costs, gasoline, greenhouse gas emissions, harmful component, health costs, human health, jason hill, life cycles, next generation, pollutants, resident fellow, university of minnesota