Oil from algae; salvation from peak oil?
Author: Rhodes, Christopher J.
Source: Science Progress, Volume 92, Number 1, May 2009 , pp. 39-90(52)
Publisher: Science Reviews 2000 Ltd
Abstract:
A review is presented of the use of algae principally to produce biodiesel fuel, as a replacement for conventional fuel derived from petroleum. The imperative for such a strategy is that cheap supplies of crude oil will begin to wane within a decade and land-based crops cannot provide more than a small amount of the fuel the world currently uses, even if food production were allowed to be severely compromised. For comparison, if one tonne of biodiesel might be produced say, from rape-seed per hectare, that same area of land might ideally yield 100 tonnes of biodiesel grown from algae. Placed into perspective, the entire world annual petroleum demand which is now provided for by 31 billion barrels of crude oil might instead be met from algae grown on an area equivalent to 4% of that of the United States. As an additional benefit, in contrast to growing crops it is not necessary to use arable land, since pond-systems might be placed anywhere, even in deserts, and since algae grow well on saline water or wastewaters, no additional burden is imposed on fresh-water - a significant advantage, as water shortages threaten. Algae offer the further promise that they might provide future food supplies, beyond what can be offered by land-based agriculture to a rising global population.Keywords: ALGAE; PEAK OIL; FUEL; TRANSESTERIFICATION; PHOTOBIOREACTORS; PBR; RACEWAY PONDS; OPEN-PONDS; OIL; ALGOIL; OILGAE; ALGAL OIL; PHOSPHORUS; PHOSPHATE; PEAK PHOSPHATE
Document Type: Research article
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3184/003685009X440281
Publication date: 2009-05-01
- SCIENCE PROGRESS has for over 100 years been a highly regarded review publication in science, technology and medicine. Its objective is to excite the readers' interest in areas with which they may not be fully familiar but which could facilitate their interest, or even activity, in a cognate field. Science Progress commissions world authorities to contribute articles on the most interesting, important and meaningful topics - ranging from cosmology to the environment - and ensures that they are presented for the most effective use of those in both academia and industry. Truly, Science Progress publishes an eclectic mix of articles that no library can afford to be without
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