Renewable Energy Sources and Methods
Renewable Energy Sources and Methods
Renewable   
Energy
Renewable   
Energy
SourceS and MethodS
Anne Maczulak, Ph.D.
RENEWABLE ENERGY: Sources and Methods
Copyright  2010 by Anne Maczulak, Ph.D.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any 
form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, 
recording, or by any information storage or retrieval systems, without permission 
in writing from the publisher. For information contact:
Facts On File, Inc.
An imprint of Infobase Publishing
132 West 31st Street
New York NY 10001
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Maczulak, Anne E. (Anne Elizabeth), 1954 
  Renewable energy : sources and methods / Anne Maczulak.
    p. cm.(Green technology)
  Includes bibliographical references and index.
  ISBN 978-0-8160-7203-3 (hardcover)
  ISBN 978-1-4381-2748-4 (e-book)
  1. Renewable energy sourcesJuvenile literature. I. Title.
  TJ808.2.M33 2010
  621.042dc22                                  2009010352
Facts On File books are available at special discounts when purchased in  
bulk quantities for businesses, associations, institutions, or sales promotions.  
Please call our Special Sales Department in New York at (212) 967-8800 or  
(800) 322-8755.
You can fnd Facts On File on the World Wide Web at http://www.factsonfle.com
Text design by James Scotto-Lavino
Illustrations by Bobbi McCutcheon
Photo research by Elizabeth H. Oakes
Composition by Hermitage Publishing Services
Cover printed by Bang Printing, Brainerd, MN
Book printed and bound by Bang Printing, Brainerd, MN
Date printed:  December 11, 2009
Printed in the United States of America
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Tis book is printed on acid-free paper.
GT-RnewEnergy.fnl.indd   4 12/3/09   5:03:20 PM
vv
Preface ix
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction xiii
 1
Earths Energy Sources 1
Te Worlds Appetite for Energy 2
Case Study: Western Energy Crisis, 20002001 6
Renewable or Nonrenewable 8
Oil 10
Suns Energy Stored in the Earth 14
Carbon Economics 16
Our Renewable Energy Resources 20
Smart Energy Grids 22
Social Aspects of Alternative Energy 24
Energy Programs in the Global Community 26
Te U.S. House Subcommittee on Energy and  
Environment 28
Conclusion 28
 2
Recycling 31
Te Grassroots History of Recycling 33
How Recycling Saves Energy 35
Industrial Raw Materials from Waste 39
Recycled Materials Chemistry 41
High-Density Polyethylene (HDPE) 42
Minerals and Metals 44
Contents
Case Study: Recycling during World War II  46
Rubber Recycling  48
Conclusion  49
 3
GasolineAlternativeVehicles 51
Evolution of Alternative Vehicles  53
Biofuels  57
Case Study: Toyotas Prius  58
Synthetic Fuels  62
Battery Power  64
Combustion  65
Fuel Cell Technology  66
Nuclear Fission and Fusion  69
Natural Gas Fuels  70
Next Generation Hybrids  72
Conclusion  74
 4
Biorefneries 75
Todays Refnery Industry  77
Pipelines  80
Te U.S. Department of Energy  81
Case Study: Alaskas Oil Economy  84
Biorefning Steps  86
Developing the Biorefning Industry  89
Conclusion  91
 5
InnovationsinCleanEnergy 93
Alternative Energy Emerging  94
Wind, Wave, and Tidal Power  97
Solar Power  101
Solar Films  108
Hydropower and Geothermal Energy  109
Nuclear Energy  113
Direct Carbon Conversion  117
Fuel Cells  120
Conclusion  124
 6
GreenBuildingDesign 125
Building Green Comes of Age  127
Controlling Energy and Heat Flows  129
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design  
(LEED)  131
Cooling and Ventilation  138
Insulation  140
Daylighting  142
Windows Technology  144
Water Conservation  146
Case Study: Four Horizons House, Australia  147
Managing Waste Streams  150
Of the Energy Grid  151
Conclusion  154
 7
EnergyfromSolidBiomass 156
Te Earths Biomass  158
Types of Biomass  160
Te Phosphate Bond  163
Conversion to Energy and Fuels  164
 Te Energy Value of Garbage  166
A Biomass Economy  167
Case Study: Te Chicago Climate Exchange  169
Conclusion  171
 8
FutureNeeds 172
Appendixes 174
Glossary 184
FurtherResources 190
Index 199
lx lx
Preface
T
he frst Earth Day took place on April 22, 1970, and occurred mainly 
because a handful of farsighted people understood the damage being 
inficted daily on the environment. Tey understood also that natural 
resources do not last forever. An increasing rate of environmental disasters, 
hazardous  waste  spills,  and  wholesale  destruction  of  forests,  clean  water, 
and other resources convinced Earth Days founders that saving the envi-
ronment would require a determined efort from scientists and nonscien-
tists alike. Environmental science thus traces its birth to the early 1970s.
Environmental scientists at frst had a hard time convincing the world 
of oncoming calamity. Small daily changes to the environment are more 
difcult  to  see  than  single  explosive  events.  As  it  happened  the  environ-
ment was being assaulted by both small damages and huge disasters. Te 
public  and  its  leaders  could  not  ignore  festering  waste  dumps,  illnesses 
caused  by  pollution,  or  stretches  of  land  no  longer  able  to  sustain  life. 
Environmental laws began to take shape in the decade following the frst 
Earth Day. With them, environmental science grew from a curiosity to a 
specialty taught in hundreds of universities.
Te condition of the environment is constantly changing, but almost 
all scientists now agree it is not changing for the good. Tey agree on one 
other thing as well: Human activities are the major reason for the incred-
ible  harm  dealt  to  the  environment  in  the  last  100  years.  Some  of  these 
changes cannot be reversed. Environmental scientists therefore split their 
energies  in  addressing  three  aspects  of  ecology:  cleaning  up  the  damage 
already  done  to  the  earth,  changing  current  uses  of  natural  resources, 
and  developing  new  technologies  to  conserve  Earths  remaining  natural 
resources.  Tese  objectives  are  part  of  the  green  movement.  When  new 
technologies  are  invented  to  fulfll  the  objectives,  they  can  collectively 
be  called  green  technology.  Green  Technology  is  a  multivolume  set  that 
explores new methods for repairing and restoring the environment. Te 
x  Renewable Energy
set covers a broad range of subjects as indicated by the following titles of 
each book:
Cleaning Up the Environment
Waste Treatment
Biodiversity
Conservation
Pollution
Sustainability
Environmental Engineering
Renewable Energy
Each  volume  gives  brief  historical  background  on  the  subject  and 
current technologies. New technologies in environmental science are the 
focus of the remainder of each volume. Some green technologies are more 
theoretical than real, and their use is far in the future. Other green tech-
nologies  have  moved  into  the  mainstream  of  life  in  this  country.  Recy-
cling,  alternative  energies,  energy-efcient  buildings,  and  biotechnology 
are examples of green technologies in use today.
Tis  set  of  books  does  not  ignore  the  importance  of  local  eforts  by 
ordinary  citizens  to  preserve  the  environment.  It  explains  also  the  role 
played by large international organizations in getting diferent countries 
and cultures to fnd common ground for using natural resources. Green 
Technology is therefore part science and part social study. As a biologist, I 
am encouraged by the innovative science that is directed toward rescuing 
the environment from further damage. One goal of this set is to explain 
the scientifc opportunities available for students in environmental stud-
ies.  I  am  also  encouraged  by  the  dedication  of  environmental  organiza-
tions,  but  I  recognize  the  challenges  that  must  still  be  overcome  to  halt 
further  destruction  of  the  environment.  Readers  of  this  book  will  also 
identify many challenges of technology and within society for preserving 
Earth. Perhaps this book will give students inspiration to put their unique 
talents toward cleaning up the environment.
xl xl
Acknowledgments
I 
would  like  to  thank  the  people  who  made  this  book  possible. 
Appreciation goes to Bobbi McCutcheon who helped turn my unrefned 
and  theoretical  ideas  into  clear,  straightforward  illustrations.  Tanks 
also go to Elizabeth Oakes for providing photographs that recount the past 
and the present of environmental technology. My thanks also go to Jodie 
Rhodes, who is a constant source of encouragement. Finally, I thank Frank 
Darmstadt, executive editor, and the talented editorial staf at Facts On File 
for their valuable help.
xlll xlll
H
undreds  of  generations  have  relied  on  a  fairly  short  list  of  energy 
sources  to  perform  work.  Wood,  coal,  oil,  and  natural  gas  served 
well  as  fuels  for  providing  heat  and  for  cooking;  wind  and  water 
powered  sawmills  and  ships  at  sea.  But  the  human  population  did  not 
confne  itself  to  a  simple  life.  Communities  expanded  and  needed  new 
types  of  vehicles.  Tese  communities  soon  began  growing  at  a  pace 
that  outstripped  natural  resources.  Some  parts  of  the  world  ran  out  of 
resources  faster  than  other  regions,  but  they  maintained  their  strong, 
growing  economies  by  importing  materials  from  resource-rich  areas. 
Forests  began  disappearing,  and  challenges  in  mining  coal  increased. 
Crude  oil  reserves  also  became  increasingly  difcult  to  fnd  and  tap, 
and eventually scientists could calculate a future point in time when the 
worlds oil reserves would be gone.
People noticed something else as early as 1950: Te skies had turned 
heavy with pollution. Technology had certainly brought new conveniences 
to civilization, but these technologies also introduced problems to a gen-
eration  lef  with  the  job  of  fnding  ways  to  halt  the  harm  being  done  to 
the  environment.  Graduates  in  physics,  chemistry,  engineering,  biology, 
and ecology would soon be asked to accept the job of reinventing the way 
society used and reused materials for making energy.
Renewable  energy  ofers  an  advantage  compared  with  other  disci-
plines in environmental science because of the breadth of new technolo-
gies emerging every day in this feld. Although U.S. energy technologies 
once centered squarely on extracting coal and crude oil, new technolo-
gies  began  to  contribute  to  overall  energy  consumption.  Te  nuclear 
energy  industry  grew  in  the  1950s  but  over  time  its  promise  dimmed. 
Nuclear  powers  future  remains  very  uncertain,  and,  as  communities 
have  resisted  nuclear  energy  for  a  variety  of  safety  concerns,  coal,  oil, 
and  natural  gas  again  dominate  world  energy  productionthese  three 
Introduction
xlv  Renewable Energy
energy sources supply 87 percent of energy needs worldwide. Since the 
1970s,  world  energy  production  has  been  led  by  mammoth  oil  compa-
nies, coal producers, and power utilities that use either nuclear or non-
nuclear energy sources.
Te  frst  warning  of  a  sea  change  in  world  energy  supply  occurred 
in the 1970s when a newly established oil  cartel in the Middle East took 
control of the regions plentiful supply of cheap oil. Americans learned to 
adjust to new speed limits and higher prices. Later, drivers contended with 
gas rationing in which fuel purchases were limited. Perhaps the gasoline 
pump would someday run dry.
As  the  U.S.  oil  supply  from  foreign  shores  began  to  look  a  bit  less 
certain, environmental experts interjected more disquieting news. Tey 
warned, frst, that the Earths oil supply would reach a point of dimin-
ishing  returns  and,  second,  that  fuel  emissions  were  accumulating  to 
dangerous  levels  in  the  atmosphere,  enough  to  cause  global  tempera-
tures  to  rise.  Te  public  found  it  difcult  to  imagine  that  an  extra  car 
trip  to  the  store  could  in  some  way  make  the  Earths  temperature  rise. 
Many people therefore ignored the impending global climate crisis and 
continued  driving  far  and  fast,  encouraged  by  the  fact  that  the  scien-
tifc  community  was  immersed  in  a  heated  debate  over  whether  global 
warming truly existed.
In the 1990s, Vice President Al Gore spoke for a growing consortium 
of  scientists  who  had  been  collecting  evidence  of  rising  temperatures  in 
the  atmosphere.  Tey  warned  the  public  that  emissions  from  all  forms 
of  transportation,  certainly  a  large  portion  from  cars  and  trucks,  were 
accumulating in the atmosphere and interfering with the Earths normal 
heating and cooling cycles. By the end of the decade, a small number of 
automakers ofered drivers a new opportunity, that is, a car powered by a 
dual  gasoline-electricity  system.  Te  number  of  experts  concerned  over 
Earths warming trend increased, and the overwhelming majority of them 
warned  that  climate  change  was  caused  not  by  nature  but  by  humans. 
Some drivers tried the new gasoline-electric vehicles and found that they 
conserved  gasoline  and  cut  emissions.  But  this  shif  in  thinking  did  not 
sway  most  U.S.  car  buyers  or  big  U.S.  automakers  that  equated  driving 
with heavy vehicles with big engines, driven at high speeds.
It is difcult to identify a defning moment that turned the tide toward 
less-polluting  energy  sources,  but  by  the  start  of  the  new  century  most 
people had developed a fresh outlook on the environment. Te numbers 
  Introduction  xv
of  people  who  agreed  that  the  planet  might  indeed  be  warming  passed 
the numbers of skeptics. A new community emerged: People who wanted 
alternative energies for their cars, public vehicles, and houses. Renewable 
energy  sources  that  bypassed  the  need  for  fossil  fuels  became  more  than 
a  curious  idea  for  staunch  environmentalists;  renewable  energy  joined 
the mainstream. Politicians who once scofed at the notion of a warming 
planet changed course and fguratively wrung their hands over the prob-
lem of global warming. Today, any politician would be foolish to run for 
ofce without frst devising a clear and feasible energy plan for conserving 
fossil fuels.
In  1988,  the  World  Meteorological  Organization  (WMO)  and  the 
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) established a team of 
scientists,  governments,  and  policy  experts  called  the  Intergovernmen-
tal  Panel  on  Climate  Change  (IPCC).  Te  IPCC  has  taken  the  lead  in 
assessing the current knowledge on global temperatures and greenhouse 
gas buildup in the atmosphere. Ordinary citizens found climate change 
such a complex issue to grasp that they ofen overlooked the real evidence 
before them: rising sea levels, dying forests, an increase in infectious dis-
eases, and debilitated ocean ecosystems, to name a few clues. Te IPCC 
has  drawn  together  all  of  these  issues  and  communicates  the  problems, 
the unknowns, and the possible plans for bringing global warming under 
control.
Renewable  energies,  and  in  particular  low-emission  energies,  make 
up  a  crucial  part  of  the  IPCCs  proposals  on  climate  change.  By  read-
ing the organizations periodic reports on climate change, a nonscientist 
quickly learns that no single area of expertise will solve global warming. It 
is a massive problem caused by a tremendous increase in industrial activi-
ties that began with the industrial revolution. But advances in renewable 
energy hold the greatest potential for afecting a planet that humanity has 
altered.
Renewable  Energy  reviews  the  current  status  of  renewable  energy 
technologies, a critical subject since the world now increases its energy 
consumption between 1 and 3 percent every year. It covers the current 
rate of energy consumption and the consequences of continuing at this 
rate.  Te  book  explains  how  the  main  conventional  forms  of  energy
coal,  oil,  and  gascontribute  to  economies,  but  its  main  theme  is  the 
remarkable diversity of ideas that are born every day in the feld of alter-
native energy.
xvl  Renewable Energy
Te  frst  chapter  reviews  the  Earths  energy  sources  from  the  fossil 
fuels that have been depended upon for the past century to a new approach 
to  energy  production  and  distribution.  Te  second  chapter  discusses 
how  recycling  plays  a  part  in  energy  conservation  by  managing  natural 
resources and allowing industries to fnd new uses for common materials 
and  products.  Chapter  2  also  covers  new  technologies  in  recycling  and 
some of the areas where recycling can improve.
Chapter  3  covers  the  important  topic  of  alternative  fuel  vehicles, 
which will certainly be a crucial piece of a new energy future. Te chapter 
explains why new vehicles cannot be designed and produced as an isolated 
task, but rather their success depends on cooperation between automak-
ers,  fuel  companies,  and  the  public.  Te  chapter  also  describes  the  tech-
nologies behind biologically based fuels, synthetic fuels, batteries, and fuel 
cells, one of the newest technologies in alterative energy.
Chapter  4  provides  information  on  the  biorefning  industry,  which 
makes new fuels for transportation or heating by using plant-made com-
pounds, mainly ethanol. It discusses also the promise of biorefning and 
the daunting challenges ahead for this industry if it hopes to catch up with 
the fossil fuel industry. Chapter 3 also provides a special look at pipelines 
in fuel transport.
Chapter 5 describes innovations in clean energy sources that are being 
pursued  mainly  because  they  do  not  cause  as  much  air  pollution  as  fos-
sil fuels. Te chapter explains the advantages and disadvantages of solar, 
wind, water, and geothermal energies. It also follows the books theme in 
emphasizing the incredible number of options and new ideas emerging in 
these energy technologies.
Te next chapter provides a primer on new methods for constructing 
buildings  that  are  designed  for  energy  and  resource  conservation.  New 
fuels for vehicles may be consumed in the future at rates that exceed their 
production. New buildings confront the same challenge; future construc-
tion projects will increasingly adhere to principles that reduce waste, reuse 
materials whenever possible, and construct a building that will conserve 
energy.  Chapter  6  covers  the  latest  technologies  in  heating  and  cooling, 
lighting, insulation, windows, and waste management.
Chapter  7  describes  the  use  and  the  predictions  for  biomass  as  an 
important  energy  source  to  conserve  fossil  fuels.  It  covers  the  nature  of 
biomass,  why  it  acts  as  an  energy  source,  and  the  decisions  that  can  be 
made today to make biomass a valuable energy source for the future. Te 
  Introduction  xvll
chapter  also  discusses  the  emerging  business  of  buying  and  selling  car-
bon  in  international  markets,  surely  one  of  the  most  innovative  ideas  to 
emerge from the renewable energy arena.
Renewable  Energy  ofers  an  encouraging  array  of  technologies  for 
both  the  near  future  and  long-term  planning.  If  only  half  of  these  new 
technologies come into being, society will have created a very good chance 
at saving the Earth from its dangerous course.
1
1
E
nergy is the primary force in the universe. Energy defnes the Earths 
biomes  and  sustains  life.  All  life,  from  single-celled  microbes  to  blue 
whales, exists in a continuous process of consuming, using, and storing 
energy. Human communities work in the same way as other communities 
with regard to energy management. Any community consumes fuel to pro-
duce energy, but the community must also conserve some of the fuel for the 
next  generation.  Tis conservation  of  energy  sources  from  one  generation 
to  the  next  is  the  principle  behind  sustainability,  the  process  by  which  a 
system survives for a period of time. No system in biology lasts forever, and 
this is also true for sustainability. Sustainability prolongs the time that living 
things can survive, but it cannot ensure that life will go on forever.
Te Earths resources can be called its natural capital. Capital is any 
asset  that  has  value.  Natural  capital,  meaning  things  in  nature  such  as 
trees,  rivers,  coal,  and  wildlife,  must  be  managed  in  the  same  way  that 
responsible people manage their money. A person who possesses $10,000 
but spends every penny of it in a single month has not conserved mone-
tary capital. Tat person certainly will not be able to sustain a comfortable 
lifestyle.  By  keeping  a  budget  and  making  prudent  purchases,  the  same 
amount of money will last far longer; this is conservation.
A savings account containing $10,000 with no other form of income 
represents  a  nonrenewable  resource.  Once  the  money  has  been  spent,  no 
more  money  will  magically  appear.  In  terms  of  natural  capital,  Earths 
main nonrenewable resources are oil, natural gas, coal, metals, minerals, 
and land. Nonrenewable resources can be thought of as depleted when the 
energy needed to extract them from the Earth costs more than the energy 
value of the resource itself.
Earths Energy Sources
z  Renewable Energy
A  person  can  conserve  $10,000  by  getting  a  job  and  earning  money 
to  renew  any  funds  spent  each  month.  In  the  same  way,  the  Earth  con-
tains renewable resources that replenish over time: forests, plants, wildlife, 
water, clean air, fresh soil, and sunlight. Renewable resources may take a 
long time to replenishforests can take 100 years to matureor a short 
time, such as sunlight that returns each morning.
Living  sustainably  means  conserving  nonrenewable  resources  by 
intelligent  use  of  renewable  resources.  Even  renewable  resources  must 
be managed carefully or else they too can disappear faster than they are 
replaced.  Te  world  is  now  experiencing  this  very  problem  because  in 
many places forests, plants, wild animals, clean water, clean air, and rich 
soil have become depleted before nature can replace them.
Sustainable  use  of  resources  depends  on  the  principles  of  conserva-
tion and resource management. Since the 1960s, some people have known 
that conservation of nonrenewable energy sources is of paramount impor-
tance. At the same time, people must put increased efort into using renew-
able energy sources from the Sun, wind, and water. Tis chapter examines 
the renewable energy sources available today, aspects of managing these 
sources, and new technologies that will be crucial for future generations.
Tis chapter reviews the current state of energy use in the world and 
covers  specifc  characteristics  of  renewable  and  nonrenewable  energies. 
It  covers  the  ways  in  which  society  has  come  to  rely  on  oil.  It  contrasts 
such dependence on fossil fuels with the benefts of switching to renewable 
energy sources. Te chapter also includes special topics related to energy 
use  such  as  carbon  management  and  the  mechanism  by  which  utility 
companies distribute energy to consumers.
The Worlds AppeTiTe for energy
World energy consumption has increased rapidly since the industrial rev-
olution introduced mechanized production methods. However, since the 
frst Earth Day on April 22, 1970, the public has grown increasingly con-
scious of the environment and the need to be prudent in the use of natural 
resources. Te rate of energy consumption has slowed in the United States 
since the 1980s, but Americans continue to use energy lavishly compared 
with every other part of the world.
Americans  consume  about  100  quadrillion  British  thermal  units 
(Btu) yearly. (An engine burning 8 billion gallons [30 billion l] of gasoline 
  Earths Energy Sources  !
 produces about 1 quadrillion [10
15
] Btu of energy; 1 Btu equals the energy 
released in burning one wooden match.) Te United States consumes more 
energy  than  it  produces,  so  it  must  import  the  diference.  Te  following 
table shows how the United States currently uses its energy sources.
Electric power production uses the biggest portion, about 40 percent, 
of all energy used in the United States. Transportation consumes 28.5 per-
cent of the countrys energy use, industry uses 21.1 percent, and residen-
tial and commercial buildings use 10.4 percent.
Lifestyle  and  a  countrys  type  of  economics  afect  the  rate  at  which 
residents consume energy. Many of the highest energy consumers produce 
very  little  of  the  energy  they  use  within  their  borders.  Luxembourg,  for 
example, consumes a rather large amount of energy per capita, yet it pro-
duces almost none of its energy. Te countries that in the past decade have 
consistently  used  the  most  energy  per  capita  per  year  are  the  following: 
U.S. Energy Consumption
Energy Source 
Consumed
Percent of 
Total Energy 
Consumption
Main Sectors Using  
the Energy Source
petroleum 39.3 transportation; industry; 
residential and commercial; 
electric power production
natural gas 23.3 transportation; industry; 
residential and commercial; 
electric power production
coal 22.5 industry; residential and 
commercial; electric power 
production
nuclear power 8.2 electric power production
renewable sources 6.7 transportation; industry; 
residential and commercial; 
electric power production
Source: Energy Information Administration (EIA)
4  Renewable Energy
Qatar,  United  Arab  Emirates,  Bahrain,  Luxembourg,  Canada,  and  the 
United States. Te United States (as a nation) consumes more than 21 per-
cent  of  all  the  energy  consumed  globally;  China  is  the  next  biggest  con-
sumer at 15 percent. Appendices A and B list the top energy-consuming 
(crude oil) countries and energy consumption trends, respectively.
National energy appetites correlate with a countrys industrialization. 
Te International Energy Association (IEA) has estimated that developed 
countries  use  about  3.4  million  tons  (3.1  million  metric  tons)  of  energy 
sources (on an energy-equivalent basis with oil), but developing countries 
use only 1.7 million tons (1.5 million metric tons).
Te  worlds  consumption  of  renewable  and  nonrenewable  natural 
resources  can  be  expressed  by  a  calculation  called  the  ecological  footprint. 
An amount of energy as large as 100 quadrillion Btu is difcult to imagine, 
but an ecological footprint puts resource consumption into understandable 
terms. Te ecological footprint equals the amount of land and water needed 
to sustain life and absorb wastes. Tis can be calculated for a single person, 
a country, or the entire planet. Since the mid-1980s, the worlds population 
has exceeded its ecological footprint. In other words, people are consuming 
Te worlds human population has exceeded its ecological footprint by about 20 
percent. Each year, the average person on Earth uses more resources and produces more 
wastes than the planet can produce or absorb, respectively. Some of the consequences 
of exceeding the ecological footprint have already become evident: depleted fsheries, 
diminished forest cover, scarcity of freshwater, and buildup of wastes.
  Earths Energy Sources  
resources faster than the Earth can replace them. People are able to notice the 
efects of a growing ecological footprint when they see polluted water and air, 
shrinking forests and grasslands, or increasing gas and electricity costs.
Te type of energy sources used by society afects the ecological foot-
print  in  two  diferent  ways.  First,  some  resources  require  that  the  land 
be  disturbed  to  extract  the  resources,  which  produces  large  amounts  of 
dangerous waste. For example, coal mining companies sometimes remove 
entire mountaintops to get at the coal underneath, and then coal burning 
puts emissions into the air that cause global warming. Second, by reducing 
the use of resources that damage and pollute the environment and replac-
ing them with renewable and nonpolluting resources, people can reduce 
their ecological footprints. At this point in history, every individuals goal 
should  be  to  reduce  their  ecological  footprint  as  much  as  possible  while 
maintaining an acceptable lifestyle.
Countries  reduce  their  ecological  footprints  in  the  same  way  as  peo-
ple.  Countries  can  minimize  dependency  on  fossil  fuels,  encourage  the 
Oil, natural gas, and coal have provided the bulk of world energy consumption since the 
Industrial Revolution. Of nonfossil fuel energies, nuclear power currently produces about 
6 percent of world energy demand, biomass combustion 4 percent, and hydroelectric 
dams 3 percent. Renewable energies can only have a meaningful efect on ecological 
footprints if people simultaneously reduce their use of fossil fuels.
6  Renewable Energy
 development  of  resources  as  alternatives  to  fossil  fuels,  perfect  pollution 
cleanup methods, and design technology that reuses most of the waste mate-
rials that society produces. Countries also must overcome obstacles from pol-
I
n  the  warm  summer  of  2000,  the  western  United  States  experienced  a  sudden  increase  in 
energy prices, power outages, and power rationing by utility companies. Many families strug-
gled through rolling blackouts in which utility companies rationed electricity to conserve a falter-
ing power supply. In July, a Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) news release assured 
that the commission ordered its staf to conduct an investigation of electric bulk power markets 
so  that  it  can  determine  whether  markets  are  working  ef ciently  and,  if  not,  the  causes  of  the 
problems. Bulk power markets referred to buyers and sellers of electricity throughout the coun-
try. FERCs statement began the unveiling of a serious faw in the U.S. energy supply that would 
have an impact on fnancial markets around the world.
T e  western  energy  crisis  of  20002001  began  with  a  drought  that  lowered  water  levels  and 
reduced the amount of electricity that hydroelectric power plants could produce. Electricity reserves 
at  Californias  energy  utilities  fell  to  low  levels,  so  these  companies  bought  more  electricity  from 
Washington and Oregon, which had excess amounts. At the same time, the nations wholesale sup-
ply of electricity called the power grid furnished irregular amounts of electricity at varying prices. A 
crisis began to heighten. California electric companies were required by law to charge no more for 
electricity than certain predetermined prices. Companies in other states that controlled the grid, 
however, charged whatever price they liked. Californias electricity costs rose higher and higher.
California  stumbled  into  its  energy  crisis  because  in  1998  the  state  deregulated  its  electric 
industry, meaning electric supply and distribution to customers occurred on a competitive sup-
ply and demand basis. T e goal of deregulation was to decrease overall energy costs for custom-
ers. But the electricity shortage in 2000 made it dif cult for California to buy cheap electricity to 
keep inexpensive energy fowing. Utility companies began purchasing electricity at high prices as 
out-of-state electricity sellers knew they could take advantage of Californias problem. T e prices 
in  short-term  electricity  sources,  called  spot  markets,  fuctuated,  and  energy  availability  in  the 
state turned into a day-to-day emergency.
California might have weathered its energy shortfall until the autumn, but the out-of-state 
companies controlling electricity supply increased the pressure even more. Electric wholesalers 
such as Reliant Energy, Dynegy, and Enron began illegally manipulating electricity prices and sup-
ply.  Many  wholesalers  created  false  data  to  imply  that  they  too  had  run  short  of  electricity  so 
that they could claim that they were forced to raise prices. Incredibly, these companies devised 
plans to sell the same electricity over and over and invented schemes that further skewed normal 
supply and demand patterns. T e FERC investigation later explained in summarizing its fndings, 
One scheme in particular . . . is designed to create an illusion of power fowing in a circle from 
John  Day  in  Oregon  to  Mead  in  Nevada  [large  energy  utilities],  through  the  critical  congested 
[electricity]  pathways  in  California,  without  any  input  of  power  whatsoever.  Enron  and  similar 
companies sold electricity, but they failed to deliver it. By 2001, Pacifc Gas and Electric in north-
ern  California  fled  for  bankruptcy,  and  Southern  California  Edison  needed  emergency  help  to 
avoid the same fate.
Rolling  blackouts  continued  through  the  winter  and  into  2001.  FERCs  investigation  mean-
while had made progress in untangling a complicated and multibillion dollar world of buying and 
selling electricity. By the end of 2001, FERC had collected evidence of numerous irregularities by 
the energy brokers who had held California hostage to high-energy prices. Further investigations 
led to the downfall of several wholesale energy companies and jail time and fnes for their execu-
tives. Various leaders proposed that the federal government take over the nations energy supply, 
but the National Energy Development Task Force refused to stop deregulation because the task 
force felt deregulation made the economy stronger.
T e sight of wealthy executives pleading their cases to judges caught the nations attention 
more  than  the  root  cause  of  Californias  energy  crisis.  T e  crisis  illustrated  the  importance  of 
maintaining a steady, reliable energy supply to households, but the nations massive power grid 
also required diligent control. California had learned several lessons as well. It had failed to build 
enough power plants to keep up with population growth, and no one had anticipated an unusu-
ally cold winter in 2000 or a severe drought that summer that lowered water levels in reservoirs. 
Hydroelectric plants generated less energy due to the lowered water levels, but demand for power 
rose, and the crisis also made prices for natural gas rise.
T e western energy crisis ruined careers, destroyed companies and jobs, and wiped out bil-
lions  of  dollars  in  retirement  savings.  It  demonstrated  the  intricate  ways  in  which  energy  has 
become woven into state and national economies. Any future sustainable practices in energy use 
will need the support and oversight of government and good business decisions.
Case Study: Western Energy Crisis, 20002001
  Earths Energy Sources  
itics, international relationships, and the state of their economies. Te sidebar 
Case  Study:  Western  Energy  Crisis,  20002001  on  page  6  describes  how 
these factors afect a countrys ability to control its ecological footprint.
I
n  the  warm  summer  of  2000,  the  western  United  States  experienced  a  sudden  increase  in 
energy prices, power outages, and power rationing by utility companies. Many families strug-
gled through rolling blackouts in which utility companies rationed electricity to conserve a falter-
ing power supply. In July, a Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) news release assured 
that the commission ordered its staf to conduct an investigation of electric bulk power markets 
so  that  it  can  determine  whether  markets  are  working  ef ciently  and,  if  not,  the  causes  of  the 
problems. Bulk power markets referred to buyers and sellers of electricity throughout the coun-
try. FERCs statement began the unveiling of a serious faw in the U.S. energy supply that would 
have an impact on fnancial markets around the world.
T e  western  energy  crisis  of  20002001  began  with  a  drought  that  lowered  water  levels  and 
reduced the amount of electricity that hydroelectric power plants could produce. Electricity reserves 
at  Californias  energy  utilities  fell  to  low  levels,  so  these  companies  bought  more  electricity  from 
Washington and Oregon, which had excess amounts. At the same time, the nations wholesale sup-
ply of electricity called the power grid furnished irregular amounts of electricity at varying prices. A 
crisis began to heighten. California electric companies were required by law to charge no more for 
electricity than certain predetermined prices. Companies in other states that controlled the grid, 
however, charged whatever price they liked. Californias electricity costs rose higher and higher.
California  stumbled  into  its  energy  crisis  because  in  1998  the  state  deregulated  its  electric 
industry, meaning electric supply and distribution to customers occurred on a competitive sup-
ply and demand basis. T e goal of deregulation was to decrease overall energy costs for custom-
ers. But the electricity shortage in 2000 made it dif cult for California to buy cheap electricity to 
keep inexpensive energy fowing. Utility companies began purchasing electricity at high prices as 
out-of-state electricity sellers knew they could take advantage of Californias problem. T e prices 
in  short-term  electricity  sources,  called  spot  markets,  fuctuated,  and  energy  availability  in  the 
state turned into a day-to-day emergency.
California might have weathered its energy shortfall until the autumn, but the out-of-state 
companies controlling electricity supply increased the pressure even more. Electric wholesalers 
such as Reliant Energy, Dynegy, and Enron began illegally manipulating electricity prices and sup-
ply.  Many  wholesalers  created  false  data  to  imply  that  they  too  had  run  short  of  electricity  so 
that they could claim that they were forced to raise prices. Incredibly, these companies devised 
plans to sell the same electricity over and over and invented schemes that further skewed normal 
supply and demand patterns. T e FERC investigation later explained in summarizing its fndings, 
One scheme in particular . . . is designed to create an illusion of power fowing in a circle from 
John  Day  in  Oregon  to  Mead  in  Nevada  [large  energy  utilities],  through  the  critical  congested 
[electricity]  pathways  in  California,  without  any  input  of  power  whatsoever.  Enron  and  similar 
companies sold electricity, but they failed to deliver it. By 2001, Pacifc Gas and Electric in north-
ern  California  fled  for  bankruptcy,  and  Southern  California  Edison  needed  emergency  help  to 
avoid the same fate.
Rolling  blackouts  continued  through  the  winter  and  into  2001.  FERCs  investigation  mean-
while had made progress in untangling a complicated and multibillion dollar world of buying and 
selling electricity. By the end of 2001, FERC had collected evidence of numerous irregularities by 
the energy brokers who had held California hostage to high-energy prices. Further investigations 
led to the downfall of several wholesale energy companies and jail time and fnes for their execu-
tives. Various leaders proposed that the federal government take over the nations energy supply, 
but the National Energy Development Task Force refused to stop deregulation because the task 
force felt deregulation made the economy stronger.
T e sight of wealthy executives pleading their cases to judges caught the nations attention 
more  than  the  root  cause  of  Californias  energy  crisis.  T e  crisis  illustrated  the  importance  of 
maintaining a steady, reliable energy supply to households, but the nations massive power grid 
also required diligent control. California had learned several lessons as well. It had failed to build 
enough power plants to keep up with population growth, and no one had anticipated an unusu-
ally cold winter in 2000 or a severe drought that summer that lowered water levels in reservoirs. 
Hydroelectric plants generated less energy due to the lowered water levels, but demand for power 
rose, and the crisis also made prices for natural gas rise.
T e western energy crisis ruined careers, destroyed companies and jobs, and wiped out bil-
lions  of  dollars  in  retirement  savings.  It  demonstrated  the  intricate  ways  in  which  energy  has 
become woven into state and national economies. Any future sustainable practices in energy use 
will need the support and oversight of government and good business decisions.
Case Study: Western Energy Crisis, 20002001
8  Renewable Energy
reneWAble or nonreneWAble
Te  concept  of  renewable  versus  nonrenewable  resources  provides  the 
cornerstone of sustainability. Renewable resources are replaced by natural 
processes over time, but even these must be conserved so that they are not 
used  up  faster  than  nature  can  replace  them.  Conversely,  nonrenewable 
resources such as oil or minerals are formed in the Earth over millions of 
years.  Earth  can  replenish  nonrenewable  resources,  but  this  occurs  over 
eons such as the millions of years needed to transform organic matter into 
fossil fuels. Do people have any real chance to afect the entire planet and 
preserve its natural wealth? Environmentalists think everyone can indeed 
make  a  diference  in  building  sustainability  by  following  the  three  rs
reduce,  reuse,  and  recycle.  Tese  activities  conserve  both  renewable  and 
nonrenewable resources, as described in the following table.
Energy companies would be wise not to deplete resources faster than 
the Earth replaces them, a process known as recharging. However, replen-
ishment of renewable resources has become increasingly difcult because 
of  a  growing  world  population.  Although  many  factors  contribute  to 
Te worlds countries difer in energy use, per country and per capita. Tis satellite image of the planets city lights 
shows where most energy is consumed. In general, countries that produce a large volume of goods and services 
(high gross domestic product) also consume the largest amounts of energy. Te U.S. Department of Energy has 
joined other energy agencies in projecting that world energy consumption will double in the next 50 years.  (NASA)
  Earths Energy Sources  9
Renewable and Nonrenewable Resources
Renewable 
Resources
How These Resources  
Replenish Themselves
air Earths respiration and plant and animal 
respiration
animals reproduction
forests reproduction and germination
grasses and plants reproduction and germination
microbes sexual and asexual reproduction
nutrients (carbon, 
nitrogen, phosphorus, 
sulfur, etc.)
decomposition of plant and animal wastes 
followed by biogeochemical cycles
soil Earths sediment cycle
sunlight activity at the Suns core
water biological reactions, including respiration
wind climate, tides, and weather
Nonrenewable 
Resources
How These Resources  
Become Depleted
coal mining for energy production by burning
land development for population expansion
metals mining for industrial use
natural gas extraction for energy production by burning
nonmetal minerals mining and other extraction methods for 
industrial use and other commercial uses
petroleum extraction for energy production by combustion 
and industrial uses
uranium nuclear energy production
10  Renewable Energy
population growth at unsustainable rates, two important historical devel-
opments  may  have  had  the  largest  impact  on  population  because  they 
increase life span. First, the development of the microscope 275 years ago 
led  to  greater  knowledge  of  microbes  and  an  increasing  understanding 
of disease. Second, conveniences introduced by the industrial revolution 
alleviated the need for manual labor in many industries. In short, life had 
become less physically demanding, and medicine had reduced the infant 
mortality  rate  and  lengthened  life  spans.  Populations  in  developed  and 
developing  regions  began  to  undergo  exponential  growth,  which  means 
that the numbers of humans increase at an increasingly faster pace over a 
short period of time.
Exponential  population  growth  is  the  single  most  signifcant  fac-
tor  in  humans  increasing  ecological  footprint.  In  this  decade,  humans 
have been depleting resources 21 percent faster than Earth can recharge 
them. Environmental scientists ofen describe this problem as the number 
of  planet  Earths  that  people  need  to  support  their  activities.  At  present, 
humans need 1.21 Earths to support current consumption of resources.
oil
Crude oil, also called petroleum, is a thick liquid found in underground 
rock  formations.  Te  petroleum  industry  extracts  crude  oil  out  of  the 
ground  and  then  refnes  it  into  products  such  as  gasoline.  Crude  oil 
contains  a  complex  mixture  of  compounds  made  of  carbon  chains  with 
hydrogen molecules attached to each link in the chain. Extracted crude oil 
also contains small amounts of sulfur, oxygen, and nitrogen compounds 
mixed  with  the  hydrocarbons.  Te  principle  of  oil  refning  is  to  remove 
crude oils impurities, that is, anything that is not a hydrocarbon.
Oil refneries clean up crude oil by heating it to drive of the impuri-
ties. Tis heating step to purify a liquid is called distillation. Light, vola-
tile (easily vaporized) materials such as gases leave crude oil frst, and the 
least volatile components, such as asphalt, remain in the mixture the lon-
gest. Refneries recover the following components from crude oil, listed 
from the most to the least volatile: gases, gasoline, aviation fuel, heating 
oil, diesel oil, naptha solvents, greases, lubricants, waxes, and asphalt.
Refneries  further  distill  some  of  the  components  to  collect  specifc 
chemicals  called  petrochemicals.  Diferent  industries  have  a  need  for 
  Earths Energy Sources  11
 specifc  petrochemicals  that  vary  mainly  by  the  types  of  hydrocarbons 
they contain. Petrochemicals currently go into the production of the fol-
lowing  materials:  organic  solvents,  pesticides,  plastics,  synthetic  fbers, 
paints, and some medicines.
Present  global  crude  oil  reserves  still  contain  enough  to  last  several 
decades.  At  some  point,  however,  fnding  new  reserves,  drilling,  and 
extracting the oil will not occur fast enough to meet the worlds oil appe-
tite. Te United States reached that critical point about 1970 when crude 
oil  production  for  the  frst  time  stopped  increasing  in  this  country  and 
began declining. Te United States turned to imports from Saudi Arabia, 
Mexico, Canada, Venezuela, Nigeria, and Iraq, plus small amounts from 
other countries, to make up the diference. Overall, U.S. oil supplies come 
from the places listed in the following table. Te rest of U.S. oil require-
ments  come  from  domestic  sources  mainly  in  the  Gulf  of  Mexico.  Of 
all U.S. oil production, the Gulf of Mexico supplies more than twice the 
amount of oil from any other region.
Crude oil exploration, extraction, and refning make up a multitrillion dollar 
industry. Te United States has 33 oil refneries employing more than 65,000 people. 
Service stations employ another 100,000 workers. Any transition to new fuels must 
be coordinated with the oil industry in order to protect world economies. Many 
scientists have considered new uses for refneries, perhaps by modifying operations 
to make natural gas or biomass fuels.
1z  Renewable Energy
Te exact amount of crude oil in the worlds oil reserves has not been 
determined even though experts have tried various methods to calculate 
the remaining volume. Author Sonia Shah pointed out in her 2004 book 
Crude:  Te  Story  of  Oil,  Te  size  of  oil  reserves  is  generally  calculated 
Sources of U.S. Crude Oil, 2008
Region
Percent of 
Total U.S. 
Consumption
Individual Regions 
Contributing at Least  
10 Percent 
(Percent of total imports from 
the regions main suppliers in 
parentheses)
major sources
North America 33.56 Canada (52); Mexico (38); United 
States (7)
Africa 19.95 Nigeria (42); Algeria (24); Angola 
(20)
Middle East 17.05 Saudi Arabia (64); Iraq (24); Kuwait 
(10)
South America 15.98 Venezuela (66); Ecuador (13);
Europe 11.54 Russia (24); United Kingdom (18); 
Netherlands (13); Norway (13)
minor sources
Asia 1.86 Vietnam (2); Azerbaijan (1); China 
(1)
Oceania (Australia, 
New Zealand, 
Pacifc islands)
0.06 Australia (100)
Source: Jon Udell
  Earths Energy Sources  1!
by  reservoir  engineers  employed  by  oil  companies.  Once  oil  companies 
determine what they believe is an accurate calculation of an oil reserves 
size,  these  companies  may  be  reluctant  to  make  the  information  public 
for the three following reasons: (1) to protect the status of their countrys 
oil import or export activities, (2) to better control fuel prices, and (3) to 
protect national security.
Estimating an oil reserve starts by drilling an appraisal well to gauge 
the extent of the underground reserve and to sample underground rock 
for  geologists  to  study.  Geologists  can  make  predictions  on  the  prob-
ability  of  fnding  oil  based  on  the  constituents  of  rock.  Yet  even  with 
the  most  sensitive  statistical  tests  and  the  most  advanced  petrochemis-
try, Shah wrote, what the oily samples on the lab table reveal about the 
formations  under  the  ground  is  limited.  Petrochemistry  is  a  specialty 
in chemistry related to the characteristics of compounds found in crude 
oil.  Shah  also  quoted  petroleum  geologist  Robert  Stoneley  of  the  Royal 
School of Mines in London, England: Until we have actually produced 
all  of  the  oil  that  we  ever  shall,  we  are  involved  with  a  greater  or  less 
degree  of  uncertainty.  To  complicate  matters,  oil  companies  change 
their fndings over time as they use more sophisticated methods to cal-
culate  oil  reserves,  and  countries  may  hedge  the  truth  about  their  oil 
reserves for political reasons.
Despite the unknowns regarding oil reserves, scientists and nonscien-
tists can agree on the following features of world crude oil:
 Te following nations hold the largest oil reserves, in order: 
Saudi  Arabia,  Canada,  Iran,  Iraq,  United  Arab  Emirates, 
Kuwait, Venezuela, Russia, Libya, and Nigeria.
 Te  United  States  consumes  the  most  oil  (almost  21  mil-
lion  barrels  per  day),  about  three  times  the  next  largest 
consumer.
 China and Japan consume the next largest volumes, more 
than 7 and 5 million daily barrels, respectively.
 Saudi Arabia holds the largest oil reserves, about 262 billion 
barrels, followed by Canada with about 180 billion barrels.
 Te  U.S.  oil  consumption  gap  is  increasing,  which  makes 
the country more dependent on oil imports and fuels that 
replace oil.
14  Renewable Energy
Of  all  countries  in  the  world,  the  United  States  has  the  largest  and 
fastest-growing consumption gap, calculated as follows:
oil consumption  oil production = consumption gap
China  follows  closely  behind  the  United  States  in  oil  consumption, 
and since 1993 China has also become an oil importer because its reserves 
cannot meet its demand. Even the vast oil felds in eastern China have been 
declining  since  1980.  As  oil-producing  countries  fnd  their  oil  reserves 
more and more difcult to reach, alternative fuels become a critical need. 
Te decision to emphasize alternative and renewable energy sources there-
fore can be attributed to two factors: (1) the pollution caused by burning 
petroleum fuels, and (2) the inevitable decline of oil reserves.
suns energy sTored in The eArTh
Te energy stored in the Earths crude oil originally came from the Sun. Over 
thousands of years, generation upon generation of all types of life on Earth 
thrived, died, and then decomposed. Te decomposed organic matter accu-
mulated under the Earths oceans and migrated into deep sediments. Te 
Earths mantle exerted tremendous pressure on these organic compounds 
and the carbon-hydrogen substances became liquidthe oil reserves peo-
ple depend on today. Humans cannot replicate the process by which Earth 
formed crude oil, but they can develop other ways to take advantage of the 
ultimate source of all the energy, in all its forms, on Earth today, the Sun.
Life  on  Earth  uses  the  Suns  energy  either  in  an  indirect  or  direct 
manner. Te worlds oil reserves have stored the Suns energy for millions 
of  years  as  a  complex  mixture  of  carbon  compounds.  When  people  use 
refned petroleum products to run engines, they are using the Suns energy 
indirectly. By contrast, a house heated by sunlight coming in through win-
dows is using the Suns energy in a direct manner.
Energy is the ability to do work. Walking, typing on a keyboard, and 
heating  a  room  are  examples  of  actions  that  require  energy.  Civilization 
has devised ways to use the Suns energy that the Earth stores in the fol-
lowing six forms:
electrical energy from the fow of electrons
mechanical energy in things such as engines
light or radiant energy from the Sun
Th e Electromagnetic Spectrum
Electromagnetic 
Wave Type
Approximate 
Wavelength  
Range (m)
General Energy 
Content
cosmic <10
14
very high
gamma 10
14
 to 10
12
high
X-rays 10
12
 to 10
8
high
far ultraviolet 10
8
 to 10
7
high
near ultraviolet 10
7
 to 10
6
moderately high
visible light 10
6
 to 10
5
moderate
near infrared 10
5
moderately low
far infrared 10
5
 to 10
3
low
microwave 10
3
 to 10
2
low
television 10
2
 to 10
1
very low
radio 1 very low
16  Renewable Energy
Te  Suns  electromagnetic  radiation  originates  from  nuclear  fusion 
reactions  in  which  enormous  amounts  of  hydrogen  gas  break  apart  to 
form  helium  and  energy.  Up  to  99  percent  of  the  hydrogen  combines  to 
form  helium  molecules  and  only  1  percent  of  the  fusion  reactions  pro-
duce  energy  available  to  the  solar  system.  Tat  small  percentage  of  the 
Suns total energy nonetheless represents a tremendous amount of energy. 
Te Sun produces 386
33
 ergs of energy per second equivalent to 386  10
18
 
megawatts. To put these units of energy into perspective, the explosion of 
2.2 pounds (1 kg) of TNT releases 1 megawatt of energy.
Te Sun emits energy as gamma rays, which travel outward into space. 
As  the  gamma  rays  travel  toward  Earth,  they  lose  energy  in  the  form  of 
heat. By the time the Suns radiation reaches Earth, the gamma rays have 
been transformed to radiation mainly in the visible range of light, meaning 
light that people can see. Photosynthetic organismsplant life and some 
microbescapture  the  Suns  radiant  energy,  called  solar  energy,  when 
sunlight hits the Earths surface. Te Earth stores solar energy in chemi-
cal bonds produced during photosynthesis. Plants use part of this energy. 
Animals that eat the plants or photosynthetic microbes then receive their 
energy.  When  larger  animals  prey  on  smaller  animals,  the  predators  get 
a portion of the solar energy and so on until solar energy transfers up an 
entire food chain. Animals use the energy for moving, breathing, think-
ing, and functions that keep them alive. At each point in which the Suns 
energy transfers from one type of living thing to another, a small amount 
of energy dissipates as heat. Tis gradual loss of the Suns energy follows 
the second law of thermodynamics, which states that some energy is lost 
whenever energy changes from one type to another.
A person, a plant, or a microbe cannot transfer solar energy as a ball 
of light, so living things use another type of currency to move energy from 
organism to organism. Te element carbon serves as this currency. Pho-
tosynthesis  builds  carbon-containing  compounds,  called  organic  com-
pounds, to store energy. When animals eat plants or other animals, they 
get most of the energy they need from organic compounds.
CArbon eConomiCs
Carbon is the sixth most abundant element on Earth but represents only 
0.09 percent of the mass of the Earths crust. Carbon occurs naturally in 
all living cells and is a main component in proteins, fats, carbohydrates, 
  Earths Energy Sources  1
nucleic acids (deoxyribonucleic acid [DNA] and ribonucleic acid [RNA]), 
and  vitamins.  In  fact,  of  all  life-sustaining  compounds  on  Earth,  only 
mineral salts, water, and oxygen gas lack carbon. Te Earths fossil fuels
coal,  oil,  and  natural  gasalso  contain  carbon  as  their  main  element 
because they originally came from living things millions of years ago. On 
the Earths surface, forests, the ocean, and fossil fuels act as the main car-
bon stores.
Humans are like any other living organism; they cannot exist with-
out carbon. Carbon therefore has become a valuable commodity in soci-
ety. However, it also brings two harms to the environment. First, carbon 
in the form of the gases carbon dioxide (CO
2
) or methane (CH
4
) makes 
up  part  of  the  atmospheres  greenhouse  gases.  Greenhouse  gases  have 
aided  life  throughout  the  Earths  history  by  holding  in  the  Suns  heat 
energy and making the planet a temperate place for life to evolve. Since 
about 1900, however, greenhouse gases have built up in the atmosphere 
and  caused  average  global  temperatures  to  rise.  Second,  carbon  com-
pounds  given  of  in  the  combustion  of  fossil  fuels  combine  with  other 
elements in the atmosphere to form acids that lead to acid rain. Acid rain 
has had very damaging efects on plant and tree health and the normal 
chemical conditions in the ocean. Te Earths carbon therefore presents 
people with a dilemma: People need carbon as a nutrient, but they must 
take care to manage the use of carbon compounds to avoid harming the 
planet.
Carbon economics represents a manner of keeping track of benefcial 
forms  of  carbonas  an  energy  storage  materialand  harmful  forms  of 
carbongreenhouse gases. Carbon economics consists of buying or sell-
ing carbon units, called carbon ofsets, on a world trading market, simi-
lar to how stocks are bought and sold on the New York Stock Exchange. 
In  North  America,  businesses  conduct  carbon  transactions  on  the  Chi-
cago Climate Exchange, which opened in 2003. Te University of Chicago 
economist Ronald Coase developed the concept of trading carbon units in 
the 1960s. Coases journal article Te Problem of Social Cost examined 
the relationships between business actions and the well-being of commu-
nities in the context of the environment: Te standard example is that of 
a factory the smoke from which has harmful efects on those occupying 
neighboring properties. Moving the factory or shutting it down takes jobs 
from the community. A community may therefore decide that it is willing 
to  endure  the  disadvantages  for  the  advantage  of  keeping  its  livelihood. 
18  Renewable Energy
Coase wrote, We are dealing with a problem of a reciprocal nature. In 
other  words,  people  sometimes  take  reciprocal  actions.  Tis  means  that 
they  might  sometimes  choose  a  harmful  course  of  action  if  the  gains  of 
that action outweigh the losses.
Carbon  economics  tries  to  achieve  greater  gains  while  lessening  the 
ill  efects  of  carbon  in  the  world.  Te  following  table  presents  the  main 
aspects of carbon economics.
Carbon  trading  plays  a  central  role  in  carbon  economics,  but  many 
people question whether carbon trading actually contributes to pollution 
and global warming. A person or company that stays below its allowable 
limit  of  emissions  may  sell  extra  carbon  units  to  companies  that  have 
exceeded their emissions target. Critics of carbon trading say that the plan 
simply allows polluters to continue polluting as long as they are willing to 
pay a fee. Carbon trading rewards businesses that produce low emissions 
by making it possible to earn extra money by selling carbon credits. Car-
bon trading also gives polluters extra time to achieve emissions limits that 
will become stricter over time.
Carbon or emissions trading, the buying and selling of carbon, has been praised as one of the most innovative 
methods for getting industries to lower their greenhouse gas emissions. Te Chicago Climate Exchange serves 
as the main trading house in the United States. Other climate exchanges operate in Europe (the largest climate 
exchange), Canada, Australia, China, and Japan, with several new exchanges due to open. Climate experts have not 
yet found evidence that the exchanges have afected global warming.
  Earths Energy Sources  19
Carbon Economics
Carbon Transaction Description
carbon dioxide equivalent 
(CO
2
e)
a measure used to indicate the global warming 
potential of a gas emission relative to CO
2
credits amount of CO
2
e that a business can sell if that 
business conducts activities known to limit 
greenhouse gas emissions
markets places or institutions that bring buyers and 
sellers of carbon credits together
carbon trading (also 
emission trading)
the scheme whereby companies sell CO
2
e to 
polluters (also called carbon ofsetters)
ofsets a unit of CO
2
e that can be purchased by a 
polluter to be applied against that polluters 
excess emissions (often used interchangeably 
with carbon credits)
domestic tradable quota the entire process of buying and selling CO
2
e 
for the purpose of rationing the use of fossil 
fuels and thereby lowering greenhouse gas 
emissions
tax a tax levied on any polluter that exceeds its 
legal limit of emissions, based on the amount 
of emissions over the limit
direct payment payment from a governing agency to any 
business that produces less emissions than 
its allowable limit, based on the amount of 
emissions under the limit
cap and trade system in which a limit is set on the amount of 
emissions allowed by a businessthe cap
which, if exceeded, the business must buy 
ofsets on the carbon trading market
assigned amount unit a tradable unit of CO
2
 in the form of 1 ton 
(0.91 metric ton) of CO
2
e
z0  Renewable Energy
Te international treaty called the Kyoto Protocol has backed carbon 
trading  as  a  beneft  to  the  environment,  and  according  to  the  Chicago 
Climate Exchange, Application of fexible, market-based mechanisms for 
reducing  greenhouse  gas  emissions  has  achieved  widespread  intellectual 
and  political  support.  Tis  broad  acceptance  of  emissions  trading  was 
refected in the Kyoto Protocol, which established several emissions trad-
ing mechanisms. Tough the Chicago Climate Exchange has stated that 
carbon  trading  makes  good  business  sense  and  environmental  sense, 
others  disagree.  Carbon  market  analyst  Veronique  Bugnion  said  in  the 
San  Francisco  Chronicle  in  2007,  Have  they  [carbon  markets]  achieved 
any  real  reductions  in  greenhouse  gases?  Tere  is  not  much  evidence  of 
a reduction. It may be too soon to tell if carbon trading can slow global 
warming, but the World Bank has predicted that carbon trading will soon 
become the largest commodities market in the world. From 2005 to 2006, 
the global carbon market more than doubled the amount of carbon equiv-
alents that moved between buyers and sellers. Tis amount rose 63 percent 
in 2007 and 83 percent in 2008. In 2008 alone, 5.4 billion tons (4.9 billion 
metric tons) of carbon equivalents changed hands.
our reneWAble energy resourCes
Switching  from  fossil  fuel  burning  for  energy  production  to  renew-
able  energy  sources  lowers  the  total  amount  of  carbon  released  into  the 
atmosphere  as  CO
2
  gas.  Six  main  types  of  renewable  energies  have  been 
employed  in  industrialized  places  for  this  purpose  and  are  listed  in  the 
following table. As the table shows, renewable technologies may be either 
modern advances in energy generation or ancient technologies that some 
parts of the world continue to use. Solar, water, and wind energy plus the 
burning of organic wastes together account for 7 percent of energy con-
sumption in the United States and about 20 percent worldwide. Fossil fuels 
and nuclear power supply the rest.
Of the main types of renewable energy, only biomass puts CO
2
 into the 
atmosphere. Burning biomass ofers a good environmental choice only if 
the rate of burning biomass does not exceed the rate of new plant growth 
on Earth. Put another way, plants must be able to remove more CO
2
 from 
the atmosphere than burning puts into the atmosphere.
Many renewable energy sources do not produce usable energy directly, 
and  equipment  must  convert  one  type  of  energy  into  another  form.  For 
  Earths Energy Sources  z1
Renewable Forms of Energy
Energy  
Source
Percent of 
Renewable 
Sources
Description Product
biomass 53 burning of plant 
materials and animal 
wastes
heat and 
gas
hydropower 36 water fowing from 
higher to lower 
elevations through dams
electricity
wind 5 capture of wind by 
turbines
electricity
geothermal 5 tapping steam and hot 
water from the Earths 
mantle
heat and 
electricity
solar 1 absorbing and storing 
heat from the Sun
heat and 
electricity
emerging technologies
hydrogen fuel burning hydrogen gas power for 
movement
nanotechnology using the unique 
properties of materials 
on the size scale of 
molecules or atoms
electricity
ancient technologies
water water wheels, dams, 
weight
power, 
motion
wind windmills, sails power, 
motion
movement (kinetic energy) animals, human exertion power, 
motion
zz  Renewable Energy
example,  the  energy  contained  in  wind  turns  a  turbine,  which  powers 
a  generator  that  makes  electricity.  Energy  contained  in  motion,  such  as 
wind or fowing water, is kinetic energy. Sometimes kinetic energy helps 
convert one form to another, such as the wind turbine mentioned here, or 
kinetic energy itself might be used. An ox pulling a plow across a feld is 
an example of kinetic energy at work.
smArT energy grids
An energy grid or a power grid consists of a large distribution network that 
carries electricity or natural gas from producers to customers. Te United 
States  contains  a  large  electrical  power  grid,  but  smaller  regional  grids 
also  supply  electricity  to  customers  in,  for  example,  southwestern  states. 
Te U.S. natural gas grid consists of thousands of miles of underground 
pipes that distribute natural gas throughout the contiguous 48 states.
Conventional energy grids that have been used for many years distrib-
ute energy in a one-way fashion. A large power plant generates electricity, 
which enters high-voltage power lines that take the electricity to smaller, 
local  electric  utilities.  Hydroelectric  dams  and  coal-fred  power  plants 
supply  most  of  the  electricity  on  this  type  of  energy  grid.  Te  fnal  con-
sumerhouses or businessesthen draws electricity of the grid and pays 
for the amount taken. Tis system has been convenient for customers, but 
it  has  also  been  wasteful.  Even  though  customers  pay  for  the  electricity 
they  take,  a  signifcant  amount  of  energy  is  wasted  when  people  do  not 
turn of or unplug electronic devices when not in use. On the other end of 
the grid, coal-fred plants generate a troubling amount of emissions even 
if  they  are  equipped  with  emission-reducing  devices  such  as  scrubbers. 
Hydroelectric dams also receive blame for harming riparian ecosystems by 
releasing hot process water into the environment.
Smart  energy  grids  improve  on  conventional  energy  distribution  in 
two ways. First, smart energy grids maximize the use of alternative energy 
sources  that  supply  electricity  without  causing  the  environmental  harm 
associated  with  dams  and  coal  burning.  Large  power  plants  and  thou-
sands of miles of power lines can be eliminated by the use of smart energy 
grids. Second, smart energy grids can be designed to eliminate or mini-
mize waste by allowing a type of two-way fow of electricity. Tese grids 
make  it  easier  for  consumers  to  pay  for  what  they  use  rather  than  what 
they take.
  Earths Energy Sources  z!
A  smart  energy  grid  is  made  up  of  two  main  components:  a  power 
plant  and  a  computerized  system  that  constantly  monitors  electricity 
usage.  Future  smart  grids  will  likely  use  renewable  energy  sources.  Te 
computerized  monitoring  system  keeps  tabs  on  the  times  and  locations 
of  highest  electricity  use  and  can  redirect  power  at  any  moment  from 
low-use locations to high-use locations. Advanced smart grids may soon 
connect to in-home smart appliances, which also sense peak usage times. 
Te appliances send information to the grid to indicate a lesser or greater 
need for electricity. Tis two-way communication between the consumer 
and the energy grid is called feedback and is the key element in regulating 
energy  use  in  a  more  responsible  manner.  In  times  of  high  and  sudden 
power usage, such as evenings when computers, kitchen appliances, and 
heating or cooling systems all run at once, smart grids parse out energy in 
a staggered fashion to reduce strain and waste on the entire system.
Lou Schwartz and Ryan Hodum, writing for RenewableEnergyWorld.
com in 2008, explained, In the United States . . . although the transmission 
Smart grids will contain the following: feedback systems to monitor peak and low energy usage periods, redirection 
of extra energy to places with a temporary energy demand, devices for storing wind and solar energy, alternate 
emergency routes to avoid system breakdowns, and accommodations for smart appliances, electric vehicles, and 
other new technologies as they become available.
z4  Renewable Energy
grid is 99.97 percent reliable, brief power interruptions have cost the coun-
try  nearly  $100  billion  each  year;  apart  from  enhanced  reliability,  smart 
grids promise to increase efciency of power distribution and usage, with 
corresponding savings in power and power consumption. China currently 
is planning to overhaul its electricity supply by adopting smart energy grids, 
and Europe and Australia have also made investments in smart systems.
soCiAl AspeCTs of  
AlTernATive energy
Homeowners  and  businesses  ofen  cite  the  expense  of  new  alternative 
energy sources as a reason for staying with conventional energy supplied 
by  power  plants.  Solar  energy  indeed  carries  a  large  price  tag,  and  in 
some cases the money saved on smaller electric bills does not pay for the 
Engineers design smart energy grids by studying the peak energy use periods of the 
grids customers. In the United States, most peak energy patterns follow the graph 
shown here. Energy use falls during the night and peaks in the middle part of the day. 
More in-depth studies would show that diferent activities have difering energy usage 
patterns. For example, a large factory working three shifts has a diferent pattern than a 
small ofce building.
  Earths Energy Sources  z
systems purchase price and installation until decades later. For this rea-
son, many people regard alternative energies such as solar a luxury item.
In  impoverished  parts  of  the  world,  millions  of  people  are  starving, 
and  they  are  not  worried  about  efcient  energy  supply.  But  sustainable 
use of energy in developing parts of the world encourages the use of local 
resources,  reduces  health-threatening  pollution,  and  creates  jobs.  No  one 
has  proven  that  sustainable  energy  can  help  alleviate  poverty.  Sustainable 
practices do, however, make people more aware of their environment and its 
potential destruction. Developing regions furthermore do not have to undo 
habits associated with the industrialized world, such as the use of numerous 
electronic devices, large energy-demanding homes, and high-maintenance 
luxuries (swimming pools, sports cars, video game consoles, etc.). Because 
of  this,  industrialized  nations  and  international  organizations  can  help 
developing parts of the world build sustainability from the ground up.
Countries that have been mired in poverty for generations and which 
now are taking bold steps toward industrialization have gone from being 
energy-efcient places to high energy-consuming places. Te IEA expects 
China and India to account for more than half of world energy demand 
approaching the year 2030. Both countries rely on oil and coal for power, 
and their power plants produce enormous pollution. BBC correspondent 
James  Reynolds  described  a  situation  in  Chinas  Shanxi  Province:  At  a 
temperature  of  10C  (14F),  in  the  grey-blue  dawn,  two  schoolchildren 
have a thankless job to complete. Tey are meant to sweep away the soot, 
dirt and grime from the school gate. But this village is surrounded by coal 
mines and power stations, so it is impossible to get anything clean. Teir 
environment  certainly  would  have  looked  better  if  these  countries  had 
built  their  industrial  revolutions  based  on  sustainable  fuels  rather  than 
nonrenewable and polluting fossil fuels.
Some  countries  that  have  been  building  strong  industrialized  econo-
miesChina, India, parts of the Middle East, South Koreahave developed 
existing conventional energies rather than new technologies. Teir leaders 
may  emphasize  commerce  over  environmental  protection.  When  a  large 
country or small community decides on the types of energy source it will 
use, the decision encompasses more than blueprints for power plants and 
power lines. Energy decisions should be based on each regions economy, 
its local resources, and the willingness and ability of leaders to work with 
citizens in making the correct energy choices. Te U.S. federal government 
has developed several agencies that monitor energy law, evaluate new tech-
z6  Renewable Energy
nologies, and guide the populace on how to make sound energy conserva-
tion  choices.  Te  sidebar  Te  U.S.  House  Subcommittee  on  Energy  and 
Environment on page 28 discusses one such organization.
energy progrAms in The  
globAl CommuniTy
Te Global Energy Network Institute has been working since 1986 to help 
design  a  global  system  for  distributing  energy.  As  part  of  the  San  Diego 
institutes  plan,  the  new  network  would  distribute  power  derived  mainly 
from  renewable  energy  sources.  Te  scientist  R.  Buckminster  Fuller  laid 
out his vision for the global energy network: Electrical-energy integration 
of the night and day regions of the Earth will bring all the capacity into use 
at all times, thus overnight doubling the generating capacity of humanity 
because it will integrate all the most extreme night-day peaks and valleys. 
Te global network in this way has the potential of moving energy around 
Te Earths temperature is rising for reasons that cannot be attributed solely to natural cycles. Human activities 
that have increased with population growth have caused a rise in the globes overall average temperature. Some 
of the many methods that combine to produce enormous databases on temperatures around the world are 
weather station readings, satellite ocean and landmass measurements, ocean and atmospheric readings, polar ice 
permeability, and polar ice and glacier melt rates.
  Earths Energy Sources  z
the world to places where energy is needed most. Fullers far-reaching plan 
requires  large  investments  in  money  and  time  plus  commitment  among 
nations. Surely a global energy grid would present large obstacles along the 
way to success.
A global energy network requires that leaders gather energy experts to 
work on specifc phases of building such a network. Te IEA, for instance, 
has representatives from 20 industrialized countries working on current 
energy  questions.  Each  year,  the  IEA  presents  an  update  on  the  worlds 
energy  usage  and  production,  regions  with  overconsumption,  and  ofers 
ideas for future energy management. Te following list contains the IEAs 
most recent observations on global energy:
All current energy trends are not sustainable.
Oil will likely remain the leading energy source.
 Oil  felds  have  declined,  so  undiscovered  oil  reserves  will 
be needed to sustain current consumption.
 Countries  must  cooperate  on  holding  the  average  global 
temperature rise to 3.6F (2C).
 Arresting  current  global  temperature  rise  requires  lower-
ing emissions in both industrialized and nonindustrialized 
regions.
Te  world  contains  diverse  economies  and  customs,  so  building 
a  global  energy  program  will  be  very  difcult.  For  example,  a  standard 
energy grid cannot meet New York Citys needs in the same way it would 
serve  Mongolia.  IEAs  director  Nobuo  Tanaka  stated  in  a  2008  press 
release, We cannot let the fnancial and economic crisis [of 2008] delay 
the policy action that is urgently needed to ensure secure energy supplies 
and  to  curtail  rising  emissions  of  greenhouse  gases.  We  must  usher  in  a 
global  energy  revolution  by  improving  energy  efciency  and  increasing 
the  deployment  of  low-carbon  energy.  By  low-carbon  energy,  Tanaka 
means  solar,  wind,  water,  and  nuclear  sources  in  place  of  burning  fossil 
fuels  or  wood.  Te  IEA  and  other  international  organizations  put  con-
siderable  eforts  into  balancing  the  ways  to  minimize  energy  consump-
tion, stop environmental decay, and address social issues such as poverty. 
Appendix C lists the major international groups with active energy policy 
programs and plans for reaching sustainability.
z8  Renewable Energy
ConClusion
Te Earths energy sources have been sufcient for sustaining human life 
since its inception. Humanity in the current era depends mainly on fos-
sil  fuelspetroleum,  natural  gas,  and  coalto  keep  industrialized  and 
unindustrialized  countries  running.  Tis  plan  has  worked  for  genera-
tions, but since the 1970s and 1980s scientists have sent out alarms regard-
ing the human populations insatiable appetite for energy. Some scholars 
have calculated that people are nearing a point at which more than half of 
T
he U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Science and Technology has fve subcom-
mittees: space and aeronautics; technology and innovation; research and science education; 
investigations and oversight; and energy and environment. T e Committee on Science and Tech-
nology was formed by Congress in 1958 in response to the Soviet Unions launching of the Sputnik 
spacecraft  the  year  before.  Feeling  that  the  United  States  might  be  falling  behind  in  the  technol-
ogy race, Congress asked for increased programs in science and innovative technologies. T e BBC 
reported at the time of the launch, T ere have already been calls for an immediate review of U.S. 
defenses, given the implications of the technological leap ahead by a political enemy. New studies 
would be designed not only for space fight, but also physics, weapons, and environmental studies.
In the 1960s and 1970s, the public turned its attention increasingly to the environment. Air 
and water pollution, hazardous wastes, environmental accidents, and the loss of species and their 
habitats seemed to afect every region. In literature, ecologist Rachel Carson alerted readers to 
the dangers of pesticides in her 1962 book Silent Spring, and a 1966 science fction novel by Harry 
Harrison, Make Room! Make Room!, provided the story line for a 1973 movie Soylent Green, which 
popularized the term greenhouse efect. People were becoming aware of the real problems of gas 
emissions,  chemical-leaking  dumpsites,  and  wastes  pouring  into  the  ocean.  T e  environmental 
subcommittee began to gain an audience for developing new ideas for repairing environmental 
harm.
By  the  1980s,  the  federal  government  was  tackling  mounting  problems  in  waste  disposal, 
environmental hazard, pollution controls, environmental health, and new energy sources. After 
the  1994  national  election,  the  U.S.  House  of  Representatives  reorganized  the  Committee  on 
Science and Technology into subcommittees to cover specifc focus areas. Dana Rohrabacher of 
California became the chairman of the new Subcommittee on Energy and Environment. Today, 
the chair is held by Brian Baird of Washington. T e subcommittee continues its role in evaluating 
new approaches to energy use and conducting hearings with experts on the efects of fossil fuel 
use on pollution and global warming.
T e Subcommittee on Energy and Environments jurisdiction has now expanded to the fol-
lowing main areas:
 Department of Energy research, laboratories, and other science activities
renewable energy technologies
nuclear power materials, wastes, and safety
fossil fuel energy and pipeline research
alternative energy sources
energy conservation
 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) activities in weather, 
climate, and ocean conditions
T e  subcommittee  encourages  academic  and  government  researchers  to  move  quickly  in 
developing the areas listed above. T ese topics are no longer projects for the future; they have all 
now become urgent. Although government has been accused of moving too slowly in times of 
crisis, environmental scientists have shown that climate change and natural resource depletion 
are true crises without the luxury of time. Organizations such as the Subcommittee on Energy 
and Environment can help the United States make the right decisions about building sustainabil-
ity in energy use and natural resources.
Recycling begins with separating and sorting waste types to recover all the materials 
that can be recycled. Sorting plays an important role in recycling because small 
amounts of contamination, plastic mixed in with aluminum for example, decreases the 
recycling efciency, which is critical to keep the recycling process cost-efective. Tese 
sorters in an Oregon recycling plant are removing non-paper materials from paper 
wastes.  (OregonLive.com)
  Recycling  !
recycled aluminum can requires only 5 percent of the energy that would 
be needed to make the same can from virgin (new) aluminum. Te Stop 
Global  Warming  Organization  based  in  California  has  noted,  Using  1 
ton  [0.9  metric  ton]  of  recycled  aluminum  as  opposed  to  1  ton  of  virgin 
aluminum  would  power  an  American  household  for  over  15  months. 
Recyclers would like to fnd the same efciencies in other materials such 
as glass, paper, and plastic.
Te recycling balance sheet for some materials does not always work 
as well as that for aluminum for two reasons. First, some recycling steps 
cost more than new materials. Second, sometimes recycling simply can-
not keep up with the amount of recyclable waste that comes into recycling 
centers. When recycling cannot keep up with waste production, recyclable 
items accumulate. Jim Hogan, manager of a recycling center in Yonkers, 
New  York,  told  the  Lower  Hudson  Valley  Journal  News  in  2006,  What-
ever we can take out of the waste stream is a plus. Crushed glass is [costing 
us] well over $100,000 a year. Most of it gets used as landfll cover  . . . Te 
potential to save energy in recycling the worlds wastes, therefore, is con-
nected to recycling costs and savings.
Recycling saves energy and money only if it meets two requirements. 
First, a sufcient amount of material must go into the recycling process to 
make recycling both energy- and cost-efcient. Large operations usually 
cost less per unit, in energy and in money, than small processes. Tis phe-
nomenon  is  called  economy  of  scale,  in  which  companies  receive  advan-
tages by using materials in bulk and producing large quantities of product 
in a single production run. For example, a wristwatch made by a company 
that produces thousands of watches a year costs less to make than a watch 
built by a single watchmaker working in a small shop. Second, there must 
be customers for a recycled product. High demand for a recycled material 
allows  the  recycler  or  manufacturer  to  take  advantage  of  economies  of 
scale. Consumers thus keep the entire recycling loop going in an efcient 
manner.
Te  need  for  very  high  efciency  in  order  to  make  recycling  worth-
while has caused some people to criticize curbside recycling programs. In 
1996, the New York Times columnist John Tierney wrote, Believing that 
there was no more room in landflls, Americans concluded that recycling 
was  their  only  option. . . .  Recycling  does  sometimes  make  sensefor 
some materials in some places at some times. But the simplest and cheap-
est option is usually to bury garbage in an environmentally safe landfll. 
!8  Renewable Energy
Tierneys conclusion works only if, as he believed, landfll space is plenti-
ful.  Landfll  space  in  most  states  has  in  fact  dwindled;  waste  managers 
have calculated that the last space will be used up within 20 years.
Others in addition to Tierney have expressed varied opinions on recy-
cling. Te On Milwaukee magazine editor Drew Olson explained in 2008, 
Anti-recyclers claim that gains derived from curbside pickup are ofset by 
the need for more trucks, which consume more gas and create more atmo-
spheric pollution. Tey feel that recycling advocates, aided by the media, 
created  a  number  of  myths  about  recycling.  In  truth,  not  all  recycling 
leads to the advantages enjoyed by the aluminum industry. Most recyclers 
and manufacturers must watch their expenses and energy use very care-
fully to make recycling work in their favor.
Plastic  recycling  presents  more  obstacles  than  aluminum  recycling. 
In 2007, Science Daily noted, While major cities like New York and San 
Francisco have shown that plastics recycling can be done successfully on a 
large scale . . . many municipalities are still falling far short of their recy-
cling goals. Handled correctly, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency 
(EPA) states that recycling aluminum saves 95 percent of the energy of vir-
gin aluminum, recycling paper saves 60 percent, but recycling glass saves 
Te recycling industry has made important advances in increased speed and 
efciency of recycling and in fnding new usesin business, this is called developing 
new marketsfor more materials. Tese bales of recycled materials have been 
separated from other wastes and perhaps sorted into additional categories. Baling 
makes handling and transport easier, and overall this step will likely save fuel and 
money.  (South Dakota Department of Environment and Natural Resources)
  Recycling  !9
less than 50 percent. For plastics, the efciencies of recycling depend on 
the type of compounds in the plastic. Te greatest needs in recycling tech-
nology are improved efciencies in glass and plastic recycling so that these 
methods save energy and money.
indusTriAl rAW mATeriAls  
from WAsTe
Recycling efciency has improved because of advanced materials science 
and  chemistry.  Materials  scientists  and  chemists  study  the  behavior  of 
recyclable waste when crushed, heated, extruded, or otherwise made into 
new product. Schools such as the Massachusetts Institute of Technology 
have combined both disciplines into a new area called materials chemis-
try. Materials chemistry encompasses the following subject areas that can 
be applied to recycling: organic and inorganic chemistry, physical chemis-
try, polymers, biochemistry, and analytical chemistry.
Innovative Recycling
Waste Material New Use
bamboo microbe-resistant workout clothes
coconut odor-absorbing clothes
denim fber insulation for houses
inner tubes purses and handbags
paper cat litter
plastic outdoor blankets
soybean husks baby clothes and blankets
tires sealants, shoe soles, paint
tubs, sinks, and toilets terrazzo counters and foors
40  Renewable Energy
As a mark of how successful recycling has become, the industry now 
manages more than 1,000 recycled product categories. About 80 diferent 
recycled materials serve as the raw materials for making these products. 
Appendix D lists the important recyclable materials that go into making a 
wide variety of products sold to consumers today.
Entrepreneurs  also  play  a  role  in  the  recycling  industry  by  recover-
ing materials that large recycling businesses cannot use proftably. Many 
unique uses have come out of these innovative recycling schemes. Exam-
ples in the table on page 39 show that small businesses with a good idea on 
how to reuse a particular waste can contribute to sustainability.
Large industries create great quantities of waste that cost money to 
treat  or  may  take  up  space  in  landflls.  Whenever  possible,  industries 
send their waste materials to other businesses that can use them as a raw 
material. Industries refer to this recycling as benefcial use because they 
know their wastes will become a valued commodity for another indus-
Industrial Recycling
Material Source Industrial Use
coal fy ash inorganic material 
left over from the 
combustion of coal
mixed with concrete for 
retaining walls, pavement, 
and structural fll
construction and 
demolition debris
concrete, bricks, steel, 
sheet metal, roofng, 
and wood
crushed and mixed with
asphalt as pavement
foundry sand excess processing 
material used in metal 
casting
structural fll in construc-
tion; cement manufacture; 
landscaping topsoil; grout; 
mortar
gypsum (a soft mineral 
found in nature)
plasterboard waste new plasterboard, 
construction materials
slag (excess runof 
during metal 
manufacturing)
heterogeneous 
by-product of ore 
smelting
metal manufacturing
  Recycling  41
Basic Recycling Steps
Material Separation Extraction Purification
glass by color washing melting
metal by metal 
composition
melting chemical removal 
of nonmetals
paper ink from paper fltration for 
recovering 
cellulose fbers
steam-pressure 
treatment
plastic by molecular 
structure
polymer 
breakdown to 
individual units
solvent treatment
try. Te table on page 40 describes some of the new uses industries fnd 
for wastes.
Te plastics industry contends with a more complex recycling process 
than those described in the preceding table. Tis is because plastics come 
in  a  variety  of  chemical  structures  that  have  their  own  properties.  Te 
sidebar High-Density Polyethylene (HDPE) on page 42 describes one of 
the main plastic components recycled today.
reCyCled mATeriAls ChemisTry
Recycling  chemistry  draws  on  aspects  of  materials  science  and  organic 
and  inorganic  chemistry  to  make  recycled  wastes  suitable  for  new  uses. 
Te  chemical  aspect  of  recycling  consists  of  four  steps:  (1)  breaking  the 
material  into  components;  (2)  extraction  of  the  target  components;  (3) 
cleaning or purifcation; and (4) analysis. Paper, glass, metal, and plastic 
recycling require these steps or similar methods as described briefy in the 
following table. Analysis of the fnal recycled material takes place either as 
laboratory chemical tests (plastic resins) or as sensitive measurements on 
sophisticated instruments (metals).
Recycling  chemistry  uses  common  laboratory  procedures  that  have 
been modifed for the particular substance being recovered from an item. 
4z  Renewable Energy
Te most common chemical procedures are the following: distillation, fl-
tration, phase separation, and catalyzed reactions. Distillation entails the 
heating of a material to drive of the water. Distillations of recyclable mate-
rials range from room temperature to low-temperature procedures. Filtra-
tion involves passing a substance through a barrier containing very small 
pores  (the  flter)  that  allow  liquids  and  small  particles  to  pass  through. 
Chemists save either the material that passes through the flter, called the 
fltrate, or the material that remains on the flter. Phase separation recov-
H
DPE is a long carbon-hydrogen compound, called a polymer, formed by applying heat 
and  pressure  to  the  methane  gas  (CH
4
)  from  petroleum.  German  chemist  Hans  von 
Pechmann  developed  this  method  for  making  the  polymer  polyethylene  in  the  1890s.  Other 
chemists followed by changing the types and sizes of side chains attached to the polyethylene. 
T ey found that such changes would alter the fexibility of the fnal polymer. In 1935, the British 
chemists Eric Fawcett and Reginald Gibson created a durable polyethylene for insulating cables. 
Almost  20  years  later,  the  German  Karl  Ziegler  devised  a  chemical  reaction  to  make  a  dense 
polyethylene  that  maintained  a  rigid  and  strong  structurethe  present  form  of  HDPEand 
received the 1963 Nobel Prize in chemistry for his discovery. T e plastics industry continues to 
use Zieglers process to make HDPE from ethylene gas or from natural gas that comes from oil 
refning.
HDPE is a thermoplastic, meaning it is a plastic in which the molecules are held together 
by weak bonds so that the material softens when heated but returns to its original condition at 
room temperature. T ermoplastics are in milk jugs, shampoo or detergent bottles, credit cards, 
and foor coverings. T ermoset plastics, by contrast, do not lose their shape or strength when 
heated, and so these plastics work best in vehicle components and construction materials.
HDPE does not degrade in nature and so can quickly take up much space in landflls. (HDPE 
items total only 1 percent by weight of municipal solid wastes [MSW].) More than 95 percent 
of all plastic bottles contain HDPE or polyethylene terephthalate (PET), a plastic used mainly 
for soda bottles. Other materials used to a lesser extent by the plastics industry are low-den-
sity  polyethylene  (LDPE),  polypropylene  (PP),  polystyrene  (PS),  and  polyvinyl  chloride  (PVC). 
Each  of  these  plastics  has  a  diferent  content  of  resin,  which  is  the  specifc  carbon-hydrogen, 
or hydrocarbon, polymer that makes up the fnal formula of the plastic. Each resin correlates 
with a code developed by the Society of the Plastics Industries (SPI) in 1988. T e code number 
usually occurs inside a triangle symbol that has been embossed into the plastic, for instance, on 
the bottom of a shampoo bottle. T e SPI resin codes are the following: PET, 1; HDPE, 2; PVC, 3; 
LDPE, 4; PP, 5; PS, 6; and all other resin blends, 7.
Recyclers  process  HDPE  frst  by  sorting  and  washing  plastic  wastes.  Recyclers  then  chop 
the plastic into small pieces of less than one-half inch (1.27 cm), called fake. T e recycler pours 
the  fake  into  a  melter,  which  heats  the  plastic  to  200F  (93C),  and  then  adds  dyes  to  color 
the new material. Another machine extrudes the melted material to form small pellets about 
a quarter-inch (0.64 cm) in diameter, and the pellets then cool. (HDPE can also be formed into 
powders,  granules,  tubes,  or  sheets.)  Manufacturing  plants  then  use  the  HDPE  to  make  new 
plastic products. Recycled HDPE does not disintegrate in heat or humidity, splinter, or lose its 
color, so manufacturers have preferred it for making bottle caps, outdoor furniture, playground 
equipment, toys, crates, dog houses, and boating parts.
T e United States now recycles more than 27 percent of HDPE bottles. By 2005, the total 
amount of plastics going into recycling had for the frst time exceeded 2 billion pounds (907 mil-
lion kg) per year and the rate of recyclingthe amount recycled divided by the total amount of 
plasticcontinues to grow. T e German market research company Ceresana Research reported 
in 2008 that the growing global HDPE market had exceeded 30 million tons (27 million metric 
tons), and HDPE revenues would likely double by the year 2016.
T e  most  important  aspect  of  HDPE  recycling  resides  in  its  capacity  to  conserve  petro-
leum. It takes 3.86 pounds (1.75 kg) of petroleum to make 2.2 pounds (1 kg) of new HDPE when 
accounting for the raw materials and the energy to run the process and transport the goods. 
Plastic recycling also requires some energy for the recycling process, transportation, and manu-
facturing,  but  if  these  tasks  are  done  ef ciently,  plastic  recycling  can  save  energy  compared 
with making new plastic.
High-Density Polyethylene (HDPE)
  Recycling  4!
ers chemicals that dissolve in either oily liquids or water. Catalyzed reac-
tions consist of chemical reactions in which a compound called a catalyst 
aids  the  progress  of  the  reaction.  Te  resulting  reaction  products  difer 
from the starting compounds.
Recycling chemistry has advanced from the time of the frst environ-
mental gatherings in the 1970s. At that time recycling had not become the 
familiar  activity  it  is  today  in  almost  every  home,  school,  and  business. 
Tough recycling of some sort has existed for centuries, only in modern 
H
DPE is a long carbon-hydrogen compound, called a polymer, formed by applying heat 
and  pressure  to  the  methane  gas  (CH
4
)  from  petroleum.  German  chemist  Hans  von 
Pechmann  developed  this  method  for  making  the  polymer  polyethylene  in  the  1890s.  Other 
chemists followed by changing the types and sizes of side chains attached to the polyethylene. 
T ey found that such changes would alter the fexibility of the fnal polymer. In 1935, the British 
chemists Eric Fawcett and Reginald Gibson created a durable polyethylene for insulating cables. 
Almost  20  years  later,  the  German  Karl  Ziegler  devised  a  chemical  reaction  to  make  a  dense 
polyethylene  that  maintained  a  rigid  and  strong  structurethe  present  form  of  HDPEand 
received the 1963 Nobel Prize in chemistry for his discovery. T e plastics industry continues to 
use Zieglers process to make HDPE from ethylene gas or from natural gas that comes from oil 
refning.
HDPE is a thermoplastic, meaning it is a plastic in which the molecules are held together 
by weak bonds so that the material softens when heated but returns to its original condition at 
room temperature. T ermoplastics are in milk jugs, shampoo or detergent bottles, credit cards, 
and foor coverings. T ermoset plastics, by contrast, do not lose their shape or strength when 
heated, and so these plastics work best in vehicle components and construction materials.
HDPE does not degrade in nature and so can quickly take up much space in landflls. (HDPE 
items total only 1 percent by weight of municipal solid wastes [MSW].) More than 95 percent 
of all plastic bottles contain HDPE or polyethylene terephthalate (PET), a plastic used mainly 
for soda bottles. Other materials used to a lesser extent by the plastics industry are low-den-
sity  polyethylene  (LDPE),  polypropylene  (PP),  polystyrene  (PS),  and  polyvinyl  chloride  (PVC). 
Each  of  these  plastics  has  a  diferent  content  of  resin,  which  is  the  specifc  carbon-hydrogen, 
or hydrocarbon, polymer that makes up the fnal formula of the plastic. Each resin correlates 
with a code developed by the Society of the Plastics Industries (SPI) in 1988. T e code number 
usually occurs inside a triangle symbol that has been embossed into the plastic, for instance, on 
the bottom of a shampoo bottle. T e SPI resin codes are the following: PET, 1; HDPE, 2; PVC, 3; 
LDPE, 4; PP, 5; PS, 6; and all other resin blends, 7.
Recyclers  process  HDPE  frst  by  sorting  and  washing  plastic  wastes.  Recyclers  then  chop 
the plastic into small pieces of less than one-half inch (1.27 cm), called fake. T e recycler pours 
the  fake  into  a  melter,  which  heats  the  plastic  to  200F  (93C),  and  then  adds  dyes  to  color 
the new material. Another machine extrudes the melted material to form small pellets about 
a quarter-inch (0.64 cm) in diameter, and the pellets then cool. (HDPE can also be formed into 
powders,  granules,  tubes,  or  sheets.)  Manufacturing  plants  then  use  the  HDPE  to  make  new 
plastic products. Recycled HDPE does not disintegrate in heat or humidity, splinter, or lose its 
color, so manufacturers have preferred it for making bottle caps, outdoor furniture, playground 
equipment, toys, crates, dog houses, and boating parts.
T e United States now recycles more than 27 percent of HDPE bottles. By 2005, the total 
amount of plastics going into recycling had for the frst time exceeded 2 billion pounds (907 mil-
lion kg) per year and the rate of recyclingthe amount recycled divided by the total amount of 
plasticcontinues to grow. T e German market research company Ceresana Research reported 
in 2008 that the growing global HDPE market had exceeded 30 million tons (27 million metric 
tons), and HDPE revenues would likely double by the year 2016.
T e  most  important  aspect  of  HDPE  recycling  resides  in  its  capacity  to  conserve  petro-
leum. It takes 3.86 pounds (1.75 kg) of petroleum to make 2.2 pounds (1 kg) of new HDPE when 
accounting for the raw materials and the energy to run the process and transport the goods. 
Plastic recycling also requires some energy for the recycling process, transportation, and manu-
facturing,  but  if  these  tasks  are  done  ef ciently,  plastic  recycling  can  save  energy  compared 
with making new plastic.
High-Density Polyethylene (HDPE)
44  Renewable Energy
history have advanced chemical processes been used to break apart materi-
als and devise new substances. Te sidebar Case Study: Recycling during 
World War II on page 46 examines one of the early successes in recycling 
in U.S. history.
minerAls And meTAls
Minerals and metals are two nonrenewable resources that must be recy-
cled  to  sustain  the  current  amounts  of  these  substances  in  the  Earths 
crust.  Minerals  consist  of  compounds  with  specifc  crystal  structures 
and other physical features that identify them, such as density, hardness, 
color,  luster,  and  ability  to  break.  Mineralogists  have  to  date  identifed 
about 4,500 minerals in the Earths crust. Te following are examples of 
the most plentiful minerals: quartz, feldspar, mica, olivine, calcite, and 
magnetite.
Mineral recycling plays an important role in protecting the environ-
ment in four main ways. First, it avoids mining activities that destroy land 
inhabited  by  endangered  plants  and  animals.  Secondly,  it  reduces  the 
amount  of  toxic  wastes  produced  by  mineral  mining.  Tird,  the  process 
of extracting a mineral from ore, the raw material removed from a mine, 
Metals
Group Description Examples
base metals corrodes when exposed 
to air and reacts with 
hydrochloric acid to 
release hydrogen gas
copper, iron, nickel, 
lead, zinc
ferrous metals usually magnetic iron
noble metals resists corrosion when 
exposed to air
gold, platinum, 
rhodium, silver
precious metals rare and of high 
monetary value
gold, silver, palladium, 
platinum, plutonium, 
uranium
  Recycling  4
requires additional hazardous chemicals that recycling does not require. 
Lastly, mining and mineral extraction consumes 10 percent of the worlds 
energy, which is disproportionately large for the size of this industry. Min-
eral recycling alleviates this consumption.
A metal consists of an element in which electrons move easily between 
the atoms and help bond the atoms together. Metals have characteristic 
density,  luster,  and  conductivity  of  heat  and  electrical  charge.  Metal-
lurgists  classify  elements  in  various  ways  based  on  chemical  qualities. 
Members  of  the  periodic  table  of  elements  ofen  share  characteristics, 
so chemistry classifes these elements into more than one category. For 
example carbon in the form of graphite conducts electrical current like 
a metal, so shares this characteristic even though carbon is not a metal. 
Te table on page 44 summarizes four main metal classifcations.
Chemists  also  classify  metals  by  their  electron  confgurations.  Te 
periodic table of elements refects these groupings as follows:
 Group IA: lithium, sodium, potassium, rubidium, cesium, 
francium
 Group  IIA:  beryllium,  magnesium,  calcium,  strontium, 
barium, radium
Group IB: copper, silver, gold
Group IIB: zinc, cadmium, mercury
 Transition  metals:  scandium,  titanium,  vanadium,  chro-
mium,  manganese,  iron,  cobalt,  nickel,  copper,  zinc, 
yttrium,  zirconium,  niobium,  molybdenum,  technetium, 
ruthenium,  rhodium,  palladium,  silver,  cadmium,  haf-
nium,  tantalum,  tungsten,  rhenium,  osmium,  iridium, 
platinum, gold, mercury
Metal recycling methods difer slightly by the individual metal to be 
recovered, but most recycling includes the following basic steps: washing, 
shredding or chopping, purifcation, melting, and casting or molding into 
blocks called ingots. Te metals industry has traditionally used smelting 
as  a  purifcation  process.  Smelting  involves  heating  an  ore  to  melting  so 
that impurities can be separated from the desired metal.
Metal  recycling  has  grown  into  a  critically  important  part  of  the 
metals industry and the U.S. economy. For instance, the metals industry 
46  Renewable Energy
W
orld War II began in September 1939 when Germany invaded Poland. From that point 
on, the war enveloped an increasingly large area of the globe (the United States entered 
in  1941).  Although  the  United  States  held  a  vast  potential  in  workers  and  natural  resources,  it 
still needed some raw materials from places halfway around the world. As industries converted 
their normal activities into wartime eforts, certain materials ran short for meeting both civilian 
and military needs. T e United States and many other countries turned to massive recycling pro-
grams to generate the most needed and scarcest items.
During World War II in the United States, people everywhere, from big cities to small towns, 
began collecting rubber tires, cloth, motor oil, and various metals in what came to be known as 
scrap drives. T ese scrap drives and a complementary program in food rationing helped conserve 
items that were no longer available from overseas because of Japanese and German naval opera-
tions in the Pacifc and Atlantic Oceans, respectively. A rationing campaign set household limits 
on things such as sugar, cofee, meat, eggs, fsh, cheese, shoes, and gasoline. Eggs, milk, and meat 
came from the United States, but the fuel needed to transport them had been redirected into the 
war efort.
As  the  war  progressed, 
the  scrap  drives  expanded. 
Old  rubber  tires  initially 
helped  supply  some  of  the 
material for military vehicle 
tires,  but  soon  President 
Franklin D. Roosevelt called 
for  old  rubber  raincoats, 
old  garden  hose,  rubber 
shoes, bathing caps, gloves 
to  supplement  the  drive. 
T e  historian  Ronald  H. 
Bailey  described  the  color-
ful outcomes of some scrap 
drives  in  Te  Home  Front, 
In  New  York  City,  a  car-
load  of  chorus  girls  from 
a  Broadway  musical  drove 
up to one collection depot, 
Nat  Jupiters  service  station,  and  wriggled  out  of  their  girdles.  In  Washington,  Secretary  of  the 
Interior Harold L. Ickes spotted a rubber foor mat at the White House, rolled it up and had his 
chaufeur deposit it at the nearest collection point. Towns received quotas from the government 
setting the amount of material the towns were required to put into the collection trucks, and the 
populace readily complied.
T e  recycling  campaign  of  World  War  II  showed  that  with  ingenuity  almost  any  scarce 
article  seemed  to  have  a  wartime  purpose.  Cloth  of  almost  every  type  went  into  uniforms, 
scraps such as old clothes, rags, curtains, blankets, and old upholstery. Womens silk stockings 
disappeared  from  store  shelves  because  the  silk  and  newly  invented  nylon  went  to  making 
parachutes. World War II changed currency forever by rerouting all copper from penny produc-
tion  to  wire  production.  Pennies  for  a  time  contained  zinc-coated  steel,  but  no  copper.  Used 
lubricating  grease  went  into  the  manufacture  of  explosives  and  artifcial  rubber;  food  grease 
and  fats  helped  in  making  gunpowder.  Old  newspaper  served  as  packaging  for  shipments  to 
the military.
Of all the wars recycling drives, those for scrap metals, especially iron, and rubber made the 
biggest impact on wartime machinery. Huge heaps of metal items grew in the center of almost 
every town and contained bicycle rims, watering cans, metal drums, cans, paper clips, toy wagons, 
pipes, bedsprings, among other household products. Haulers took the metals to smelting com-
panies that removed the impurities by heating the metal until it was molten. Trucks then carried 
the cooled, extracted metal to factories.
Equally impressive collections of rubber objects mounted up in World War II: rubber soles, 
rubber bands, balls, roofng liners, inner tubes, and other items that President Roosevelt asked 
for in his weekly radio addresses to the nation. Rubber recycling had not previously been done 
on such a large scale, but wartime chemists soon found ways to improve the process for turn-
ing  rubber  into  new  products.  T ey  used  a  process  called  vulcanization  in  which  rubber  is 
heated  and  reacted  with  a  sulfur  compound.  Vulcanization  degrades  and  then  rebuilds  the 
links between the rubbers molecules to strengthen the rubber. T e rubber industry also uses 
devulcanization  in  rubber  reprocessing  in  which  the  sulfur  is  removed  in  order  to  change  its 
chemical  properties.  A  product  manufacturer  then  revulcanizes  the  rubber,  which  returns 
durability to it.
During  World  War  II,  the  United  States  recycled  about  25  percent  of  its  total  wastes,  an 
enormous amount for a country of about 138 million people. T e scrap drives helped industry 
develop new, faster ways to recycle raw materials and led to a variety of innovative uses for com-
monplace items.
Case Study: Recycling during World War II
U.S. recycling campaigns in World Wars I and II netted thousands of tons of 
materials for supplying the war. Te scrap drives of World War II, pictured 
here, led to the development of new chemistry and materials science 
methods in use today.  (Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan)
  Recycling  4
W
orld War II began in September 1939 when Germany invaded Poland. From that point 
on, the war enveloped an increasingly large area of the globe (the United States entered 
in  1941).  Although  the  United  States  held  a  vast  potential  in  workers  and  natural  resources,  it 
still needed some raw materials from places halfway around the world. As industries converted 
their normal activities into wartime eforts, certain materials ran short for meeting both civilian 
and military needs. T e United States and many other countries turned to massive recycling pro-
grams to generate the most needed and scarcest items.
During World War II in the United States, people everywhere, from big cities to small towns, 
began collecting rubber tires, cloth, motor oil, and various metals in what came to be known as 
scrap drives. T ese scrap drives and a complementary program in food rationing helped conserve 
items that were no longer available from overseas because of Japanese and German naval opera-
tions in the Pacifc and Atlantic Oceans, respectively. A rationing campaign set household limits 
on things such as sugar, cofee, meat, eggs, fsh, cheese, shoes, and gasoline. Eggs, milk, and meat 
came from the United States, but the fuel needed to transport them had been redirected into the 
war efort.
As  the  war  progressed, 
the  scrap  drives  expanded. 
Old  rubber  tires  initially 
helped  supply  some  of  the 
material for military vehicle 
tires,  but  soon  President 
Franklin D. Roosevelt called 
for  old  rubber  raincoats, 
old  garden  hose,  rubber 
shoes, bathing caps, gloves 
to  supplement  the  drive. 
T e  historian  Ronald  H. 
Bailey  described  the  color-
ful outcomes of some scrap 
drives  in  Te  Home  Front, 
In  New  York  City,  a  car-
load  of  chorus  girls  from 
a  Broadway  musical  drove 
up to one collection depot, 
Nat  Jupiters  service  station,  and  wriggled  out  of  their  girdles.  In  Washington,  Secretary  of  the 
Interior Harold L. Ickes spotted a rubber foor mat at the White House, rolled it up and had his 
chaufeur deposit it at the nearest collection point. Towns received quotas from the government 
setting the amount of material the towns were required to put into the collection trucks, and the 
populace readily complied.
T e  recycling  campaign  of  World  War  II  showed  that  with  ingenuity  almost  any  scarce 
article  seemed  to  have  a  wartime  purpose.  Cloth  of  almost  every  type  went  into  uniforms, 
scraps such as old clothes, rags, curtains, blankets, and old upholstery. Womens silk stockings 
disappeared  from  store  shelves  because  the  silk  and  newly  invented  nylon  went  to  making 
parachutes. World War II changed currency forever by rerouting all copper from penny produc-
tion  to  wire  production.  Pennies  for  a  time  contained  zinc-coated  steel,  but  no  copper.  Used 
lubricating  grease  went  into  the  manufacture  of  explosives  and  artifcial  rubber;  food  grease 
and  fats  helped  in  making  gunpowder.  Old  newspaper  served  as  packaging  for  shipments  to 
the military.
Of all the wars recycling drives, those for scrap metals, especially iron, and rubber made the 
biggest impact on wartime machinery. Huge heaps of metal items grew in the center of almost 
every town and contained bicycle rims, watering cans, metal drums, cans, paper clips, toy wagons, 
pipes, bedsprings, among other household products. Haulers took the metals to smelting com-
panies that removed the impurities by heating the metal until it was molten. Trucks then carried 
the cooled, extracted metal to factories.
Equally impressive collections of rubber objects mounted up in World War II: rubber soles, 
rubber bands, balls, roofng liners, inner tubes, and other items that President Roosevelt asked 
for in his weekly radio addresses to the nation. Rubber recycling had not previously been done 
on such a large scale, but wartime chemists soon found ways to improve the process for turn-
ing  rubber  into  new  products.  T ey  used  a  process  called  vulcanization  in  which  rubber  is 
heated  and  reacted  with  a  sulfur  compound.  Vulcanization  degrades  and  then  rebuilds  the 
links between the rubbers molecules to strengthen the rubber. T e rubber industry also uses 
devulcanization  in  rubber  reprocessing  in  which  the  sulfur  is  removed  in  order  to  change  its 
chemical  properties.  A  product  manufacturer  then  revulcanizes  the  rubber,  which  returns 
durability to it.
During  World  War  II,  the  United  States  recycled  about  25  percent  of  its  total  wastes,  an 
enormous amount for a country of about 138 million people. T e scrap drives helped industry 
develop new, faster ways to recycle raw materials and led to a variety of innovative uses for com-
monplace items.
Case Study: Recycling during World War II
48  Renewable Energy
accounts for more than 25 percent of the gross output in dollars of all U.S. 
durable goods industries as of 2009, and recycling makes up a signifcant 
part of this production.
rubber reCyCling
Te United States discards 250 million tires annually, a portion of which 
can  be  recycled  to  make  new  tires  or  other  rubber-containing  products. 
Without  recycling,  tires  create  an  unmanageable  volume  of  nondegrad-
able waste. Mountains of discarded tires have recently been shown to cause 
health hazards by flling with rainwater, which provides breeding grounds 
for  insects  that  carry  diseases  such  as  West  Nile  virus  and  encephalitis. 
Also, fres at tire dumps have released large amounts of air pollution con-
taining hazardous chemicals.
Tire and other rubber products recycling begins with the pulverization 
of the rubber into fne granules called crumbs. Crumb rubber represents 
the primary raw material from recycling that goes to product manufactur-
ers.  Te  next  step  is  devulcaniza-
tion,  whereby  a  chemical  process 
breaks  the  sulfur  linkages  that 
hold  rubbers  polymers  together 
so  that  it  can  be  remolded  into  a 
new  product.  Devulcanization 
has  been  difcult  for  recycling 
companies to perfect; the current 
methods either are very expensive 
or  ruin  some  of  rubbers  natural 
qualities.
Te  rubber  recycling  indus-
try  has  experimented  with  new 
technologies that carry out devul-
canization  in  ways  other  than 
relying  on  a  difcult-to-manage 
chemical  process.  Ultrasound 
devulcanization,  for  example, 
exposes  the  rubber  to  ultrasonic 
waves  of  50  kilohertz  (kHz)  for 
Te latest scrap tire estimate from the 
EPA in 2003 calculated that Americans 
generated 290 million scrap tires that 
amounted to 2 percent of the entire U.S. 
solid wastes. About 30 states use tire 
incinerators for the production of part of 
their energy needs. Te energy is called 
tire-derived fuel (TDF).  (Bufalo ByProducts)
  Recycling  49
20 minutes. Tis treatment breaks sulfur bonds while leaving all of the 
rubbers carbon-carbon bonds intact, so the resulting rubber maintains 
its desired qualities.
Te world demand for rubber has been increasing, mainly because of 
dramatic  increases  in  vehicle  use  in  China  and  India.  Current  recycling 
methods contribute to only a small fraction of this growing demand. For 
this reason, the recycling industry as well as tire manufacturers continue 
to seek new technologies in rubber treatment and reuse.
ConClusion
Waste recycling has historically been a means to either hold down busi-
ness  costs  or  to  invent  a  replacement  for  something  that  has  become 
scarce,  or  both.  Recycling  has  clearly  taken  on  a  third  purpose  in  the 
past  several  decades:  waste  management.  Te  volume  of  waste  that  the 
worlds  population  produces  is  an  environmental  problem  that  recy-
cling  helps  reduce.  In  order  for  recycling  to  make  a  greater  impact  on 
waste reduction, there are some areas of recycling technology in need of 
attention.
Since 1970, the recycling industry has made advances in the number 
of materials it reuses and the variety of products made from these materi-
als.  Materials  science  and  chemistry  will  in  the  future  create  additional 
uses for the various items that continue to accumulate in landflls. In gen-
eral,  landfll  items  are  composed  of  glass,  plastic,  aluminum,  nonalumi-
num metals, paper, and cardboard. Other landfll items either decompose 
quickly or can be removed and made into fuel for energy production. Sci-
ence  must  fnd  more  innovations  for  the  fve  main  recyclable  materials 
produced today by communities. Research also needs to fnd solutions for 
dealing with chemicals and solvents in order to make the best use of these 
sometimes hazardous substances.
Recyclings greatest accomplishment may be in aluminum recycling, 
an  efciency  that  hardly  leaves  room  for  improvement.  Other  materials 
have not been converted to usable products as efciently, perhaps because 
the technology is lacking. Plastic recycling in particular has not advanced 
very  well.  Te  plastics  industry  ofen  fnds  that  producing  plastic  resins 
from new raw materials is less costly than recycling certain resins. Plastics 
present an obvious opportunity in recycling technology.
0  Renewable Energy
Finally, though recycling now serves a purpose in managing wastes, 
the  future  will  demand  improved  technologies  to  keep  up  with  waste 
accumulation. Te recycling industry might prove to be the best arena for 
developing a zero waste society. Zero wastethough a long-term goal
has the potential of reducing humanitys ecological footprint, which is the 
ultimate goal of all sustainability programs.
1
I
n the United States, drivers log 4 million miles (6.4 million km) annu-
ally  on  highways  and  streets  in  personal  vehicles,  a  distance  exceeded 
only by air travel. Te American Automobile Manufacturers Association 
(AAMA)  furthermore  has  predicted  that  vehicle  production  will  pass  50 
million  by  2010;  the  number  of  vehicles  produced  worldwide  has  been 
climbing  since  the  1950s.  Alternative  travel  advocates  feel  that  the  only 
way  to  reduce  global  warming  is  to  forsake  this  massive  dependence  on 
personal  vehicles.  But  environmental  scientists  might  do  better  to  accept 
the reality of the strong personal connection between people in industrial-
ized nations and their cars. Industrialized nations depend on commuters 
and also on trucks that move products from manufacturers to customers.
Mike Millikin of the Green Car Congress and environmental writer 
Alex Stefen wrote in Worldchanging: A Users Guide for the 21st Century
in 2006, For many North Americans, the car has become both a neces-
sity and a shrine. Sprawling suburbs and bad urban planning have made it 
nearly impossible for us to get anywhere without driving. Booming econ-
omies in China and India among other regions have followed the United 
States in their desire for new cars. Te Washington Post reporter Ariana  Washington Post Washington Post
Eunjung Cha noted in 2008, Car ownership in China is exploding, and 
its not only cars but also sport-utility vehicles, pick-up trucks and other 
gas-guzzling  rides  .  .  .  China  alone  accounts  for  about  40  percent  of  the 
worlds recent increase in demand for oil, burning through twice as much 
now as it did a decade ago. Car manufacturers have increased launches of 
new models in India to meet that countrys growing demand for personal 
vehicles, and the trend does not appear to be slowing.
3
Gasoline Alternative 
Vehicles
z  Renewable Energy
Environmental scientists have taken their cue from these statistics to 
assume  that  getting  people  to  give  up  their  cars  will  be  extremely  dif-
cultin some cases impossible. But the long-term future of fuel for these 
vehicles  presents  another  worry.  World  oil  consumption  continues  to 
increase, led by the United States, which consumes more than 20 million 
barrels daily, followed by China, Japan, Russia, Germany, India, Canada, 
Brazil,  South  Korea,  Saudi  Arabia,  Mexico,  France,  United  Kingdom, 
Italy, Iran, Spain, and Indonesia, which all consume more than 1 million 
barrels a day. Rather than trying to alter peoples desire for fuel consump-
tion, energy technologies must develop new fuels to replace nonrenewable 
petroleum.
Fossil fuel consumption inevitably leads to greenhouse gas emissions 
from  exhaust.  Transportation  produces  34  percent  of  the  total  green-
house  gaseselectric  power  plants  produce  39  percent  and  homes  and 
industries  produce  27  percent.  For  this  reason,  cleaner  fuels  and  more 
efcient fuel use in vehicles can have an important efect on global warm-
ing  caused  by  greenhouses  gases.  On  roads  today,  the  main  producers 
of  greenhouse  gases  are  cars  (35  percent  of  emissions),  light  trucks  (27 
percent),  and  heavy  trucks  (19  percent).  (Aircraf  produce  9  percent  of 
greenhouse  gas  emissions,  and  pipelines,  locomotives,  and  ships  and 
boats produce the rest.)
Te main alternative fuels today are ethanol, biodiesel (nonpetroleum 
diesel  fuels),  natural  gas,  propane,  and  hydrogen.  Vehicles  running  on 
either  ethanol  or  biodiesel  currently  make  up  the  largest  percentage  of 
alternative fuel vehicles, and a small selection of models have been intro-
duced  that  run  on  natural  gas,  propane,  or  hydrogen,  with  additional 
models soon to be introduced. Even so, alternative fuel vehicles make up 
a very small proportion of the total vehicles bought in the United States, 
about 2 percent of new car sales.
Tis  chapter  discusses  the  important  technology  of  alternative  fuel 
vehicles,  from  electric-gas  hybrid  vehicles  that  have  already  entered  the 
market  to  innovative  vehicles  still  in  development.  Te  chapter  exam-
ines new ideas in biofuels, synthetic fuels, and other power sources such 
as  batteries,  fuel  cells,  and  natural  gas.  Sections  discuss  the  vision  for  a 
future technology and an ancient technology, nuclear-powered transport 
and wind power, respectively. Te chapter closes with a discussion on the 
feasibility  of  new  vehicles,  based  on  hybrid  technology  that  has  already 
been successful.
  Gasoline Alternative Vehicles  !
evoluTion of AlTernATive vehiCles
Todays alternative vehicles include any vehicle with a power source that 
either replaces gasoline or conserves gasoline by sharing the power needs 
with  another  type  of  energy,  such  as  electricity.  Te  introduction  of  the 
Toyota Prius in 1997 marked the frst mass-marketed hybrid car for fam-
ily use, but the vision for alternative vehicles dates much further into the 
past.  Te  following  table  reviews  important  milestones  in  the  history  of 
modern alternative vehicles.
In the 1930s, the electric vehicles that had dominated the early 20th 
century  were  replaced  by  gasoline  vehicles.  Electricity  was  a  technology 
that  ofered  limitless  uses  in  the  home,  but  for  vehicles  it  presented  the 
following troubles: Electric power plants were not standardized to using 
either AC or DC voltage; the range between battery recharges lasted only 
3050 miles (4880 km); batteries lost about 40 percent of their power in 
the winter; and heavy batteries made vehicles get stuck in snow and mud.
Te  development  of  alternative  vehicles  has  been  a  steady  series  of 
trials  and  errors.  Each  promising  breakthrough  in  a  new  fuel  to  replace 
gasoline has been accompanied by unique drawbacks. In 2008, the Time 
magazine  reporter  Michael  Grunwald  warned  readers  of  the  pitfalls  of 
putting hopes on biofuels as the perfect answer to fuel consumption: . . . 
the  biofuel  boom  is  doing  exactly  the  opposite  of  what  its  proponents 
Car designers, engineers, and amateur inventors have developed a number of truly 
innovative alternative fuel vehicles. Tis solar-powered car designed and built by Kansas 
State University consists of an upper body covered with solar collectors and batteries. 
More than 40 universities in North America have designed similar cars as prototypes for 
future all-solar or solar-electric vehicles. Te teams also compete in a biennial 2,500-mile 
intercollegiate North American Solar Challenge, a cross-country rally.
4  Renewable Energy
Evolution of Alternative Veh icles
Vehicle Inventor Date Features
diesel engine Rudolf Diesel 1890s frst engine to run on 
peanut oil, a precursor 
to todays biofuel
electric 
carriages
18981912 all-electric powered 
vehicles predominated
Porsche-
Lohner
Ferdinand Porsche 1900 electric drive motor 
worked with a gasoline-
powered engine
Model T Henry Ford 1905 originally designed to 
run on ethanol from 
corn
Cadillac Charles Kettering 1912 frst electric starter on 
vehicle
small-scale car Christopher 
Becker
1935 all-electric car
various 
vehicles
Ford Motor 
Company
1930s40s ofers alternative fuel 
Benzol
road vehicles T omas 
Davenport and 
Robert Davidson
1942 non-rechargeable 
electric cells for road 
use
Electrovan General Motors 1966 hydrogen fuel-cell 
powered
trucks Ford Motor 
Company
1960s some models powered 
by propane
CitiCar Sebring-Vanguard 
Company and 
Elcar Corporation
1970s small, short-range 
electric cars
Prius Toyota 1997 frst successfully 
marketed electric-
gasoline hybrid
  Gasoline Alternative Vehicles  
intended:  its  dramatically  accelerating  global  warming,  imperiling  the 
planet in the name of saving it. Biofuels, which a mere decade ago seemed 
to signal the future of alternative fuels, now receive the most criticism due 
to the negatives that come with its positives. Te following table highlights 
the advantages and the disadvantages of alternative fuels as scientists and 
engineers explore these options in greater detail.
Automotive  engineers  work  on  ways  to  improve  the  current  advan-
tages  of  alternative  fuels  while  trying  to  eliminate  the  disadvantages. 
Most  of  the  innovations  described  in  the  table  have  been  put  into  pro-
totype  vehicles,  some  of  which  might  enter  the  consumer  market  in  the 
near  future.  One  of  the  biggest  obstacles  in  implementing  new  vehicle 
designs comes from breaking old traditions in automaking and buying. 
Large automakers have in the past built their fnancial growth on gaso-
line-fueled  vehicles  and  have  put  relatively  little  efort  into  alternative 
vehicles.  When  crude  oil  prices  were  low  and  air  pollution  had  not  yet 
reached critical levels, gasoline made sense. But the air now refects the 
damaging  efects  of  tons  of  vehicle  emissions,  and  crude  oil  supply  has 
turned into a complex scientifc and political problem. Te decision not 
Electric-gasoline hybrid and all-electric vehicles will become more popular in the 
near future. Many city and university car-sharing programs use vehicles similar to this 
Subaru R1e plugged in to a charger, and several car companies now ofer all-electric 
models.  (Subaru)
6  Renewable Energy
to  develop  new  types  of  vehicles  has  caused  dire  consequences  for  the 
U.S. automobile industry, which is discussed in the sidebar Case Study: 
Toyotas Prius on page 58.
Truck  manufacturers  have  also  made  headway  in  converting  todays 
feet of long- and short-haulers to fuel-efcient vehicles. Flex-fuel trucks, 
for instance, run on gasoline, ethanol, or hydrogen, similar to the options 
in hybrid cars. Te trucking industry also has followed guidance from the 
U.S.  Environmental  Protection  Agency  (EPA)  in  retroftting  the  current 
Ch aracteristics of Alternative   
Energy Sources for Veh icles
Fuel Advantage Disadvantage
battery nonpolluting limited range at present
biofuel (corn ethanol) can use gasoline 
pumps
disrupts crop prices and 
world food supply
biofuel (non-corn 
sources)
large supply, works in 
diesel engines
potentially high carbon 
dioxide emissions
electricity, plug-in nonpolluting depends on availability 
of remote plug-in 
sources
hydrogen fuel cell produced from water, 
nonhazardous, and 
no carbon dioxide 
emissions
requires energy to 
produce it; short driving 
range at present
natural gas high energy yield; low 
cost
nonrenewable
solar nonpolluting expensive; not feasible 
for near future
synthetic fuel large supply high manufacturing 
cost and environmental 
impact
  Gasoline Alternative Vehicles  
feet of diesel-burning trucks, buses, and construction vehicles with anti-
pollution technology. Some of the technologies that may help lower truck 
emissions include:
engine idle reduction to conserve fuel
 improved catalytic converters to reduce harmful emissions
catalyst muf ers to clean the exhaust
particulate flters to remove particles from the exhaust
Te trucking industry also encourages its drivers to reduce long peri-
ods  of  idling  and  manage  their  speeds  to  cut  the  total  emissions  they 
produce.
biofuels
Biofuels  are  any  fuels  that  are  made  from  plant  material.  Te  main  bio-
fuels  in  use  today  are  ethanol  produced  from  grain  crops;  methanol 
produced  from  natural  gas  or  from  solid  organic  waste  called  biomass; 
biogas,  a  mixture  of  methane  and  carbon  dioxide  (CO
2
);  and  vegetable 
oils.  Mounting  anxieties  over  global  warming  due  to  vehicle  emissions 
and the precarious supply of crude oil afected by political diferences have 
made biofuel a priority in the United States. George W. Bush emphasized 
the need for biofuels in the 2007 State of the Union address: Let us build 
on the work weve done and reduce gasoline usage in the United States by 
20  percent  in  the  next  10  years. . . .  To  reach  this  goal,  we  must  increase 
the  supply  of  alternative  fuels,  by  setting  a  mandatory  fuels  standard  to 
require 35 billion gallons [132 billion l] of renewable and alternative fuels 
in 2017. Both political parties now are concentrating on the biofuel man-
date. Biofuel producers have taken up the challenge to increase operations 
and worldwide investment in biofuels has grown. Biofuel investments may 
top $100 billion by 2010. However, even as production has soared, so too 
has concern over the millions of acres being converted from food crops to 
biofuel crops.
Ethanol has occupied the center of the controversy of converting food 
crops to fuel crops and its efect on world economies. Biofuel can be made 
from  corn,  soybeans,  sugarcane,  sugar  beets,  sorghum,  or  sunfowers. 
Increased prices for these crops as feedstock for ethanol production have 
the potential of inducing farmers to sell crops to fuel producers rather than 
8  Renewable Energy
to  food  producers.  Additional  growers  see  the  good  prices  they  can  get 
from growing crops such as corn for biofuel, so they convert their crops to 
corn also, causing other grains to rise in price. A global demand for crops 
ensues, and subsistence farmers in developing countries clear forests and 
grasslands to plant crops. As a result, habitat and biodiversity disappear, 
and the cutting and burning of land for cultivation adds CO
2
 to the atmo-
sphere.  Tis  series  of  events  has  played  out  in  a  few  places  already,  such 
W
hen  Toyotas  electric-gasoline  hybrid  vehicle  went  on  sale  in  the  United  States  in  the 
summer  of  2000,  the  New  York  Times  reporter  Andrew  Pollack  wrote,  T e  Prius,  a 
so-called hybrid that uses both gasoline and electric power, avoids most of the drawbacks and 
inconveniences of other vehicles that are designed to be clean and fuel-ef cient. Pollack pointed 
out  an  often-overlooked  fact:  T e  Prius  was  not  the  frst  hybrid  vehicle  to  arrive  on  the  auto-
motive scene. T e Japanese automaker Toyota built on previous experiments in electric-gasoline 
vehicles that dated as far back as 1900. But Toyota achieved success by making the Prius the frst 
marketable hybrid vehicle that met the needs of drivers while staying ahead of increasingly strict 
environmental laws.
The  Prius  symbolized  a  feature  of  Japans  automotive  industry  that  began  in  the  1980s 
and  continues  to  this  day.  That  is,  Japanese  carsas  well  as  Japans  dominant  electronics 
industrycombined driver-friendly innovations with good economic decisions for control-
ling  manufacturing  costs  and  pricing  cars  for  the  average  car  buyer.  American  automak-
ers  have  developed  as  many  if  not  more  alternative  vehicle  prototypes  than  their  foreign 
competitors,  but  they  have  not  achieved  all  of  the  five  following  objectives  that  the  Prius 
achieved:
 a car with conventional look and feel that did not require drivers to greatly 
change their driving habits
comparably priced with similar cars
saves consumers money to operate
 signifcantly better for the environment than the competitors being sold at the 
time
readily available on the consumer market
Despite  innovations  by  the  Big  T ree  U.S.  automakersFord,  General  Motors  (GM),  and 
Chryslerthat preceded the Prius, these companies have been playing catch-up in the alternative 
vehicle market ever since the Prius introduction. In the Priuss early years, the Detroit automakers 
seemed  determined  to  follow  their  tried-and-true  approach  of  building  bigger,  more  powerful 
vehicles that appealed to many drivers but also guzzled gasoline.
By 2008, the Big T ree were experiencing serious fnancial pressures, partly due to an obso-
lete product line. A New York Times article explained the automakers predicament in reinventing 
their  business  with  a  goal  of  sustainability:  . . .  the  car  companies,  which  have  long  lead  times 
to develop products, will need sales of big trucks and sport utility vehicles . . . to bring in much-
needed  revenue.  T is  statement  highlights  the  challenges  ahead  for  the  Big  T ree  in  attaining 
three  sometimes  conficting  objectives.  First,  they  must  shorten  the  time  between  designing  a 
new vehicle and selling it. Second, they must design innovative and desirable alternative vehicles. 
T ird and most daunting, the Big T ree must take the risk of changing their current ofering of 
vehicles and trust car buyers will accept them.
T e  lessons  to  be  learned  from  the  Prius  have  extended  beyond  fuel  economy.  Progress  in 
sustainability  does  not  require  a  drastic  overhaul  of  current  technology,  but  it  must  lead  to  a 
few  important  changes  that  make  a  genuine  diference  to  the  environment:  type  of  fuel,  fuel 
ef ciency, and styling to minimize fuel use. T ese innovations should also appeal to the public. A 
prototype vehicle that makes brilliant use of energy but has no practical application for families 
is  all  but  useless  in  building  sustainability.  Finally,  automobile  manufacturing  must  restructure 
in order to take inventions from the planning stage to consumers much faster than in the past. 
Given  a  choice  between  large,  gas-guzzling  vehicles  and  more  ef cient  and  afordable  alterna-
tives, many drivers will choose the latter. For this to happen, carmakers must be committed to 
alternative vehicles. T ey must not treat these vehicles as novelties but view alternative vehicles 
as the future of transportation.
Case Study: Toyotas Prius
  Gasoline Alternative Vehicles  9
as  Brazil,  and  environmentalists  fear  it  may  reach  critical  proportions. 
Te Time magazine writer Henry Grunwald explained simply, Te basic 
problem is that the Amazon [in Brazil] is worth more deforested than it is 
intact. Biofuels should not be canceled as alternative fuels. Rather, biofu-
els must be managed to work better with the environment.
New  biofuel  sources  may  help  ease  the  problems  associated  with 
corn-dominated  biofuels.  Growers  have  already  begun  to  experiment 
W
hen  Toyotas  electric-gasoline  hybrid  vehicle  went  on  sale  in  the  United  States  in  the 
summer  of  2000,  the  New  York  Times  reporter  Andrew  Pollack  wrote,  T e  Prius,  a 
so-called hybrid that uses both gasoline and electric power, avoids most of the drawbacks and 
inconveniences of other vehicles that are designed to be clean and fuel-ef cient. Pollack pointed 
out  an  often-overlooked  fact:  T e  Prius  was  not  the  frst  hybrid  vehicle  to  arrive  on  the  auto-
motive scene. T e Japanese automaker Toyota built on previous experiments in electric-gasoline 
vehicles that dated as far back as 1900. But Toyota achieved success by making the Prius the frst 
marketable hybrid vehicle that met the needs of drivers while staying ahead of increasingly strict 
environmental laws.
The  Prius  symbolized  a  feature  of  Japans  automotive  industry  that  began  in  the  1980s 
and  continues  to  this  day.  That  is,  Japanese  carsas  well  as  Japans  dominant  electronics 
industrycombined driver-friendly innovations with good economic decisions for control-
ling  manufacturing  costs  and  pricing  cars  for  the  average  car  buyer.  American  automak-
ers  have  developed  as  many  if  not  more  alternative  vehicle  prototypes  than  their  foreign 
competitors,  but  they  have  not  achieved  all  of  the  five  following  objectives  that  the  Prius 
achieved:
 a car with conventional look and feel that did not require drivers to greatly 
change their driving habits
comparably priced with similar cars
saves consumers money to operate
 signifcantly better for the environment than the competitors being sold at the 
time
readily available on the consumer market
Despite  innovations  by  the  Big  T ree  U.S.  automakersFord,  General  Motors  (GM),  and 
Chryslerthat preceded the Prius, these companies have been playing catch-up in the alternative 
vehicle market ever since the Prius introduction. In the Priuss early years, the Detroit automakers 
seemed  determined  to  follow  their  tried-and-true  approach  of  building  bigger,  more  powerful 
vehicles that appealed to many drivers but also guzzled gasoline.
By 2008, the Big T ree were experiencing serious fnancial pressures, partly due to an obso-
lete product line. A New York Times article explained the automakers predicament in reinventing 
their  business  with  a  goal  of  sustainability:  . . .  the  car  companies,  which  have  long  lead  times 
to develop products, will need sales of big trucks and sport utility vehicles . . . to bring in much-
needed  revenue.  T is  statement  highlights  the  challenges  ahead  for  the  Big  T ree  in  attaining 
three  sometimes  conficting  objectives.  First,  they  must  shorten  the  time  between  designing  a 
new vehicle and selling it. Second, they must design innovative and desirable alternative vehicles. 
T ird and most daunting, the Big T ree must take the risk of changing their current ofering of 
vehicles and trust car buyers will accept them.
T e  lessons  to  be  learned  from  the  Prius  have  extended  beyond  fuel  economy.  Progress  in 
sustainability  does  not  require  a  drastic  overhaul  of  current  technology,  but  it  must  lead  to  a 
few  important  changes  that  make  a  genuine  diference  to  the  environment:  type  of  fuel,  fuel 
ef ciency, and styling to minimize fuel use. T ese innovations should also appeal to the public. A 
prototype vehicle that makes brilliant use of energy but has no practical application for families 
is  all  but  useless  in  building  sustainability.  Finally,  automobile  manufacturing  must  restructure 
in order to take inventions from the planning stage to consumers much faster than in the past. 
Given  a  choice  between  large,  gas-guzzling  vehicles  and  more  ef cient  and  afordable  alterna-
tives, many drivers will choose the latter. For this to happen, carmakers must be committed to 
alternative vehicles. T ey must not treat these vehicles as novelties but view alternative vehicles 
as the future of transportation.
Case Study: Toyotas Prius
60 Renewable Energy
with crops that make better use of land and convert crop energy to fuel 
energy more efciently than corn. While corn generates 1.3 units of etha-
nol energy for every 1 unit of corn processed, sugarcane yields 8 units of 
ethanol  per  1  unit  of  sugarcane.  Sugarcane  yields  can  also  double  corn 
yields per acre [0.004 km
2
] of land. Any crop used for biofuel production 
should  be  chosen  to  avoid  the  heavy  use  of  chemical  fertilizers,  pesti-
cides, and herbicides that have become a hallmark of large agricultures 
corn production.
Sugarcane, shown here, forms the basis of Brazils biofuel program, allowing Brazil to no longer rely on foreign oil. 
Sugarcane produces twice the biofuel per acre as corn, the main feedstock for U.S. biofuel. All biofuel and biomass 
feedstocks must be grown sustainably and preserve the worlds food supply and the environment. Brazil burns 
sugarcane feldsand pollutes the airto drive out snakes before workers enter the felds to be harvested. Te 
cutting of Brazilian forests to plant more sugarcane puts additional CO
2
 into the atmosphere. Te biofuel industry 
must solve these problems in order to truly help the environment.  (Rufno Uribe)
GT-RnewEnergy.fnl.indd   60 10/30/09   10:01:19 AM
  Gasoline Alternative Vehicles  61
Waste  materials  also  ofer  efcient  conversions  of  the  energy  stored 
in  waste  to  energy  contained  in  ethanol.  Cellulosic  ethanol  comes  from 
substances  that  have  little  crop  value;  they  are  called  cellulosic  because 
they  contain  mainly  cellulose  fber.  Cornstalks,  husks,  leaves,  forestry 
wastes such as wood chips and bark, sawdust produced by lumber mills, 
paper pulp, and fast-growing prairie grasses such as switchgrass produce 
36 units of ethanol energy per unit of material. Growers in Mali in eastern 
Africa  where  good  agricultural  land  is  at  a  premium  have  begun  grow-
ing jatropha, a plant that thrives on poor soils and requires little fertilizer 
and no pesticides to produce high yields. Tis type of crop allows farmers 
to  keep  more  valuable  cropland  for  producing  fruits  and  vegetables  and 
income.
Some car owners have taken matters into their own hands by retool-
ing their cars to run on waste cooking oil. Greasecar is a Massachusetts 
company that sells kits for car owners to use in modifying an engine for 
running on vegetable oil lef over afer use by restaurants. At present, how-
ever, the EPA has not approved these modifcations or vegetable oil fuels 
for use on public roads.
Entrepreneurs  have  also  studied  algae  as  a  renewable  energy  source 
that  requires  no  cropland  at  all.  GreenFuel  Technologies  in  Cambridge, 
Massachusetts, grows algae in ponds, taking advantage of algaes ability to 
turn Sun energy into carbohydrates and fats using photosynthesis. Com-
pany  chemists  then  convert  100  percent  of  the  substances  into  ethanol. 
Fortune magazine reported on GreenFuels system in a 2008 article: Te 
curious setup is a bioreactor [a microbe-growing tank] that takes the stuf 
of  pond  scumalgaegrows  it  like  mad,  and  turns  it  into  biomass  that 
can be processed into fuel for cars and trucks. Algae tanks can further-
more be built on land that is poor for cultivation, and algae even grow on 
polluted or salty waters.
Te  small  community  of  scientists  that  have  worked  on  techniques 
for  making  fuel  from  algae  have  targeted  algae  biodiesel.  Diesel  fuel  is 
derived  from  crude  oil,  as  is  gasoline,  but  diesel  difers  from  gasoline  in 
composition  and  has  a  thicker,  oilier  consistency.  Biodiesel  comes  from 
plant sources rather than crude oil and produces 2.5 times the energy pro-
duced by an equal amount of fossil fuel. Tough the research remains in 
its early stages, algae seem best suited for making biodiesel.
Algae  and  other  microbes,  such  as  bacteria,  have  created  excite-
ment  among  scientists  as  a  new  alternative  fuel  source  that  bypasses 
6z  Renewable Energy
the  disadvantages  of  growing  fuel  crops.  Te  biofuels  researcher  Kathe 
Andrews-Cramer of Sandia National Laboratory in New Mexico has said, 
Algae have the potential to produce a huge amount of oil. We could replace 
certainly all of our diesel fuel with algal-derived oils, and possibly replace 
a  lot  more  than  that.  Power  companies  and  other  large  businesses  are 
now conducting studies on algae-produced biofuels for the future. Large 
oil companies, some of the biggest companies in the world, have partnered 
with entrepreneurs in seeking new biofuels.
synTheTiC fuels
Synthetic fuels, also called synfuels, consist of liquid fuels derived from 
nonliving  things.  Te  main  synfuel  sources  currently  being  studied  are 
coal, natural gas, oil shale, and tar. Synthetic fuels came to prominence in 
World War II when crude oil supply lines were cut. Germany developed 
Algae convert solar energy to chemical energy, which companies use as feedstock for 
biodiesel production. Algae are reliable, inexpensive to grow and harvest, and need a 
fraction of the space that agricultural crops use.  (New Mexico State University)
  Gasoline Alternative Vehicles  6!
the  method  known  as  the  Fischer-Tropsch  process  for  making  synfuel 
as  its  fuel  supply  dwindled.  Te  Fischer-Tropsch  process  makes  liquid 
gasoline  from  coal  by  applying  high  temperature  and  high  pressure  to 
the solid coal. Te frst synfuels came from coke as the starting material; 
coke is a by-product made by distilling coal. By the 1950s, crude oil again 
became  available  and  research  on  synfuels  slowed.  Alternative  vehicle 
technology  has  reignited  interest  in  synfuels  for  two  reasons:  to  break 
U.S.  dependency  on  crude  oil  supplied  by  other  countries  and  to  give 
vehicles a cleaner-burning fuel with reduced exhaust emissions. Synfuels 
have one major drawback, however, because their manufacture requires 
high  levels  of  consumption  of  fossil  fuels  and  energy.  For  this  reason, 
synfuel producers have explored the use of biomass to substitute for fossil 
fuels as raw material.
Biomass  works  as  a  feedstock  in  synfuel  production  because  it  con-
tains a high concentration of carbon compounds, the basis for fuels used 
in combustion. Te synthesis reactions produce long hydrocarbons made 
up  of  hydrogen  molecules  attached  to  a  carbon  backbone.  Because  bio-
mass composition is variable, it results in many diferent fuels, each with 
a  unique  blend  of  hydrocarbons  of  varying  length.  Te  Fischer-Tropsch 
process applied to biomass makes the following materials, from the least 
dense to the densest: methane gas, ethane gas, liquid petroleum gas, gaso-
line, diesel, and waxes.
Many motor oils have synthetic versions that drivers use today. Syn-
thetic motor oil contains long polymer compounds made in laboratories, 
chemically designed to behave as regular oil. Te synthetic oils must not 
degrade when heated in an engine and should ofer lubricating qualities 
equal to or better than regular motor oil. So far, chemists have developed 
synthetic  oils  in  a  variety  of  grades  or  viscosities  that  meet  the  needs  of 
diferent types of engines.
Biotechnology companies have also joined the hunt for better sustain-
able synfuels by combining biology with the synthesis process. A new feld 
called  synthetic  biology  involves  the  fabrication  of  biological  substances 
not  found  in  nature.  Kareem  Saad  of  Codon  Devices  explained  in  2008, 
Synthetic biology is important for a lot of reasons. Introducing engineer-
ing  principles  of  design  .  .  .  and  standardization  to  biology  promises  to 
revolutionize  the  way  we  make  fuels  and  consumer  products  that  rely 
less  on  crude  oil  and  are  less  damaging  to  the  environment,  and  can  be 
a  game-changer.  Synthetic  biology  experts  now  plan  on  manipulating, 
64  Renewable Energy
through  bioengineering  or  through  new  fermentation  methods,  natural 
microbes to make new hydrocarbons that act as fuel. A new generation of 
biofuels might be synthesized by microbes to produce new hydrocarbons 
to make synthetic gasoline or synthetic diesel.
Green chemistry represents a related feld in which chemists use bio-
logical  components  such  as  enzymes  to  carry  out  chemical  reactions. 
Natural enzymes run reactions without demanding high temperatures or 
hazardous  chemicals  that  conventional  chemistry  sometimes  uses.  Tis 
feld  of  chemistry  ofers  the  similar  promise  that  synthetic  biology  does 
for creating hydrocarbons that take the place of fossil fuels.
Whether a vehicle uses a biofuel, synfuel, or fossil fuel, a combustion 
engine must have hydrocarbons to burn for producing power. Alternative 
fuel  combustion  engine  vehicles  therefore  resemble  standard  gasoline-
powered  vehicles.  Te  principles  of  combustion  are  described  in  the  fol-
lowing sidebar Combustion.
bATTery poWer
Vehicles powered exclusively by batteries have been tried for many years. 
Most  progress  toward  this  end  has  been  stymied,  however,  by  the  enor-
mous  size  and  weight  of  batteries  that  would  be  needed  to  power  cars 
for  any  practical  distance.  Te  development  of  gasoline-battery  hybrid 
vehicles has ofered more promise and has spurred scientists to improve 
battery  technology  for  vehicles.  With  newer,  lighter  batteries,  vehicles 
completely powered by batteries may become a large part of the alterna-
tive vehicle market.
Conventional car batteries contain lead and strong acid that provide 
a medium for the fow of electrons between two oppositely charged poles. 
Tis electron fow becomes electrical current, which helps start the engine 
when  a  driver  turns  the  key.  In  the  1990s,  GM  developed  a  new  type  of 
battery not based on the usual lead-acid system. Te company used their 
invention to create the all-battery-powered EV-1 car. Te EV-1 performed 
as a conventional car with the same or better speed and power, but recharg-
ing the battery proved to be impractical at the time, and the company dis-
continued the EV-1 in 1999.
Two  innovations  aided  the  return  of  battery-powered  vehicles.  Te 
frst  belonged  to  Toyotas  Prius  with  its  new  lighter  battery.  Te  second 
innovation  came  from  the  U.S.  computer  industrys  development  of 
  Gasoline Alternative Vehicles  6
C
ombustion is a process in which oxygen combines with other atoms 
to make a new compound and gives of energy as heat. Fire is a well-
known  combustion  reaction.  In  fre,  oxygen  from  the  air  combines  with 
carbon  or  carbon-hydrogen  compounds  and  produces  heat,  gases,  and 
incandescence, the light emitted from a heated material.
T e  internal  combustion  engine  makes  this  process  possible.  Inside 
an internal combustion engines strong metal chambers, called cylinders, 
rapid  reactions  occur  between  the  high-energy  fuel  (gasoline)  and  air. 
T ese  reactions  are  actually  energy-releasing  explosions  when  hydrocar-
bons and air combine. T e rapid series of explosions provides the power 
to move a vehicle forward by turning a crankshaft. In short, gasoline-pow-
ered vehicles move because the energy held in gasolines carbon-hydrogen 
bonds  has  been  converted  to  heat,  and  the  heat  energy  is  in  turn  con-
verted to kinetic energy.
Typical  internal  combustion  engines  make  conversions  of  one  type 
of energy to another in four steps: (1) the intake stroke in which gasoline 
enters the combustion chamber with air; (2) the compression stroke that 
puts pressure on the gasoline-air mixture to make the explosion more pow-
erful; (3) the combustion reaction in which the explosion occurs within the 
cylinder; and (4) the exhaust stroke in which the reactions by-products exit 
the cylinder. Biofuels and synfuels contain hydrocarbons that work just as 
well  as  gasoline  hydrocarbons  in  the  combustion  reaction.  Furthermore, 
exhaust by-products from biofuels and synfuels do not carry the same high 
concentration of hazardous substances as gasoline exhaust.
T e exhaust from combustion engines is blamed as one of the major 
contributors  to  global  warming.  Gasoline  exhaust  contains  compounds 
that  threaten  human,  wildlife,  plant,  and  tree  health  by  causing  global 
warming: carbon monoxide, nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide, and polycy-
clic  hydrocarbons  (hydrocarbon  compounds  containing  ring  structures 
also made of carbon and hydrogen). T e exhaust from conventional com-
bustion engines also contains benzene, formaldehyde, and small particles 
less than 10 micrometers in diameter. Biofuels and synfuels therefore pre-
serve  human  and  environmental  health  by  reducing  or  eliminating  the 
production of hazardous exhaust components.
Combustion
66  Renewable Energy
 lithium-ion  batteries  for  portable  computers.  Both  of  these  types  of  bat-
teries generated an acceptable amount of power, and they weighed far less 
than the batteries of the past. All subsequent alternative fuel vehicles now 
contain components, including the batteries, that have been selected both 
for durability and for weight.
Te next generation of battery-powered vehicles will likely be hydrids 
similar to the Prius or fully rechargeable models that are plugged in when 
not in use. Te Chicago Tribune reported in 2008, General Motors Corp. 
and  Toyota  have  announced  plans  to  introduce  plug-in  hybrids  in  2010, 
and  both  will  use  lithium-ion  batteries.  Describing  GMs  new  Volt,  the 
article said, Afer the batteries drain, the Volts gas engine recharges them, 
adding another 600 or so miles [965 km] to the vehicles range. Automak-
ers will need to continue improving the range of all-battery-powered cars 
so that drivers never fear they will be stranded by a dead battery with no 
recharging  outlet  near.  Engineers  who  plan  new  sustainable  systems  in 
cities have likely considered the need for downtown plug-in terminals for 
recharging cars during the workday.
An auto industry spokesman John Hanson told the Chicago Tribune, 
We need to see how lithium-ion batteries perform in the real world and 
make sure this technology is robust and what they [car companies] need. 
Automakers have reached a point where they can go in several directions: 
toward cars powered completely by lithium-ion batteries; by new battery 
technology  that  works  better  than  lithium-ion;  or  by  a  combination  of 
gasoline and battery in hybrid vehicles.
fuel Cell TeChnology
Fuel  cells  represent  a  new  phase  in  battery  power.  Fuel  cells  produce 
only  water  and  heat  in  their  energy-generating  process,  they  are  quiet, 
and they convert fuel to energy three to four times more efciently than 
combustion.
Te frst of two types of fuel cell reacts hydrogen gas (H
2
) with oxy-
gen gas (O
2
) to produce electrical energy. Automakers expect to introduce 
vehicles  dependent  on  this  hydrogen  fuel  cell  technology  between  2010 
and 2020. Te second type of fuel cell uses biological reactions supplied by 
microbes that carry out the same reaction between hydrogen and oxygen 
to create a fow of electrons. Scientists have been developing biological fuel 
cells, but so far they have not been tried in vehicles.
  Gasoline Alternative Vehicles  6
Both  chemical  and  biological  fuel  cells  rely  on  a  catalyst,  which  is 
any substance that makes helps reactions proceed by lowering the energy 
needed to start the reaction. Te catalyst enables the following hydrogen 
fuel cell reaction to take place in an efcient manner:
H
2
 fuel + O
2
 + catalyst  H
2
O + energy
Chemical fuel cells use metal catalysts that readily give up or accept 
electrons,  such  as  palladium  and  platinum.  Biological  fuel  cells  do  the 
same  using  enzymes,  which  act  as  catalysts  in  reactions  that  occur  in 
nature. In biology, catalysts enable reactions to take place in milliseconds, 
Mechanical fuel cells can be based on the activities of biological fuel cells, such as the 
cell shown in the diagram. Biological cells generate energy as an electric current by 
creating a charge gradient. A resting cell is depolarized: Te cell membrane separates 
the negatively charged interior (proteins) from the positively charged exterior (sodium 
ions, Na
+
). By opening the membranes pores, the cell depolarizes and a charge gradient 
develops, which sets up a current.
68  Renewable Energy
or thousandths of a second. Without enzymes, the same biological reac-
tions could well take several million years. In 2003, the biochemistry pro-
fessor Richard Wolfenden of the University of North Carolina explained, 
Now  weve  found  one  [a  reaction  without  enzymes]  thats  10,000  times 
slower than that. Its half-timethe time it takes for half the substance to 
be consumedis 1 trillion years, 100 times longer than the lifetime of the 
universe.  Enzymes  can  make  this  reaction  happen  in  10  milliseconds. 
Clearly, the success of fuel cell technology depends on catalysts, and biol-
ogy may have already invented some of the best catalysts on the planet.
Fuels for chemical fuel cells may be any of the following hydrogen-rich 
materials:  natural  gas,  petroleum,  propane,  methanol,  ethanol,  or  coal. 
Only  methanol  and  ethanol  from  this  list  are  renewable  energy  sources. 
Even though chemical fuel cells use nonrenewable fuels, they convert fuel 
to energy much more efciently than combustion engines. Chemical fuel 
cells also reduce the amount of CO
2
 emissions by about two-thirds.
Biological  fuel  cells,  by  contrast,  can  use  biomass  or  organic  wastes, 
such  as  manure,  as  a  fuel  source.  Although  Wolfenden  pointed  out  the 
Hydrogen fuel cells may be developed to supply sufcient power for running vehicles. 
Hydrogen fuel cells create an electrical charge by separating hydrogens protons (H
+
) 
from its electrons (e
). Te fuel cell produces only water as its by-product and does not 
produce greenhouse gas emissions.
  Gasoline Alternative Vehicles  69
speed with which enzyme-catalyzed reactions run, biological fuel cells take 
time to create enough energy to run a car. So far, biological fuel cells have 
been employed only for running low-energy devices such as calculators.
Future  fuel  cell  vehicles  may  circumvent  the  problem  of  low  power 
production by incorporating stacked fuel cells. Stacked cells contain many 
single  fuel  cells  lined  up  in  a  series  to  increase  the  overall  voltage  they 
produce. As with any type of vehicle energy source, fuel cells must supply 
both power and longevity or consumers may not be enticed to try them.
nuCleAr fission And fusion
Of all energy sources, nuclear energy supplies the most power and longev-
ity  for  a  unit  of  fuel.  However,  nuclear  energy  has  not  been  considered 
for  passenger  vehicles,  mainly  because  the  public  would  have  justifable 
concerns over their safety and the radioactive wastes they would produce. 
Naval ships have used nuclear power for a long time and have thus con-
served billions of gallons of crude oil.
Nuclear fssion is a change in an atoms nucleus in which the nucleus 
splits  apart  to  form  new,  lighter  nuclei.  Each  fssion  reaction  releases 
uncharged  atomic  particles  called  neutrons  plus  energy.  As  the  released 
neutrons crash into other atoms, more nuclei break apart and release more 
neutrons and more energy. Tese multiple self-sustaining fssions are col-
lectively  called  a  nuclear  chain  reaction.  Nuclear  chain  reactions  release 
enormous amounts of energy that must be controlled with utmost care.
Nuclear  fusion  is  the  opposite  process  to  fssion.  In  nuclear  fusion, 
two  atoms  of  an  element,  such  as  hydrogen,  are  forced  together  at  high 
temperatures until they form a new, heavy nucleus. Tis step also releases 
a great amount of energy.
Conventional  nuclear  reactors  that  produce  energy  for  communities 
or  for  powering  the  massive  ships  of  the  U.S.  Navy  use  nuclear  fssion 
reactions.  Uranium  and  plutonium  serve  as  the  fuels  for  these  reactors. 
Although  nuclear  reactions  would  never  be  practical  for  powering  vehi-
cles, hydrogen fuel cells ofer a type of nuclear reaction that produces safe 
energy with a viable future.
Te Nuclear Energy Institute in Washington, D.C., has proposed that 
nuclear power may best serve transportation as a major power source for 
plug-in electric vehicles. Tomorrows alternative vehicles and nuclear power 
might work in complementary fashion toward two ends. First, this system 
0  Renewable Energy
would spare fossil fuels by eliminating the gasoline-fed combustion or die-
sel  engines  and,  second,  the  system  would  bypass  the  need  for  coal-fred 
power plants to make electricity. In short-term planning, however, nuclear 
power remains most realistic for oceangoing ships.
nATurAl gAs fuels
Natural  gas  contains  50  to  90  percent  methane  (CH
4
)  by  volume.  Tese 
reserves usually occur above crude oil reserves because the processes that 
formed oil millions of years ago by the breakdown of organic matter also 
gave of gas as a by-product. Such natural gas reserves located near crude 
oil reserves are termed conventional natural gas. Some rarer natural gas 
reserves  have  been  found  with  no  crude  oil  nearby.  Tese  reserves  are 
called unconventional natural gas.
Te largest volume of natural gas exists in the Middle East, followed 
by Russia and its neighboring countries. Te United States owns about 3 
percent of the worlds natural gas reserves.
Natural gas as an energy source holds many of the same drawbacks as 
crude oil. Tat is, natural gas is a nonrenewable resource that will eventually 
run out at its current rate of consumption. Te total known reserves of natu-
ral gas should last for another 200 years at the present rate of consumption, 
but  this  is  only  an  estimate,  and  it  may  be  an  optimistic  estimate.  Tat  is 
because some of the natural gas yet to be tapped consists of unconventional 
natural  gas  that  is  very  costly  to  extract  from  the  Earth.  For  this  reason 
unconventional natural gas reserves have remained largely untouched.
Like  crude  oil,  natural  gas  requires  an  energy-demanding  series  of 
steps to get it out of the ground and turn it into usable fuel, shown in the 
following steps:
 explorationsearching  for  reserves  by  geological  surveys, 
mapping them, and setting up drilling plans
 extractionbuilding drilling wells and getting the gas out 
of the ground
 productionseparating  various  hydrocarbons  from  the 
methane that serves as a fuel source
 transportdelivery of the gas through an extensive network 
of underground pipelines throughout North America
1.
2.
3.
4.
  Gasoline Alternative Vehicles  1
storageholding in underground tanks until needed
 distributiondelivering  quantities  to  consumers  such  as 
households and businesses
Te steps listed here are not the same for every natural gas reserve. 
For instance, sometimes exploration requires more than one technology 
to  fnd  a  natural  gas  deposit.  Exploration  teams  supplement  geological 
surveys with seismology, which studies the density of the Earths layers 
by pulsing energy waves underground. Seismologists create three-dimen-
sional  images  from  their  data  to  picture  all  underground  formations. 
Other  instruments  measure  subsurface  magnetic  felds  or  gravitational 
felds.  Even  with  the  best  evidence,  companies  must  sometimes  drill 
exploratory wells to probe for natural gas. In addition to these consider-
ations, drilled wells behave diferently depending on how close they lie to 
an oil reserve.
Once  the  gas  has  been  drawn  aboveground,  processors  adjust  their 
production  method  to  two  components  of  the  gas:  the  blend  of  hydro-
carbons present and a component called natural gas liquids. Natural gas 
liquids  consist  of  ethane  (two  carbons),  propane  (three  carbons),  butane 
(four carbons), and natural gasoline. Te natural gas industry sells each of 
these  components  as  separate  products  for  distinct  usespropane  heats 
homes; handheld lighters use butane.
Despite  the  difculties  in  fnding  and  extracting  fossil  fuels,  the 
Energy Information Agency (EIA) expects natural gas demand to increase 
for residential and commercial use and electricity production by 2025. Te 
EIA  reports  that  industry  currently  runs  its  operations  with  the  follow-
ing  fuels:  petroleum,  45  percent  of  energy  use;  natural  gas,  37  percent; 
coal, 9 percent; and renewable sources, 9 percent. Unless new sustainable 
technology  becomes  commonplace  for  industry  and  the  public,  the  EIA 
predicts this same usage through 2025.
Natural  gas  supplies  very  little  energy  to  transportation,  but  propo-
nents  of  natural  gas  vehicles  feel  that  this  energy  source  can  play  a  role 
in conserving oil. Natural gas produces energy in combustion similar to 
gasoline, so technology already exists for using it as a fuel. Early attempts 
at  using  natural  gas  to  power  vehicles  showed  that  very  large  fuel  tanks 
would be needed. Scientists therefore worked on new types of natural gas, 
treated to take up less space. Liquefed natural gas (LNG) has been cooled 
to  a  temperature  that  makes  it  a  liquid  that  flls  less  volume  than  gas. 
5.
6.
z  Renewable Energy
Compressed  natural  gas  (CNG)  forms  when  natural  gas  is  stored  under 
pressure to reduce its volume.
Currently, CNG cars outnumber LNG cars, but increased sales of any 
natural gas vehicles have been deterred by the very limited availability of 
natural gas pumps. Natural gas vehicles also have a shorter range at pres-
ent than gasoline-powered vehicles.
Biologically  formed  natural  gas,  called  biogas,  consists  of  meth-
ane  minus  the  natural  gas  liquids.  (Te  term  biological  may  be  mislead-
ing since regular natural gas also formed through biological means over 
eons.) Biogas arises from the fermentation of organic matter by microbes. 
Manure, landflls, and wastewater treatment plants all produce biogas that 
can be collected and used in the same way as natural gas.
Waste  Management,  Inc.,  North  Americas  largest  waste  hauler,  has 
been developing a process for capturing landfll methane and converting 
it to fuel for its trucks. Te company intends to use technology developed 
in Germany to purify the methane, then chill it to 260F (163C) so that 
the  gas  turns  to  liquid.  Company  vice  president  Kent  Stoddard  said  in 
2008,  Were  creating  a  valuable  resource  at  our  landflls.  Landflls  and 
wastewater  treatment  plants  therefore  ofer  an  unlikely  but  possible  fuel 
source for a new generation of vehicles.
nexT generATion hybrids
In the near future, hybrids will assuredly lead the alternative fuel vehicle 
market.  Electric-gasoline  hybrids  allow  car  manufacturers  to  retain  the 
combustion engine with a fairly minor revision by adding a battery power 
source  as  in  the  Prius.  Oil  companies  can  furthermore  continue  to  sell 
gasoline at their current pumps. But change will come to automakers and 
oil  producers  nonetheless.  Hybrids  such  as  the  Prius  travel  45  or  more 
miles  on  a  gallon  [19  km/l]  of  gasoline,  which  conventional  cars  cannot 
match. Americans and drivers in other countries have shown an increas-
ing desire to buy personal vehicles that help conserve nonrenewable fuels, 
especially when gasoline prices rise.
Automotive engineers face a variety of tasks for improving hybrid cars 
to increase their appeal. New hybrids will likely contain battery-gasoline 
or fuel cellgasoline models or the same models with natural gas or biogas 
substituting  for  gasoline.  All  of  these  models  will  need  readily  available 
fueling stations, although the number of stations could be reduced because 
  Gasoline Alternative Vehicles  !
they will set better fuel mileage. Batteries must continue to be made lighter 
and be able to retain a charge much longer than current batteries.
Flex-fuel cars also ofer an option in hybrid technology in which the 
vehicles engine can run on any gasoline-ethanol mixture from 0 percent 
ethanol to 85 percent ethanol. Te EPA has estimated that more than 6 
million fex-fuel cars now travel U.S. roads. Te Big Tree automakers sell 
about  40  diferent  models  in  the  United  StatesEurope  and  Brazil  also 
sell a large number of models. Te main producers of fex-fuel cars other 
than the Big Tree are Citron, Fiat, Honda, Isuzu, Koenigsegg, Mazda, 
Mercedes-Benz,  Mitsubishi,  Nissan,  Peugeot,  Renault,  Saab,  Toyota, 
Volkswagen, and Volvo.
Tough some automakers seem to have been slow in making vehicles 
that do not depend solely on fossil fuel, the industry has been working to 
make up for lost time. At the 2009 International Auto Show in Detroit, the 
Michelin  company  announced  the  Michelin  Challenge  Design  competi-
tion for 2010: At a time when vehicles are becoming more fuel-efcient and 
automotive  manufacturers  are  tasked  with  bringing  consumer-friendly 
vehicles  to  market  that  will  contribute  to  environmental  sustainability, 
Michelin  appropriately  announces  its  theme  for  the  2010  vehicle  global 
Prototype vehicles give the automobile industry and the public an idea of the appearance 
of new models for the future. Tis Aptera 2h is a diesel-electric hybrid. Buyers may 
preorder a 2h, which the manufacturer plans to begin selling in 2010.  (Aptera)
4  Renewable Energy
design competition, Michelin Challenge Design (MCD) as: Electrifying! 
Beautiful,  Innovative  and  Radiant.   Michelins  tagline  perhaps  unwit-
tingly  shows  the  obstacles  that  a  new  generation  of  cars  facethe  2010 
competition emphasizes electric power, but the cars appearance seems to 
be of equal importance. Any new technology, no matter how good it is for 
the environment, must satisfy the tastes of car buyers.
ConClusion
Cars  and  trucks  contribute  signifcantly  to  the  air  pollution  that  causes 
climate change, so new vehicle and fuel technologies represent two of the 
most important areas in reducing humanitys ecological footprint. Tese 
new technologies must deliver changes rapidly because vehicle sales have 
been increasing steadily, especially in countries that have both high popu-
lations  and  robust  economic  growth.  Te  transportation  industry  must 
make up for lost time in fnding cleaner alternatives to the worlds current 
feet of vehicles.
Te  types  of  alternative  fuel  vehicles  that  succeed  in  the  long  term 
will  be  determined  by  the  new  nonfossil  fuels  that  technology  develops. 
Early  attempts  at  ethanol  fuel  from  corn  seemed  to  be  a  perfect  answer 
for  a  time  until  economists  and  human  aid  organizations  began  to  see 
troubling changes in world food supplies. Governments, agriculture poli-
cymakers, and free trade markets must fnd a way to supply new biofuels 
without interfering with world food production.
Te future of alternative fuels will likely be biofuels made from a vari-
ety of crops or from biomass, natural gas processed in a way that makes it 
practical for personal vehicles, and a new generation of fuel cells to replace 
batteries.  Hydrogen  fuel  cells  already  show  promise  and  entrepreneurs 
are also investigating biological fuel cells as an answer to clean, efcient 
power. All of these plans depend to a great deal on the willingness of auto-
makers to design cars to run on alternative fuels.
Perhaps a new generation of vehicles to replace the century-old depen-
dence on gasoline vehicles requires more than technology alone. Because 
drivers in industrialized countries have a strong attachment to their vehi-
cles,  the  automotive  industry  knows  it  must  satisfy  car  buyers  tastes  at 
the same time it introduces clean-vehicle technologies. With support from 
government leaders, economists, and environmental scientists, the trans-
portation industry can launch a new era in road travel.
B
iorefning  refers  to  the  production  of  liquid  fuel  from  plant  constit-
uents.  Biorefning  technology  has  emerged  as  a  priority  in  environ-
mental  science  for  a  critical  reason:  humanitys  insatiable  thirst  for 
crude  oil.  Te  worlds  oil  companies  produce  about  83  million  barrels  of 
oil a day, but the amount of oil the world consumes each day totals 1 to 2 
million barrels more than current production rates. (A barrel contains 42 
gallons [159 l] of oil.)
In  2004,  the  National  Geographic  writer  Tim  Appenzeller  noted, 
Humanitys  way  of  life  is  on  a  collision  course  with  geologywith  the 
stark fact that the Earth holds a fnite supply of oil. Although the Earth 
still  holds  large  crude  oil  reserves  under  continents  and  oceans,  the  oil 
industry  has  reached  a  point  in  which  all  the  easy-to-reach  oil  has  been 
drilled.  Each  new  oil  extraction  has  become  increasingly  difcult  and 
expensive  to  execute.  Oil  experts  vary  in  their  opinion  of  how  much  oil 
remains to be extracted from the Earth. If crude oil production continues 
at its current global pace, the British oil expert Colin Campbell, working 
with the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), has predicted the peak oil supply 
will  be  reached  between  2016  and  2040.  Te  Saudi  Arabian  oil  geologist 
Sadad  al  Husseini  has  calculated  that  the  peak  may  arrive  even  sooner. 
Te worlds peak oil supply is a critical factor for the future because afer 
it  has  peaked,  the  increasing  supply  of  cheap  oil  changes  to  a  declining 
supply of expensive oil.
Te  geophysicist  M.  King  Hubbert  proposed  as  early  as  1949  the 
idea of the world oil supply peaking within this generations lifetime. In 
an  article  Energy  from  Fossil  Fuels,  Hubbert  described  the  situation 
in  coal,  petroleum,  and  natural  gas  reserves  that  the  world  faced  since 
4
Biorefineries
6  Renewable Energy
the start of the 20th century when the human population began to grow 
faster than in any other time in history: . . . the events which we are wit-
nessing and experiencing, far from normal, are the most abnormal and 
anomalous in the history of the world. Yet we cannot turn back; neither 
can we consolidate our gains and remain where we are. In fact, we have 
no choice but to proceed into a future which we may be assured will dif-
fer  markedly  from  anything  we  have  experienced  thus  far.  Many  envi-
ronmentalists have heeded Hubberts chilling prediction, but humans in 
general do not take lifesaving steps until they are forced to do so. Some-
day biorefning will be viewed as being as critical to the worlds progress 
as oil refning is today.
Te United States needs new energy technologies for reasons in addi-
tion  to  the  looming  peak  in  world  oil  supply.  U.S.  leaders  have  worried 
over  the  fact  that  the  largest  crude  oil  reserves  in  the  world  are  in  the 
Middle East, which is a worrisome political region. Te United States can 
Azerbaijan ranks 22nd in world oil production (1,099,000 barrels per day), with signifcant 
drilling in the Caspian Sea. Tis oil feld at Azeri has been depleted. Depleted oil felds can 
be either plugged and the operations shut down, or they can be modifed as natural gas 
storage sites.
  Biorefineries  
go  in  either  of  two  directions  to  relieve  the  coming  oil  demand  crisis:  It 
can  tap  new  domestic  oil  reserves  or  it  can  make  signifcant  progress  in 
new  technologies  for  alternative  fuels.  Biorefning  belongs  to  the  second 
option. Biorefning produces an alternative fuel from either solid biomass 
or liquid oil or grease wastes. Tis chapter discusses the status of biorefn-
ing  in  relation  to  conventional  oil  refning.  It  describes  todays  refning 
industry and explores the aspects that refneries must consider in order to 
convert their operations to biomass refning. Te chapter also covers top-
ics of the refning industry that have afected how oil refning operates and 
may infuence future biorefning. Tese topics are pipeline management, 
the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), and the economics of oil.
TodAys refinery indusTry
Te present global oil refning industry produces fuel for cars and trucks, 
buses, aircraf, and ships as well as for non-vehicle uses such as road asphalt 
components, home heating fuel, lubricants, raw materials for plastics, and 
petrochemicals. Te demand for all oil products has risen with increased 
global business, which demands more fuel for intercontinental transport, 
and a growing population.
Increasing  demand  for  oil  has  helped  build  the  oil  industry  into  the 
most  dominant  industry  in  the  world.  Because  this  industrys  profts 
derive  from  a  nonrenewable  resource  that  will  become  increasingly  dif-
fcult to extract from the Earth, oils price per barrel can be expected to 
steadily  increase.  If  the  price  of  oil  exceeds  the  ability  of  businesses  and 
the public to buy petroleum products, the oil industry will not be able to 
sustain its current way of doing business.
In addition to oil reserves that are more difcult to fnd and extract, 
oil-refning  technology  shows  signs  of  difculty  in  keeping  up  with  the 
worlds demand for oil. Husseini explained in a 2005 interview with Steve 
Andrews of the Association for the Study of Peak Oil (ASPO), Oil capac-
ity today is not production limited but rather processing limited. Tat is to 
say, the DOE reports the worlds refning capacity has leveled at around 83 
MMbd [million barrels of oil per day] for some time and refnery expan-
sions are slow and costly. For this reason Husseini predicted oil produc-
tion will level of at around 9095 MMbd by 2015. A rapid global refnery 
expansion program that eventually matches an increasing oil demand rate 
of 1.5 to 2 percent per year cannot be achieved before 2015 at the earliest 
8  Renewable Energy
and is highly improbable in any case. Al Husseini continues to stand by 
his projections, and many energy experts are listening.
Te  United  States  has  already  entered  an  oil-defcit  situation.  Te 
country reached its peak oil production in the 1970s. Since the 1940s when 
world  oil  production  averaged  almost  200,000  barrels  a  day,  the  average 
U.S. daily oil production has declined each decade until it reached 77,000 
barrels a day during the 1990s. Even nonscientists should realize that oil 
production could drop even further during the 2000s.
Because  of  the  U.S.  oil  production  declines,  leaders  in  government 
have proposed opening up new untapped oil reserves now lying under pro-
tected land, such as national parks, wilderness areas, and marine protected 
areas. In 2008, George W. Bush called the restrictions on ofshore oil drill-
ing outdated and counterproductive. Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger 
of California, where much of the ofshore oil lies, agreed and added, We 
are in this situation because of our dependence on traditional petroleum-
based oil. But the governor has suggested a diferent tactic to more drilling 
Th e Main Alternative Fuels for Veh icle Use
Fuel Source Description
biofuels vegetable oils and animal 
fats from the food 
industry
replaces either gasoline or 
diesel and less polluting 
than standard fuels
ethanol corn and other crops plentiful and produces few 
greenhouse gases
hydrogen coal, nuclear power, 
renewable sources such as 
hydropower, or fuel cells
emits only water and 
nonhazardous gases
natural gas fossil fuel often found 
near oil reserves
less air pollution and 
greenhouse gases than 
gasoline or diesel
propane 
(liquefed 
petroleum gas)
crude oil refning less air pollution and 
greenhouse gases than 
gasoline or diesel
  Biorefineries  9
by advocating new technologies and new fuel choices for consumers. Te 
responsibility falls squarely onto the shoulders of the refning industry.
Te  refning  industrys  future  is  not  coming  to  an  end.  Te  worlds 
oil reserves have not yet run dry, but nonetheless they are gradually dis-
appearing.  In  light  of  the  predictions  for  future  oil  production,  refner-
ies  must  begin  now  to  plan  and  retool  for  alternative  fuels.  Te  refning 
industry has the opportunity to attack the fuel problem from two direc-
tions: biorefning and innovations in traditional oil refning. Both of these 
approaches will seek the goal of producing fuels no longer based on crude 
oil. Te alternative fuels described in the table on page 78 have the poten-
tial to supersede crude oil in this century.
As the world approaches its peak oil production, oil industry research-
ers have begun investigating options in addition to biofuels and the alter-
native  energy  sources  listed  in  the  table.  Two  long-range  approaches 
Coal accounts for 27 percent of world energy consumption, and the U.S. Energy 
Information Administration (EIA) expects that share to grow to 29 percent by 2030. 
Asia consumes more coal than any other world region, which explains in part the 
pollution problems that occur in many industrial Asian cities. Although coal mining 
and burning creates pollution, countries have depended on them because coal is 
plentiful and inexpensive. Te future of coal energy depends on new clean-burning 
technologies and coal-to-fuel conversion.  (Tom Weiland)
80  Renewable Energy
consist of coal-to-oil processing and tar sand processing. In the coal-to-
oil method, coalstill an abundant resourceis turned into a liquid fuel 
under  high  temperature  and  pressure.  But  some  coal-to-oil  drawbacks 
include high costs and large amounts of exhaust emissions. Large quanti-
ties of sand in western Canada hold tar, which is a substance from crude 
oil that has migrated toward the Earths surface. Tar extracted from Can-
adas sand reserves can be turned into crude oil, but this process demands 
large amounts of water and energy. Both coal-to-oil and tar extraction will 
demand long-term research. Tey will likely not solve the oil problem, but 
may someday serve as a supplement to dwindling oil reserves. Te biore-
fning industry hopes to develop new alternative fuels before drivers will 
ever need to depend on coal or tar.
Building a new future for oil refning holds no simple answers. More 
than one approach exists for reinventing the refning industry to satisfy 
the worlds huge fuel needs. Any decision and any approach promise to 
be  costly  and  require  an  immediate  commitment  in  research  and  test-
ing. Te sidebar on page 81, Te U.S. Department of Energy discusses 
how this government agency makes decisions on the energy future of the 
United States.
pipelines
Pipelines  in  the  United  States  and  almost  every  other  part  of  the  world 
carry crude oil from drilling sites to tankers or straight to oil refneries or 
carry natural gas to gas refneries. Several thousand oil tankers transport 
billions of gallons of oil across the oceans each day to carry oil where pipe-
lines do not exist. Ships and pipelines receive unwanted publicity when-
ever an accident or leak occurs, but in light of the massive amount of oil 
they transport through rough seas and over remote terrain, oil transport 
has been a generally safe activity.
In  the  United  States,  the  Trans-Alaska  Pipeline  System  (TAPS) 
stretches  for  808  miles  (1,300  km)  from  Prudhoe  Bay  on  Alaskas  North 
Slope near the Arctic Circle to the Port of Valdez in the south. Six difer-
ent  pipeline  companies  run  the  line  known  by  Alaskans  as  the  Alyeska 
pipeline,  and  along  its  route  the  pipeline  bisects  the  largest  expanse  of 
unspoiled wilderness in the United States.
Because  of  the  Alyeska  pipelines  remote  path  through  pristine  wil-
derness, environmentalists voiced concern during the pipelines planning 
  Biorefineries  81
T
he DOE began operations in 1977, fve years after Jimmy Carter proposed 
that a single department within the presidents cabinet should admin-
ister the countrys energy policy. T e department now numbers about 14,000 
employees with its main of ce based in Maryland near Washington, D.C. Under 
the  leadership  of  the  secretary  of  energy,  the  DOE  has  three  main  responsi-
bilities: (1) coordinate the nations energy supply and use; (2) lead research and 
development  in  energy  conservation  and  alternative  energy  sources;  and  (3) 
supervise the nations production and disposal of nuclear weapons.
T e DOEs science and technology program funds research in a vari-
ety of areas, many of which focus on climate change and issues related to 
global warming, such as greenhouse gases. T e department is also occu-
pied with solving the problem of U.S. oil production, that is, that produc-
tion is decreasing but demand is increasing.
T e DOE investigates biological and other renewable energy sources 
for  the  purpose  of  helping  to  ease  the  discrepancy  between  oil  use  and 
production. Part of the research on biomass fuels concentrates on achiev-
ing  the  most  ef cient  ways  to  convert  biomass  to  liquid  fuels.  T e  DOE 
has suggested that testing should be done not only on biomass to make 
hydrocarbon fuels to mimic petroleum, but also microbial sources, ther-
mochemical  reactions  that  combine  chemical  conversions  under  high 
heatcoal-to-oil  ofers  an  exampleor  advanced  chemical  methods 
using catalysts. As part of the research it supports, the DOE has empha-
sized that current refning technology must expand into these new areas.
In  2009,  President  Barack  Obama  named  the  Stanford  University 
physicist Steven Chu as the new secretary of energy. As the DOE has done 
under other administrations, it will be expected to implement the presi-
dents national energy policy. New national energy policies will emphasize 
renewable energy sources, and the DOE will be expected to take the lead 
in alternative and renewable energy technologies. Chu told the Washing-
ton Post shortly after his appointment, I was following [climate change] 
just as a citizen and getting increasingly alarmed. Many of our best scien-
tists  now  realize  that  this  is  getting  down  to  a  crisis  situation.  T e  DOE 
will soon put renewed eforts into solving climate change with an urgency 
never before seen in previous administrations.
The U.S. Department of Energy
8z  Renewable Energy
and building and the controversy over the pipeline continues four decades 
later.  In  2009,  an  Audubon  magazine  article  stated,  Since  the  discovery 
of  oil  in  Prudhoe  Bay  in  1968,  development  has  spread  east,  west,  and 
ofshore,  sending  several  billion  barrels  of  oil  south  through  the  Trans-
Alaska Pipeline. Te 19 producing oil felds on the North Slope are spread 
over 1,000 square miles [2,590 km
2
] of tundra and wetland. Roads, pipe-
lines, drilling pads, airstrips and other infrastructure in the central Arctic 
oilfelds have covered more than 9,000 acres [2,590 km
2
] of tundra. Te 
Alyeskas  proponents  have,  of  course,  argued  the  benefts  of  the  project, 
discussed in the sidebar Case Study: Alaskas Oil Economy on page 84.
Te Trans-Alaska Pipeline is far from the longestor even the most 
controversialof  the  worlds  oil  pipelines.  Te  Druzhba  pipeline,  the 
worlds  longest,  covers  2,500  miles  (4,000  km)  from  central  Russia  to 
Te Trans-Alaska Pipeline at Kuparuk on the Alaskan Arctic plain. In 2006, the pipeline 
ruptured and spilled more than 270,000 gallons (1 million l) of oil into Prudhoe Bay. 
Cleanup teams struggled in temperatures of 63F (52.8C) to dislodge oil frozen to 
ice. Te spill rekindled debate over proposed drilling in Alaskas Arctic National Wildlife 
Refuge (ANWR).  (William Breck Bowden)
  Biorefineries  8!
eastern Europe and Germany. Te second longest line, the Baku-Tbilisi-
Ceyhan pipeline, stretches less than half the distance (1,099 miles; [1,768 
km]) from the Caspian Sea to the Mediterranean Sea. Te capacity of the 
worlds largest pipelines may be difcult to determine because countries 
and oil companies ofen keep the details of their pipelines from the pub-
lic. Tey hold information on new construction and changing capacity of 
pipelines in check for the following reasons: (1) security against terrorist 
attack; (2) as a business decision in response to fuctuating world oil sup-
plies  and  prices;  and  (3)  as  a  protection  against  environmentalists  who 
may oppose the building of new pipelines.
Te  natural  gas  pipeline  network  in  the  United  States  also  repre-
sents  one  of  engineerings  most  impressive  accomplishments.  Natu-
ral  gas  from  the  main  reserves  in  the  Texas-Louisiana  Gulf  of  Mexico 
region,  Oklahoma,  western  Texas,  and  West  Virginia-Ohio-western 
Pennsylvania travels in underground pipelines to each of the 48 contig-
uous states. Tese pipelines lead to large underground storage facilities 
located in 28 states. Te United States uses three main storage methods 
for natural gas: (1) depleted natural gas or oil felds; (2) salt caverns; or 
(3)  natural  underground  water  reserve  sites  called  aquifers.  In  a  few 
rare  cases,  abandoned  coal  mines  have  also  been  converted  into  gas 
storage facilities.
Each type of natural gas storage presents advantages and disadvan-
tages.  Salt  caverns  have  been  used  increasingly  since  the  1980s  because 
of  their  stability  and  ease  of  injecting  and  removing  the  gas.  Aquifers, 
however,  require  extra  preparation  to  assure  that  deep  rock  formations 
hold the gas without contaminating nearby underground water sources. 
Each  of  the  current  methods  for  natural  gas  storage  requires  expenses 
that become part of the overall price that consumers pay for natural gas.
Pipelines  crossing  international  borders  and  covering  very  long  dis-
tances present increased chances for accidents and spills or possible dis-
ruption  due  to  political  actions.  National  energy  commissions  therefore 
monitor pipelines for the following events to assure pipeline safety:
breaks and leaks due to aging
damage due to earthquakes, foods, freezing, or storms
war or conficts near pipelines
 interference at border crossings between neighboring countries
84  Renewable Energy
Environmental  scientists  have  shown  another  very  serious  concern 
regarding pipelinestheir interference with wildlife migrations. Alaskas 
caribou carry out one of the worlds largest wildlife migrations, and, early 
in  the  Trans-Alaska  Pipeline  planning,  environmentalists  feared  that 
A
laskas economy depends in part on the robustness of the world oil market. Alaska pro-
duces about 10 percent of the oil used in the United States and also exports oil to countries 
in Asia; the state produces more than 20 million barrels of oil per month. For this reason, Alaska 
balances two often-competing interests: Alaska holds immense oil reserves needed by the United 
States, but it also contains the nations largest swath of undisturbed wilderness located on or near 
additional oil reserves. Can Alaska reconcile oil production with environmental protection?
Alaska receives most of its income from the following industries: oil and natural gas, timber, 
fshing, mining, and tourism. According to the state chamber of commerce, the oil and gas indus-
try generates almost 34,000 jobs, and taxes on oil companies revenues brought the state more 
than  $10  billion  in  2008,  double  the  amount  of  the  year  before.  Each  Alaskan  receives  a  yearly 
check  of  between  $1,000  and  $2,000  from  the  states  savings  account  from  money  earned  by 
investing oil tax revenues.
Because of the wealth that Alaska receives from oil, residents and government leaders may 
be tempted to raise the taxes it levies on oil companies drilling in the state. While the tax income 
benefts Alaska and its citizens, Alaska must also be careful not to tax companies to a level that 
makes further exploration and drilling too expensive. Marilyn Crockett of the Alaska Oil and Gas 
Association, which represents oil and gas companies, said in the Seattle Times in 2008, Clearly, 
from the investor standpoint, Alaska has become a less attractive place to invest exploration and 
production  dollars.  In  short,  Alaska  wants  and  possibly  needs  the  oil  industry  and  must  make 
decisions to support oil drilling.
Some  Alaskans  have  become  such  strong  proponents  of  fossil  fuels  that  they  question 
whether global warming truly exists. T e columnist Dan Fagan of the Alaska Standard has used 
such terminology as the global warming cult and refers to questions about climate change as 
hysteria.  Nevertheless,  many  Alaskans  worry  about  activities  that  encroach  onto  unspoiled 
lands.  T e  Alaska  Department  of  Commerce  cites  as  its  mission  the  need  to  maintain  existing 
energy  programs  but  also  to  pursue  new  energies  that  are  sustainable  and  environmentally 
sound. T is department now supports programs in fuel ef ciency, biomass energy, geothermal 
energy, hydroelectric energy, ocean and river energy, solar energy, and wind energy.
Alaskas  alternative  energy  programs  are  in  an  early  stage.  Former  Alaska  senator  Ted  Ste-
vens cautioned in 2008, Alternative energy opportunities in Alaska are enormous, but it takes 
a large investment to get them started. Meanwhile small local groups have discussed plans for 
investigating alternative energy, and some entrepreneurs have opened stores that sell devices for 
maximizing fuel ef ciency and converting to greener methods. For the present, however, many 
Alaskans see a more lucrative future in oil than in renewable energy.
Case Study: Alaskas Oil Economy
  Biorefineries  8
 construction and the pipeline itself would alter the natural migration route 
and permanently damage the tundra ecosystem. To reduce the potential 
harm to wildlife, the pipeline contains 23 buried sections and more than 
500 elevated (10 feet; [3.3 m]) sections to allow caribou and other wildlife 
A
laskas economy depends in part on the robustness of the world oil market. Alaska pro-
duces about 10 percent of the oil used in the United States and also exports oil to countries 
in Asia; the state produces more than 20 million barrels of oil per month. For this reason, Alaska 
balances two often-competing interests: Alaska holds immense oil reserves needed by the United 
States, but it also contains the nations largest swath of undisturbed wilderness located on or near 
additional oil reserves. Can Alaska reconcile oil production with environmental protection?
Alaska receives most of its income from the following industries: oil and natural gas, timber, 
fshing, mining, and tourism. According to the state chamber of commerce, the oil and gas indus-
try generates almost 34,000 jobs, and taxes on oil companies revenues brought the state more 
than  $10  billion  in  2008,  double  the  amount  of  the  year  before.  Each  Alaskan  receives  a  yearly 
check  of  between  $1,000  and  $2,000  from  the  states  savings  account  from  money  earned  by 
investing oil tax revenues.
Because of the wealth that Alaska receives from oil, residents and government leaders may 
be tempted to raise the taxes it levies on oil companies drilling in the state. While the tax income 
benefts Alaska and its citizens, Alaska must also be careful not to tax companies to a level that 
makes further exploration and drilling too expensive. Marilyn Crockett of the Alaska Oil and Gas 
Association, which represents oil and gas companies, said in the Seattle Times in 2008, Clearly, 
from the investor standpoint, Alaska has become a less attractive place to invest exploration and 
production  dollars.  In  short,  Alaska  wants  and  possibly  needs  the  oil  industry  and  must  make 
decisions to support oil drilling.
Some  Alaskans  have  become  such  strong  proponents  of  fossil  fuels  that  they  question 
whether global warming truly exists. T e columnist Dan Fagan of the Alaska Standard has used 
such terminology as the global warming cult and refers to questions about climate change as 
hysteria.  Nevertheless,  many  Alaskans  worry  about  activities  that  encroach  onto  unspoiled 
lands.  T e  Alaska  Department  of  Commerce  cites  as  its  mission  the  need  to  maintain  existing 
energy  programs  but  also  to  pursue  new  energies  that  are  sustainable  and  environmentally 
sound. T is department now supports programs in fuel ef ciency, biomass energy, geothermal 
energy, hydroelectric energy, ocean and river energy, solar energy, and wind energy.
Alaskas  alternative  energy  programs  are  in  an  early  stage.  Former  Alaska  senator  Ted  Ste-
vens cautioned in 2008, Alternative energy opportunities in Alaska are enormous, but it takes 
a large investment to get them started. Meanwhile small local groups have discussed plans for 
investigating alternative energy, and some entrepreneurs have opened stores that sell devices for 
maximizing fuel ef ciency and converting to greener methods. For the present, however, many 
Alaskans see a more lucrative future in oil than in renewable energy.
Case Study: Alaskas Oil Economy
Te Trans-Alaska Pipeline crosses the Brooks, Alaska, and Chugach Mountain Ranges on its route between 
Prudhoe Bays oil felds and the tankers waiting at Port Valdez. Te pipeline symbolizes the strong relationship 
between Alaskas residents and oil. Te Alaskan economy depends to a large extent on its natural resources: 
fshing, timber, wildlife, crude oil, and minerals.  (Southwest Research Institute)
86  Renewable Energy
to  pass,  but  environmentalists  clearly  wish  the  pipeline  had  never  been 
built. Audubon noted in 2009, In the early 1990s the Alaska Department 
of Fish and Game found that caribou inhabiting the oil feld had lower calf 
productivity  than  animals  from  the  same  herd  that  calved  farther  away 
from  oilfeld-related  facilities.  Other  mishaps  have  confrmed  environ-
mentalists worries. Leaks and spills and electrical and mechanical break-
downs at pump stations have occurred on occasion.
Monitors of the Alyeska pipeline try to assure that any spills or leaks 
are  contained  quickly.  Meanwhile,  environmental  scientists  continue  to 
study the efects the pipeline has had on wildlife. Unfortunately, less may 
be known about the environmental efects of pipelines that cross Russia, 
Siberia, and eastern Europes forests.
Pipelines might be necessary for any type of fuel in the future, includ-
ing nonfossil fuels. For this reason, pipeline planners and engineers must 
work  with  ecologists  to  develop  low-impact  structures  that  serve  people 
and  protect  nature.  Just  as  important,  safeguards  for  the  environment 
must be in place throughout the worlds pipelines.
biorefining sTeps
Biorefning refers to the production of fuels using biological materials with 
the intention of replacing gasoline or diesel. Te biological materials are 
made up of solid biomass or vegetable-based oils. Te biorefning industry 
has also investigated technologies that start with fossil fuels, but in a more 
efcient and nonpolluting process than conventional refning.
Biomass made of composted organic material or animal wastes can 
be turned to a thick, dark fuid that the biorefning industry calls bio-oil. 
Biorefners produce bio-oil by heating biomass until it decomposes into 
constituent hydrocarbons. Tis heating process called pyrolysis can also 
be used for making natural gas. Biorefners usually employ fash pyrolysis 
to make fuel, so-called because the process heats biomass to a very high 
temperature in a short period of time. Te heating step emits vapors that 
the biorefner condenses to an oily collection of hydrocarbons similar to 
those  in  crude  oil.  Subsequent  refning  steps  then  mirror  conventional 
oil  refning.  To  date,  bio-oil  works  best  as  heating  fuel  and  as  a  source 
of  industrial  petrochemicals.  Biorefners  also  capture  the  gas  given  of
in  the  production  of  bio-oil  and  further  refne  it  to  make  an  additional 
energy source.
  Biorefineries  8
Vegetable oils from soybeans, cottonseeds, palm, sunfower, jatropha, 
and frying oils or grease wastes from restaurants have been experimented 
with in modern cars and buses since the 1980s. Oil-processing chambers 
called  bioreactors  make  about  50,000  gallons  [189,270  l]  of  oil  that  con-
tains the same mixture of hydrocarbons as required by the government in 
order to be regulated as a vehicle fuel. Heat and the feedstock oil go into 
the  process,  and  then  propane,  a  small  amount  of  water,  and  the  liquid 
fuel exit. In order to get the most out of this process, biorefners make the 
thick vegetable oils or greases easier to handle and to turn into fuel. Tey 
do this either by diluting the oils or grease with a thinner oil, or they treat 
the thick substance by a chemical process that changes the hydrocarbon 
bonds  and  turns  the  material  into  a  more  liquid  consistency.  Following 
these steps, the new fuel has been modifed into a form suitable for use in 
combustion engines.
Biodiesel  fuel  difers  from  other  biofuels  by  its  hydrocarbon  com-
position.  Biodiesel  belongs  to  two  diferent  groups  based  on  source  and 
process  method.  First,  pure  biodiesel,  called  B100,  comes  from  biomass 
and works only in diesel engines. Second, biodiesel blends contain some 
petroleum  mixed  in  with  the  biodiesel  so  that  the  fuel  can  be  used  in  a 
variety of engines. Tis second type of fuel comes in a variety of biodiesel-
petroleum blends; B5 is 5 percent biodiesel and 95 percent petroleum, B20 
Biorefneries rely on raw materials made by nature as well as biological processes to convert the materials into end 
products. Te biorefning industry has the capability to produce three diferent types of renewable fuels, highlighted 
in the diagram: solid fuel pellets for use in biomass energy production; ethanol biofuel; and biogas, a heating fuel. 
Biorefning also produces chemical-free fertilizers for agriculture and other organic compounds.
88  Renewable Energy
is 20 percent biodiesel, and so on. Te EPA permits all biodiesel blends to 
be used in conventional diesel engines.
Te main step in biodiesel production comprises the transesterifca-
tion  reaction  in  which  a  catalyst  helps  change  the  structure  of  the  fats 
in  the  oil.  Biodiesel  refneries  usually  rely  on  the  following  feedstock 
oils:  soybean,  sunfower,  canola,  or  used  fryer  oil  from  restaurants,  or 
restaurant  grease  or  tallow.  Transesterifcation  produces  biodiesel  plus 
glycerin as a by-product. Glycerin can be refned to make methanol, an 
alcohol that biorefneries then use as an energy source in their own oper-
ations.  Afer  removing  the  glycerin,  the  biorefner  purifes  the  biodie-
sel  by  removing  contaminants  such  as  water,  unreacted  fats,  and  small 
amounts of excess glycerin.
Pure biodiesel produces two-thirds less unburned hydrocarbons from 
engines and almost 50 percent less carbon monoxide and particles. Pure 
biodiesel  and  biodiesel  blends  produce  more  nitrogen  oxides,  however, 
than regular fuels. Biodiesels other drawbacks include limited availabil-
ity  and  the  large  area  of  land  needed  to  support  biodiesel  manufacture. 
Used frying oils serve as starting material for biodiesel. Te chemicals lye and methanol added to vegetable oil 
break the fats into biodiesel precursor and glycerin. By removing the glycerin and water-washing impurities from 
the remaining liquid, a biorefnery produces clean biodiesel. Biodiesel usually requires a fnal step, called drying, in 
which the fuel is stored for a period to let the last remaining impurities settle out by gravity. Ten it is ready for use 
in cars and other vehicles.  (Source: John Blanchard, San Francisco Chronicle)
  Biorefineries  89
Drivers  of  biodiesel  vehicles  have  been  frustrated  by  the  lack  of  fueling 
stations that cater to them even in environmentally conscious areas such 
as  California.  An  Oakland,  California,  resident  Jonathan  Austin  told 
the San Francisco Chronicle in 2007, You cant just run down to the gas 
station.  Youve  got  to  plan  ahead.  Te  number  of  biodiesel  pumps  has 
increased  only  slightly  since  Austin  voiced  his  complaint.  Meanwhile, 
biorefneries  have  pursued  feedstocks  that  produce  the  most  fuel  from 
a given area of land. Canola oil can produce up to 150 gallons [568 l] of 
biodiesel per acre [0.004 km
2
] of land planted with rapeseed; sunfowers 
produce about 100 gallons [378 l] per acre; and soybeans make 50 gallons 
[189 l] of fuel per acre.
Biorefneries have not reached the number and scale of todays mas-
sive  oil  refneries.  Biorefning  has  largely  confned  itself  to  ethanol  fuels 
for the past several years, but disadvantages in large-scale ethanol produc-
tion have prompted the biorefning industry to investigate new avenues in 
fuel-making. Te DOE and government leaders will be called upon very 
soon  to  create  a  clear  plan  for  alternative  fuels  that  beneft  the  environ-
ment, the economy, and a new feet of vehicles.
developing The  
biorefining indusTry
Te  biorefning  industry  remains  young  and  small,  as  noted  by  the  San 
Francisco Chronicle reporter Michael Cabanatuan in 2007: Biodiesel has 
been popular for years among farmers in the Midwest and in the South, 
where virgin soybean oil typically is used to produce the fuel. Yet its use 
in  the  West,  until  recently,  was  largely  limited  to  hobbyists  who  brewed 
the  fuel  at  home  and  people  who  prided  themselves  on  not  using  oil. 
Home production will not be the route to alternative fuels; the EPA does 
not approve home formulas for use on public roads for two main reasons. 
First, home-prepared fuels would likely not conform to standard formu-
las so that the EPA could not estimate their efects on air pollution. Sec-
ond, home manufacture of fuel is extremely dangerous due to the risk of 
explosion.
Millions  of  dollars  from  investors  and  the  DOE  have  fed  projects 
focused on the expansion of biodiesel refning capabilities. Larry Russo of 
the DOE said, We need to do the research of course, but then we need to 
do the pilot testing with our partners, and then scale these things up to get 
90  Renewable Energy
to the point where it can attract fnancing on its own. Pilot plants carry 
out all the steps of a full-scale manufacturing plant, but the pilot plant is 
a much smaller facility designed to debug the system and look for ways to 
improve efciency.
In  May  2008,  Congress  passed  the  Food,  Conservation,  and  Energy 
Act, known familiarly, as the 2008 Farm Bill. Tis act stipulated the avail-
ability  of  more  than  $1  billion  for  diverse  programs,  including  biofuel, 
biomass,  and  technologies  to  expand  biorefning.  Large  oil  companies 
have  also  invested  in  biorefning  technology  centers  to  speed  develop-
ment.  Despite  the  increased  activity  in  biofuel  research,  biorefnings 
future remains largely unknown. Even the most knowledgeable experts in 
alternative fuels have yet to predict which alternative fuel will become the 
viable replacement for gasoline and diesel.
Te ethanol biofuel industry in the United States grew primarily due to large harvests of corn, the feedstock for 
ethanol production. Te cornstalks can be used as feedstock for biomass energy production. Concerns over the 
efects of massive corn harvests dedicated to ethanol production have prompted some farmers and economists to 
suggest diferent sources for ethanol, such as switchgrass, which requires less energy input to grow than corn.
  Biorefineries  91
One  of  the  problems  biorefning  must  solve  comes  from  the  large 
amounts of glycerin by-product that accumulates in the biofuel-making 
process. Glycerin poses no hazards, but it has to go somewhere. Some of 
the excess glycerin (also called glycerol) from biorefning goes to other 
industries  for  making  soaps,  moisturizers,  antimicrobial  formulas  in 
veterinary medicine, and as a carrier for some human drugs. A chemical 
engineer Kenneth F. Reardon of Colorado State University told the New 
York Times in 2007, Just like petroleum refneries make more than one 
product  that  are  the  feedstock  for  other  industries,  the  same  will  have 
to  be  true  for  biofuels.  Biorefning  is  what  the  vision  has  to  look  like 
in  the  end.  Large  biorefneries  take  a  long  time  to  perfect  and  build, 
and  part  of  their  planning  must  include  a  new  use  for  glycerin.  Tese 
represent big challenges for the biorefning industry. No one is sure for 
the moment whether biorefning can overcome its obstacles in a timely 
fashion  and  make  an  important  contribution  to  the  worlds  alternative 
fuel supply.
ConClusion
Biorefneries  play  a  central  role  in  assuring  the  success  of  new  alterna-
tive  fuel  vehicles.  Unless  alternative  fuels  become  as  available  as  gaso-
line is today, their future is questionable. A large responsibility rests on 
engineers to design biorefneries that can meet the fuel needs of drivers. 
Tis is a daunting challenge. Todays oil companies serve as the largest 
business  enterprises  in  the  world,  yet  even  oil  production  may  not  be 
keeping up with the growing demand for fossil fuels. Biorefning there-
fore faces dual challenges in fnding the best technologies for converting 
crops to fuel and for producing biofuel on a scale that satisfes world fuel 
consumption.
For  the  present,  biorefning  must  identify  the  best  feedstocks  for 
making biofuel in a fast and inexpensive manner. Biorefning produces 
less  air  pollution  than  conventional  oil  refning,  but  biorefneries  face 
problems  of  disposing  of  large  amounts  by-products  made  in  the  bio-
refning process. Biorefning must additionally work with governments 
to create a plan for making the new biofuels available and priced for the 
driving public.
Biorefnings future shares a strong connection with automakers cur-
rent attention to new alternative fuel vehicles. No one yet knows whether 
9z  Renewable Energy
biofuels will replace fossil fuels or if biofuels will merely serve as a bridge 
in technologies between crude oil and fuel cells or all-electric vehicles of 
the  future.  Because  of  the  complexity  of  solving  the  crisis  of  the  worlds 
growing  ecological  footprint,  biorefning  will  probably  play  a  role  in 
conjunction with many other technologies. It will be up to biorefners to 
determine whether the role of biofuels will be major or minor, long term 
or short lived, in building a sustainable society.
9!
C
lean  energy  refers  to  forms  of  energy  that  do  not  produce  hazard-
ous  emissions,  do  not  harm  human  and  ecosystem  health,  and  do 
not destroy the environment during extraction from the Earth. Coal-
burning plants and gasoline-burning vehicles do not meet this defnition. 
Clean  energy  has  become  synonymous  with  renewable  energy,  but  clean 
energy  also  might  be  from  fossil  fuels  if  the  fuel  can  be  extracted,  pro-
cessed, and burned in ways that do not harm the environment.
Te U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) provides an online 
calculator to help people understand the cleanness of their energy sources. 
Such a calculation serves as a good starting point for learning about the 
impact everyone has on energy consumption and emissions. Te calcula-
tor factors in the location where a person lives because some parts of the 
country rely almost entirely on coal-fred power plants for energy, while 
other regions use mainly hydroelectric power. Tese two energy sources 
have  diferent  values  when  calculating  clean  energy.  Te  calculator  esti-
mates the amounts (in pounds) of carbon dioxide (CO
2
), sulfur dioxides, 
and nitrogen oxides produced by individuals according to their zip code 
and  characteristics  of  their  lifestyle.  Users  of  the  calculator  additionally 
learn  whether  their  emissions  occur  at  rates  higher  or  lower  than  the 
national average. For example, a U.S. resident might produce the following 
typical annual amounts of greenhouse gases from energy usage:
CO
2
: 1,400 pounds (635 kg) per megawatt-hour (MWh) megawatt-hour megawatt-hour
sulfur dioxides: 6 pounds (2.7 kg) per MWh
nitrogen oxides: 3 pounds (1.4 kg) per MWh
5
Innovations in 
Clean Energy
94  Renewable Energy
Clean energy plays a part in protecting the environment in addition 
to reducing emissions that cause global warming. Clean energy conserves 
nonrenewable  forms  of  energy,  reduces  environmental  damage  caused 
by exploration and extraction of fossil fuels, and minimizes exposure of 
people and wildlife to large energy production plants.
Tis chapter describes the important clean energies that are becom-
ing  more  vital  every  day  in  eforts  to  halt  global  warming.  Te  chapter 
also  describes  innovative  technologies  in  clean  energy.  It  opens  with  a 
review of how the alternative energy movement became established. Te 
chapter  then  discusses  wind,  water,  solar,  geothermal,  nuclear,  and  fuel 
cell  power.  Each  discussion  includes  the  advantages  and  disadvantages 
of these technologies. Te chapter stresses the process of managing car-
bon, explaining how peoples actions inevitably relate in some way to the 
Earths carbon cycle.
AlTernATive energy emerging
Before 1900, horse-drawn vehicles traveled the roads, only forced to step 
out of the way for a steam-powered contraption on rare occasions. At the 
beginning  of  the  20th  century,  the  German  engineer  Carl  Benz  began 
manufacturing vehicles powered completely by gasoline-fed internal com-
bustion engines. Te invention produced more power than steam engines 
and  was  also  easier  to  navigate.  In  1867,  the  German  engineer  Nikolaus 
August Otto developed a four-stroke internal combustion engine for use 
in  manufacturing  equipment  rather  than  road  vehicles.  Benz,  Gottlieb 
Daimler,  and  Ferdinand  Porsche  all  saw  potential  in  Ottos  design,  and 
they  worked  independently  as  well  as  cooperatively  to  develop  the  frst 
practical use of gasoline power for vehicles.
Massive  reserves  of  oil  that  were  discovered  under  continents  or 
the seas led the next two generations of drivers to believe the tap would 
never run dry for their vehicles or for heat for their homes. But in 1973, 
the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), an oil-
producing  cartel  (see  the  following  table),  raised  the  price  of  oil  four 
times. Suddenly, oil-importing countries such as the United States began 
to  think  about  alternative  energy  sources  on  a  large  scale  and  for  the 
long term.
Tough  inventors  had  already  designed  vehicles  that  ran  on  elec-
tricity,  batteries,  or  combinations  of  gasoline  and  non-gasoline  fuels, 
  Innovations in Clean Energy  9
 oil-importing  countries  began  to  see  alternative  energy  as  an  increas-
ingly critical new industry. In the 1970s, scientists discovered another 
disquieting fact: Many oil experts estimated that the United States had 
reached its peak oil production and would thereafer depend on foreign 
sources to make up the diference to meet its needs. Many of the same 
scientists  have  pointed  out  that  the  rest  of  the  world  is  also  close  to 
reaching  this  peak  on  the  Hubbert  Curve,  which  is  a  graphical  depic-
tion of oil supply and consumption. Te most important feature of the 
Hubbert Curve is its ability to estimate a point in time in which fossil 
fuel demand exceeds supply.
OPEC Countries
Country Location Date Joined OPEC
Algeria Africa 1969
Angola Africa 2007
Ecuador South America 19731992, 2007
Iran Middle East 1960
Iraq Middle East 1960
Kuwait Middle East 1960
Libya Africa 1962
Nigeria Africa 1971
Qatar Middle East 1961
Saudi Arabia Middle East 1960
United Arab Emirates Middle East 1967
Venezuela South America 1960
Note: OPEC founding members are Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela
96  Renewable Energy
Te  worlds  need  for  energy  sources  to  replace  fossil  fuels  therefore 
originates  from  a  combination  of  commerce,  world  politics,  and  the 
Earths composition; the Earth will not make more fossil fuels in time to 
meet the human populations increasing consumption rate.
Inventions that were once the domain of amateur scientists have now 
entered  mainstream  planning  for  alternative  energies:  water,  wind,  sun-
light, geothermal emissions, biological reactions, and hydrogen. In 2007, 
the New York Times reporter Matt Richtel wrote of the new energy plat-
form,  Silicon  Valleys  dot-com  era  may  be  giving  way  to  the  watt-com 
era.  Just  as  computers  and  the  Internet  (the  dot-com  companies)  grew 
from amateur experiments in Californias Silicon Valley, the same ingenu-
ity may take the lead in alternative energies.
In 1956, the geologist M. King Hubbert used this graphknown as the Hubbert 
Curveto predict when an oil-producing region would reach its peak production. 
Te oil industry dismissed Hubberts prediction of an end to oil, but in 197071 
geologists and oil experts calculated that the United States had reached its oil-
producing peak. It has used up more than half of its oil production capability. Te 
remainder will be increasingly difcult to fnd, drill, extract, and produce in a cost-
efective manner.
  Innovations in Clean Energy  9
Wind, WAve, And TidAl poWer
Energy generated from the power of wind, waves, or water uses a passive 
form of energy collection; the system works by the force of wind or water 
and does not need any added energy. Wind power has been a fast-growing 
segment  of  the  alternative  energy  industry  since  the  1990s;  wind  power 
has  grown  more  than  30  percent  in  each  year  of  2006,  2007,  and  2008. 
Wave  and  tidal  power  have  made  smaller  contributions,  but  interest  in 
these modes of producing energy remains steady.
Wind  generates  power  when  gusts  contact  a  windmill  called  a  wind 
turbine.  Te  turbines  blades  rotate,  which  turns  gears  in  a  generator 
behind  the  blades  and  inside  the  turbine.  Te  generator  converts  the 
kinetic  energy  of  the  rotating  blades  into  electrical  energy,  which  cables 
then carry to an electrical transfer building to distribute to customers.
Commercial  wind  farms  possess  hundreds  of  turbines  and  usually 
work best in capturing the winds energy along coasts or on plains, which 
receive steady winds in all seasons. Despite this simple solution to produc-
ing energy, wind farms have caused some worry in the publics mind. Ernie 
Corrigan, spokesperson for the Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound, said 
in 2006 about a proposed 130-turbine wind farm on Massachusettss Cape 
Cod, Cape Cod has done a very good job of selling this thing as almost 
bucolic, and it is anything but bucolic. It is an industrial project that would 
assemble the largest concentration of ofshore wind turbines in the world. 
At  night,  it  would  literally  transform  what  is  now  a  crystal-clear  skyline 
into something more like an urban skyline, with tall towers and blinking 
lights. As of 2008, the wind farm that had been planned for the 400-foot 
(122-m)  turbines  placed  fve  miles  (8  km)  south  of  Cape  Cod  remains  a 
point of contention, and the project has stalled.
Does wind power have a future? A 2009 article in E/Te Environmen-
tal Magazine stated, In 2007, 35 percent of all new electricity generation 
installed in the U.S.over 5,200 megawattswas wind. Te article went 
on  to  state,  In  2008,  wind  displaced  about  34  million  tons  [31  million 
metric  tons]  of  carbon  dioxide,  equivalent  to  taking  5.8  million  vehicles 
of  the  road.  Although  wind  power  was  expected  to  produce  30,000 
megawatts  (MW)  of  electricity  in  2009  and  2010,  the  U.S.  stock  market 
currently contains few publicly traded wind energy companies.
In 2009, General Electric (GE) ventured into wind energy by partner-
ing with Chinas A-Power Energy Generation Systems to manufacture wind 
98  Renewable Energy
turbine gearboxes. Perhaps GE recognized a growing wind power industry 
outside the United States. By 2020, wind energy is expected to produce 10 
percent of Chinas energy and take pressure of the enormous amount of coal 
burned  in  China.  Wind  power  produces  as  much  as  20  percent  of  Spains 
energy and other countries are approaching that level. Te U.S. Department 
of  Energy  (DOE)  has  proposed  a  similar  goal  of  20  percent  of  all  energy 
generated in the United States to come from wind by the year 2030. Wind 
power has proponents, but as with almost any form of energy it brings dis-
advantages along with the advantages, shown in the following table.
Renewable wind energy has shown promise as an inexpensive means of producing large amounts of electricity. 
Wind farms similar to this farm in Indiana take up large land areas along coasts and on ridge tops. Hawks and 
eagles hunt in those places, and thousands of raptors and migrating birds have been killed by fying into rotating 
turbines. People living near wind farms have also objected to noise. Tese drawbacks may be fxable with new 
technology.  (Indiana Ofce of Energy and Defense Development)
  Innovations in Clean Energy  99
Environmentalists have been torn between the benefts of renewable 
energy from wind and the harm wind turbines cause to migrating focks 
of  birds  and  predatory  birds  such  as  hawks  that  hunt  across  open  felds. 
Some  hawks  and  falcons  built  nests  on  early  turbine  structures,  which 
only increased the chances of adult and fedgling deaths. Te wind power 
industry  has  tried  to  mitigate  this  hazard  by  developing  slower  turning 
turbines and new tubular designs that ofer fewer nesting places. Te latest 
turbines to enter the energy market run at about 12 revolutions per min-
ute, which allows birds to see the blades and avoid them.
Wave and tidal power remain unproven technologies for generating 
useful amounts of energy. Te Federal Energy Regulatory Commission 
(FERC) classifes both of these energies as hydropower (water-generated 
energy)  that  makes  use  of  hydrokinetic  energy,  which  is  energy  con-
tained  in  the  movement  of  water.  Several  small  companies  have  now 
Wind, Wave, and Tidal Power
Advantages Disadvantages
wind
   ef cient converting of wind to 
electrical energy
  moderate to low startup cost
  wind is free
  no pollution
  easy construction
   land below wind turbines can be 
used for other activities
  little power output in low winds
    extensive land needed for wind 
farms
  view of wind turbines
   injures and kills migratory birds and 
predatory birds
  noise pollution
waves and tides
  steady source of power
   ef cient conversion of kinetic 
energy to electrical power
  no pollution
  ocean power is free
  useful only on coasts or rivers
  unproven technology
  expensive construction
100  Renewable Energy
carved out a business niche by inventing ways to capture wave and tide 
energy.
Wave power comes from the up-and-down motion of waves about a 
mile ofshore. Various types of foating devices can capture the kinetic 
energy from wave movements and convert each movement into electric-
ity using a generator. Tree main devices for capturing wave energy are 
the following: (1) pelamis, (2) power buoy, or (3) limpet. A  pelamis is a 
Tidal energy uses the motion of the incoming and outgoing tides to turn turbines and 
generate electricity. Underwater turbines will be more expensive to install than wind 
farm turbines, and the turbine blades might injure aquatic species. If those problems 
can be corrected, tidal energy and related wave energy ofer a long-term renewable 
form of energy.
  Innovations in Clean Energy  101
large  foating  chain  made  of  alternating  buoys,  which  foat  the  chain, 
and power modules equipped with a generator. As the chain undulates 
over  waves,  the  buoys  bump  back  and  forth  into  the  modules,  provid-
ing  enough  movement  to  turn  the  generators  and  produce  electricity 
for cables to take to land. A power buoy is a single device that bobs on 
the waves similar to a regular harbor buoy. Te constant up-and-down 
movement runs the generator, and a cable takes the electricity. A limpet 
is an open cylinder on a shore into which waves pound. Each incoming 
wave  rolls  into  a  tube  and  pushes  water  against  a  turbine,  which  then 
runs a generator.
Tidal power comes from ocean movements also, but the natural sway 
of the tides provides the hydrokinetic energy. Underwater turbines rotate 
with  incoming  tides  and  in  the  opposite  direction  with  outgoing  tides. 
Tidal  energy  represents  a  steady  and  inexpensive  energy  source,  but  the 
costs of building the underwater system can be high. Like wind turbines, 
undersea turbines may cause harm to marine mammals and fsh from the 
rotating blades. Wave energy and tidal energy have not yet contributed a 
meaningful amount of energy to power grids, but some proponents antici-
pate a bright future. Wind and solar are very difuse sourcesyou have 
to cover a lot of area to collect energy, said Roger Bedard of the Electric 
Power  Research  Institute  in  Palo  Alto,  California.  Waves  carry  a  lot  of 
energy in a small space. Smaller machines cost less than bigger machines. 
Tis  type  of  efciency  will  be  at  a  premium  as  open  land  flls  with  new 
communities each year.
solAr poWer
Solar  energy  produced  in  the  form  of  light  and  heat  from  the  Sun  help 
produce heat and electricity in an increasing number of homes, schools, 
businesses and may some day be a power source for vehicles. Solar energy 
can be collected by large utility companies that turn it into electricity for 
their customers, or single buildings can be equipped with a solar thermal 
system to turn heat into electricity.
Conversion  of  solar  energy  to  electrical  energy  depends  on  a  device 
called the photovoltaic cell, also called a solar cell. Photovoltaic cells work 
by  capturing  the  energy  in  the  Suns  radiation,  called  photons;  the  pho-
tons then dislodge electrons from a material inside the cell and the fow 
of electrons produce an electric current. Semiconductor materials such as 
10z  Renewable Energy
silicon  act  as  the  best  substance  for  this  conversion  of  photon  energy  to 
electric current.
Solar energy has created the greatest level of interest of all alternative 
energies for serving homes and other buildings. Solar energy represents a 
fast-growing industry; most U.S. homeowners live in a place where they 
can  make  an  appointment  and  have  a  sheet  of  photovoltaic  cells,  called 
solar panels, installed on their roof in a day. Worldwide, solar installations 
have  increased  as  much  as  62  percent  (as  MW  produced)  between  2006 
and  2007,  yet  solar  energy  accounts  for  less  than  0.05  percent  of  global 
energy demand.
Te solar energy business appears to hold the most promise of all alter-
native energies, yet it must overcome its unique hurdles to truly compete 
with oil (37 percent of total energy use), coal (25 percent), and natural gas 
(23 percent). Like wind and ocean energy, solar energy collection requires 
A photovoltaic cell used in capturing solar energy receives photons (the Suns rays), 
which silicon absorbs. Tis action releases an electron from a silicon atom each time a 
photon strikes. Oppositely charged poles on either side of the cell induce the electrons 
to form a current.
  Innovations in Clean Energy  10!
methods  of  storing  the  energy  until  it  is  needed.  Electricity  can  be  dif-
fcult to store; batteries store small amounts but cannot yet store the large 
amounts needed by electric utility companies. Companies such as Ausra 
in California have explored the idea of storing solar energy as heat, called 
solar  thermal,  rather  than  electricity  because  this  method  is  less  costly 
than electrical storage. Ausras vice president John S. ODonnell explained 
to the New York Times in 2008 that a $5 cofee thermos and a $150 com-
puter  battery  store  about  the  same  amount  of  energy.  Tats  why  solar 
thermal  is  going  to  be  the  dominant  form,  he  said.  Te  following  table 
summarizes the current advantages and disadvantages of solar energy.
U.S. leaders and foreign governments have encouraged residences and 
businesses  to  increase  use  of  solar  energy.  Individual  towns  and  entire 
states have developed solar energy goals. In the United States, some power 
utilities  allow  owners  of  solar  homes  to  receive  payment  for  the  energy 
they do not use. Te unused amount then becomes available for others to 
draw from the communitys power grid. Even in towns where installation 
would  be  expensive  and  require  decades  to  make  up  the  cost  in  energy 
savings, residents have been willing to go solar. Michael Deery, spokes-
man for Hempstead, New York, which is converting to solar energy said to 
the New York Times in 2008, Our frst and foremost goal is to reduce our 
Solar Power
Advantages Disadvantages
  sunlight is free
  quick to install
  easy to add on to the system
   no pollution from energy 
production
  quiet
  little disturbance of land
   photovoltaic cells last for several 
decades
  high costs at present
    need access to the Sun about 60 
percent of time
  needs energy storage system
  may need energy backup system
   some homeowners do not like solar 
panels appearance
   takes 4050 years for energy 
savings to make up initial cost
   manufacturing produces hazardous 
silicon wastes
104  Renewable Energy
carbon footprint and keep our planet clean. Hempstead may be unique 
in its choice of environment over money. Many other towns would likely 
not make the same choice, so solar energy joins all other forms of energy 
in its need to be cost efective.
Is solar energy the answer to weaning the world of fossil fuels? Solar 
powers detractors cite the large area of land that huge solar panel arrays 
would require to provide enough energy for the U.S. demand. Arrays can 
be  installed  in  three  diferent  ways:  (1)  long  lines  of  concave  arranged 
solar panels, called troughs, about 25 feet (7.6 m) of the ground and cov-
ering more than 100 acres (40 ha); (2) a large concave dish of solar panels 
that  uses  less  land;  or  (3)  photovoltaic  arrangements  that  concentrate 
the total energy output. In 2001, the energy expert Nathan Lewis of the 
California  Institute  of  Technology  warned  that  the  greatest  limitation 
to solar power might be the capacity of the land to contain huge arrays 
Large-scale solar power plants can use various technologies for increasing their efciency of converting solar energy 
into electrical energy. A solar tower uses sunlight-heated air to form an updraft that runs the plants turbines; 
a parabolic trough collects direct sunlight and refected sunlight; a solar dish with a Stirling engine uses a solar 
concentrator to maximize power. Te cost of solar energy has declined in the past 20 years.
  Innovations in Clean Energy  10
of  solar  collectors.  He  calculated  that  if  all  the  solar  panels  needed  to 
provide energy for the United States were laid fat on the landscape, the 
panels would cover 66,750 square miles (172,882 km
2
) or about the size 
of the state of Washington.
Arizona owns the worlds largest solar power plant, which is in con-
struction about 70 miles (113 km) southwest of Phoenix. Te plant, called 
Solana  and  planned  for  opening  in  2011,  will  produce  280  MW  of  elec-
tricity to power about 70,000 homes. To achieve these high levels of pro-
duction,  Solana  will  use  concentrating  solar  technology  that  increases 
the total energy production by supplementing the solar panels with solar 
concentrators.  Concentrators  use  an  internal  lens  to  make  the  Suns  rays 
less difuse and more focused. As a result, a power company can put more 
photovoltaic cells into each solar collector. (Makers of home solar panels 
may soon use concentrators to increase the efciency of photovoltaic cells 
so that solar panel size can decrease, as will costs for homeowners wishing 
to install solar panels.)
Two  emerging  solar  technologies  are  solar  flms,  discussed  in  the 
sidebar  on  page  108,  and  solar  satellites.  Te  National  Security  Space 
Ofce  (NSSO)  located  near  Washington,  D.C.,  has  stated  that  satel-
lite  solar  power  may  be  the  best  way  to  collect  energy  from  the  Sun. 
In  2007,  the  NSSO  issued  a  report  titled  Space  Based  Solar  Power  as 
an  Opportunity  for  Strategic  Security  to  introduce  the  idea  of  space 
satellites  collecting  sunlight  and  then  beaming  the  energy  to  Earth. 
 Satellite-mounted  photovoltaic  cells  would  capture  photons,  and  then 
a device would convert the current produced in the solar cells to radio 
waves  or  infrared  light.  Te  NSSO  plans  for  the  satellite  to  beam  the 
waves  to  a  receiving  antenna  on  Earth  connected  to  an  electrical  gen-
erating utility. Te technology depends on expensive lightweight solar 
panels,  the  satellite  to  hold  them,  a  launch  vehicle,  and  transmission 
and  collection  instruments.  Despite  these  obstacles,  the  NSSO  values 
the  idea  because  it  could  help  free  the  United  States  from  dependence 
on imported fuels.
Te NSSO explained the reasoning behind solar satellites: Our Sun 
is  the  largest  known  energy  resource  in  the  solar  system.  In  the  vicin-
ity  of  Earth,  every  square  meter  of  space  receives  1.366  kilowatts  (1,366 
watts) of solar radiation, but by the time it reaches the ground, it has been 
reduced by atmospheric absorption and scattering; weather; and summer, 
winter, and day-night cycles to less than an average of 250 watts per square 
106  Renewable Energy
meter.  (Appendix  E  provides  an  explanation  of  common  energy  units.) 
Te NSSO plans for its space-based solar technology to provide continu-
ous and predictable solar power to Earth by avoiding these energy losses. 
As for safety, a solar satellites beams would be of fairly low power on a par 
with energy emitted from a microwave ovens door. Safety measures might 
also include no-fy zones in the beams vicinity and of-limits areas near 
the receiving antenna.
Solar power technologies have been followed by the media because of 
the interest solar power has created in the public and in scientifc circles. 
Solar  power  should  be  pursued  simply  because  the  Earth  receives  more 
energy from the Sun in one hour than it uses in one year. Of the 382.7 tril-
lion terawatts (TW) of energy emitted by the Sun in all directions, 120,000 
TW reach the Earths surface. Even with losses of solar energy to the uni-
verse, this represents an enormous amount of energy.
Solar panel technology has been the subject of tremendous interest by researchers 
and by entrepreneurs seeking improvement or a next-generation solar collector. 
Tough solar panels similar to these in Spain are the most popular device for 
making buildings sustainable, new solar collector technologies on the way include 
solar flms, ultrathin flms based on nanotechnology, solar concentrators, and solar 
windows.  (Fernando Toms)
  Innovations in Clean Energy  10
Some new solar technologies may fall behind due to technical challenges 
or high cost, but solar power has an advantage over other renewable energy 
technologies: Solar power has received a great deal of support from the pub-
lic. Te following table describes new solar technologies that may become 
commercially feasible in the future. Each of the technologies described in 
the table also has the potential of incorporating solar concentrators.
Solar Power Tech nologies
Technology Description Advantage
parabolic troughs collection panels arrayed in 
long straight arrangements
capable of producing 
large amounts of solar 
power
solar dishStirling 
technology
concave-shaped solar 
collector that contains 
a concentrator and is 
connected directly to a 
generator
large energy output
solar tower collection panels arranged 
around a tall cylindrical 
tower heat the air beneath 
them, creating an updraft 
into the tower, which 
provides energy to run 
attached turbines
potential to multiply 
the energy output of 
the solar panels alone; 
requires no energy 
input
space-based solar 
power
satellite-mounted collector 
panels receive solar 
radiation, and the satellite 
beams it to Earth as radio 
waves or infrared light
collects the maximum 
amount of solar 
energy heading for 
Earth without losses 
to the atmosphere
thin flms solar cells measuring 
hundreds of times thinner 
than solar panels collect 
solar energy on a variety of 
surfaces
space-saving and 
adaptable to more 
places than panels
108  Renewable Energy
Engineers  at  the  Massachusetts  Institute  of  Technology  (MIT)  have 
been working to combine thin solar flms with solar concentrators for the 
purpose  of  developing  a  new  technology  in  windows.  Te  MIT  electri-
cal engineer Marc A. Baldo explained in 2008 in the institutes newslet-
ter,  Light  is  collected  over  a  large  area  (like  a  window)  and  gathered, 
or concentrated, at the edges. Baldo said the concentrator increases the 
electrical  power  from  each  solar  cell  by  a  factor  of  over  40.  Te  solar 
concentrators may have two practical uses that could enter the solar mar-
ket in a short time. First, concentrators may be set along the edges of a fat 
glass  window  panel  to  generate  electricity  for  indoor  use.  Second,  con-
centrators may be installed to help boost energy output from traditional 
solar panels.
Despite improvements that solar power still requires, this clean energy 
remains one of the most attractive choices for the future for both home-
owners and communities.
S
tandard  solar  panels  contain  crystalline  silicon  that  must  be  of  a  minimum  thickness  to 
generate an electrical current. T ese solar panels take up space atop buildings or on land. 
T ough solar power is rapidly gaining ground in total energy production worldwide, some experts 
in  the  feld  believe  the  technology  may  soon  yield  to  new,  thinner  solar  collectors  called  solar 
flms. Peter Harrop, chairman of the London research frm IDTechEx, told Time magazine in 2008, 
Crystalline silicon has had its day. T ese new technologies [flms] will be taking over. Harrops 
optimism comes from the fact that thin, fexible solar flms can be constructed to roll onto a sur-
face similar to wallpaper and replace bulky solar panels with a lower profle appearance.
T in  solar  flm  contains  the  following  four  layers:  (1)  a  transparent  conducting  material 
exposed to sunlight; (2) a bufer layer; (3) a layer of chemicals such as copper, cadmium, indium, 
gallium, and diselenide, which produces an electric current from the sunlight; and (4) an underly-
ing contact layer. (Cadmium is a toxic metal that requires safe disposal.) T e interface between 
the bufer layer and the contact layer generates the electrical current. T in solar flm producers 
are now making flms containing these four layers that measure no more than 100 nanometers 
thick, or about one-thousandth the thickness of a human hair.
Solar flm manufacturers have been clamoring to enter this fast-growing segment of the solar 
power market,and they hope to soon see solar flms rolled out onto roofs, walls, and windows. 
T in  solar  flms  are  easier  and  cheaper  to  manufacture  than  traditional  silicon  cells,  but  scal-
ing up to mass production has been dif cult. T e oil company British Petroleum tinkered with 
solar flms for years before dropping the project in 2002 because of the dif culties of large-scale 
production.  Later,  however,  solar  companies  such  as  First  Solar  in  Arizona  with  operations  in 
Germany have continued thin flm research. First Solar has developed a flm using cadmium tel-
luride as an ef cient semiconductor layer. T e solar flm produces equivalent amounts of energy 
as traditional silicon solar cells but uses only 1 to 2 percent of the raw materials.
At the end of 2008, First Solar completed building North Americas largest thin solar flm 
power  plant  near  Boulder  City,  Nevada.  Michael  W.  Allman,  president  of  the  power  plants 
operator  Sempra  Generation,  said,  T is  is  a  signifcant  step  in  the  development  and  deploy-
ment of renewable solar power. T e size and scope of this new solar generation facility clearly 
demonstrates  that  we  can  build  projects  on  a  scale  that  helps  utilities  meet  their  renewable 
energy goals. T e solar flm plant generates 10 MW of power, which could power close to 3,000 
homes.
Solar flm currently produces less power than large plants ftted with traditional solar pan-
els,  but  the  solar  flm  industry  will  likely  look  for  ways  of  increasing  their  technologys  power 
output in the future.
Solar Films
  Innovations in Clean Energy  109
hydropoWer And  
geoThermAl energy
Hydropower  and  geothermal  energy  both  make  use  of  energy  that  is 
stored in diferent forms of water. Hydropower uses liquid water; geother-
mal  energy  comes  from  underground  sources  of  heated  water  or  other 
heat sources in the Earths crust. Both hydropower and geothermal energy 
behave  as  renewable  energies  because  the  Earth  regenerates  water  in  its 
water cycle.
Hydropower, also called hydroelectric power, uses the massive amount 
of energy that exists in large volumes of fowing water. Te main way to 
capture hydropower has been the construction of large dams across rivers 
to cause the water approaching the dam to build up and form a reservoir. 
Reservoir water fowing through the dams pipes, called penstocks, turns 
turbines,  which  power  generators  that  produce  electricity.  Transmission 
S
tandard  solar  panels  contain  crystalline  silicon  that  must  be  of  a  minimum  thickness  to 
generate an electrical current. T ese solar panels take up space atop buildings or on land. 
T ough solar power is rapidly gaining ground in total energy production worldwide, some experts 
in  the  feld  believe  the  technology  may  soon  yield  to  new,  thinner  solar  collectors  called  solar 
flms. Peter Harrop, chairman of the London research frm IDTechEx, told Time magazine in 2008, 
Crystalline silicon has had its day. T ese new technologies [flms] will be taking over. Harrops 
optimism comes from the fact that thin, fexible solar flms can be constructed to roll onto a sur-
face similar to wallpaper and replace bulky solar panels with a lower profle appearance.
T in  solar  flm  contains  the  following  four  layers:  (1)  a  transparent  conducting  material 
exposed to sunlight; (2) a bufer layer; (3) a layer of chemicals such as copper, cadmium, indium, 
gallium, and diselenide, which produces an electric current from the sunlight; and (4) an underly-
ing contact layer. (Cadmium is a toxic metal that requires safe disposal.) T e interface between 
the bufer layer and the contact layer generates the electrical current. T in solar flm producers 
are now making flms containing these four layers that measure no more than 100 nanometers 
thick, or about one-thousandth the thickness of a human hair.
Solar flm manufacturers have been clamoring to enter this fast-growing segment of the solar 
power market,and they hope to soon see solar flms rolled out onto roofs, walls, and windows. 
T in  solar  flms  are  easier  and  cheaper  to  manufacture  than  traditional  silicon  cells,  but  scal-
ing up to mass production has been dif cult. T e oil company British Petroleum tinkered with 
solar flms for years before dropping the project in 2002 because of the dif culties of large-scale 
production.  Later,  however,  solar  companies  such  as  First  Solar  in  Arizona  with  operations  in 
Germany have continued thin flm research. First Solar has developed a flm using cadmium tel-
luride as an ef cient semiconductor layer. T e solar flm produces equivalent amounts of energy 
as traditional silicon solar cells but uses only 1 to 2 percent of the raw materials.
At the end of 2008, First Solar completed building North Americas largest thin solar flm 
power  plant  near  Boulder  City,  Nevada.  Michael  W.  Allman,  president  of  the  power  plants 
operator  Sempra  Generation,  said,  T is  is  a  signifcant  step  in  the  development  and  deploy-
ment of renewable solar power. T e size and scope of this new solar generation facility clearly 
demonstrates  that  we  can  build  projects  on  a  scale  that  helps  utilities  meet  their  renewable 
energy goals. T e solar flm plant generates 10 MW of power, which could power close to 3,000 
homes.
Solar flm currently produces less power than large plants ftted with traditional solar pan-
els,  but  the  solar  flm  industry  will  likely  look  for  ways  of  increasing  their  technologys  power 
output in the future.
Solar Films
110  Renewable Energy
lines  carry  the  electricity  to  near  or  distant  communities.  In  the  United 
States, hydropower supplies more than 70 percent of all renewable energy 
production.
Hydropower accounts for about 25 percent of the worlds energy gen-
eration, but it accounts for only 7 percent of all energy production in the 
United States. Te West Coast depends on hydropower to a greater extent 
than  the  rest  of  the  nation;  more  than  half  of  all  hydropower  produced 
in the United States is produced in Washington, Oregon, California, and 
Montana. Te DOE has calculated that hydroelectric dams in the United 
States have the capacity to supply electricity to 28 million households, an 
amount of energy that equals almost 500 million barrels of oil.
Why does hydropower seem to receive less interest than solar power 
and other renewable energies? Tough dams produce clean energy and lit-
tle pollution, they create other troubles for the environment. U.S. salmon 
and trout populations have been severely reduced since at least the 1980s, 
and many environmentalists believe dams have played a big role by pre-
venting the fsh from swimming to upstream spawning grounds. Ecolo-
gists have experimented with fsh ladders to provide water routes for fsh 
to  bypass  dams  during  upstream  migrations.  Te  environmental  group 
Save Our Wild Salmon has argued for removal of many dams to restore 
fsh  populations:  . . .  there  is  no  doubt  that  restoring  critical  freshwater 
habitats will increase survivals.
Te hydropower industry and environmentalists have difered on other 
aspects of the environment as well, namely habitat destruction. Construc-
tion of a new dam permanently alters riparian ecosystems because dams 
food upstream land and alter the natural downstream fow. Te following 
table provides the advantages and disadvantages of hydropower.
Tree diferent types of underground heated water contribute to geo-
thermal energy. Each of these types occurs in the Earth trapped between 
rock formations, in cracks in the rock, or within porous rock. Te three 
types  of  geothermal  energy  are  the  following:  (1)  wet  steam  consisting 
of  hot  water  droplets  and  vapor;  (2)  dry  steam  containing  only  water 
vapor  and  no  droplets;  and  (3)  hot  water.  Tree  diferent  types  of  power 
plants  also  exist  to  convert  the  heat  energy  from  geothermal  sources  to 
electricity:
 Dry  steam  plants  pump  steam  directly  from  the  under-
ground source to the plants turbines.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
(continued)
  Green Building Design  1!!
energy  use,  emissions,  materials,  and  indoor  air  quality.  Remodeled  buildings  may  earn  LEED 
certifcation similar to new building certifcation.
T e U.S. Green Building Council awards points in a variety of categories, so every new build-
ing has its own unique way of attaining a certifcation. T e following general point categories each 
have many specifc areas for achieving sustainability:
 innovation and design processdesigns to reduce construction and energy 
waste with lowered costs and compact structures
 location and linkagesappropriate acreage for size of building and access to 
public transportation
 sustainable siteslandscaping to maximize heating and cooling ef ciency, sur-
face water management, and nontoxic pest control
 water ef ciencywater reuse, no leaks, high-ef ciency irrigation, on-demand 
water heaters
 energy and atmospherereduction of carbon dioxide-releasing systems, good 
indoor air quality
 materials and resourcesrecycling, minimized packaging, recycled building 
materials, biodegradable products
 indoor environmental qualityventilation, venting, air fltration, low-emission 
paints and carpeting, maximum use of daylight, radon protection
 awareness and educationpromotion of the certifcation steps taken by design-
ers, builders, and homeowners
T e following table summarizes the certifcation levels for houses.
In order for a building to receive LEED certifcation, a builder must take the following steps:
Join the LEED program.
Build the structure to the stated goals.
Receive inspection from an of cial LEED rating grader.
 Sign forms attesting to accountability for maintaining LEED performance.
 Receive fnal certifcation from the U.S. Green Building Council.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
(continued)
LEED Certification Levels for Homes
Certification
Level
Number of LEED
Points Required
Main Features
certifed 4559   substantial energy savings
   minimized construction waste
  good insulation
  double-paned windows
    elimination of water, heat, and electricity 
waste
silver 6074     energy savings in all systems
    use of recycled building materials for most 
of the structure
   water ef ciency
   heating and cooling ef ciency
gold 7589    majority of furnishings and building 
materials   salvaged, refurbished, or reused
   high-ef ciency or gray water reuse system
   excellent indoor air quality
platinum 90136    maximum ef ciency in energy and resource 
use
   superior indoor comfort and lighting
   dramatic reduction in carbon dioxide 
emissions
   zero or near-zero waste
   most or all systems disconnected from the 
power grid
total available points    136
Source: U.S. Green Building Council
(continues)
134 Renewable Energy
Certifcation need not be confned to urban areas or afuent neighbor-
hoods. LEED principles apply to rural homes, urban or suburban houses, 
inner-city dwellings, single- or multifamily housing, and rental properties. 
Each year the Green Building Council updates its requirements for LEED 
certifcation in all of its point categories in order to stay current with new 
sustainable technologies.
Te  percentage  of  new  projects  applying  for  LEED  certifcation  has 
topped  50  percent  since  the  late  1990s;  since  2005,  the  number  of  regis-
tered  and  certifed  projects  has  increased  250  percent.  Most  important, 
the LEED program helps with the design of buildings in which all of a struc-
tures featuresheating, lighting, water use, etc.have been coordinated 
for maximum efciency. Te LEED program makes the phrase green build-
ing  more  than  a  token;  certifcation  notifes  everyone  that  construction 
has been planned and implemented to reduce the ecological footprint.
(continued from page 130)
setting clothes washers to warm or cold water washes
washing only full loads in clothes washers and dishwashers
air drying washed clothes whenever possible
 when running water to warm it, using the excess water for 
plants
 using appliances before 9:00 a.m. or afer 6:00 p.m. to avoid 
peak usage times
Green buildings contain innovations that help monitor energy usage 
and distribute heat in an as efcient manner as possible. Nongreen build-
ings have for decades relied on gas or oil furnaces for heat. Green buildings 
substitute renewable energy sources for gas and oil, mainly by using roof-
mounted solar panels. Solar energy, heating, or cooling may be derived by 
either passive or active means. 
Passive methods rely on natural processes, such as sunlight for heating 
and breezes for cooling and ventilation. Passive heating involves putting 
10  Renewable Energy
mAnAging WAsTe sTreAms
Water management within a green building means wastewater and other 
waste  management.  Waste  management  begins  with  the  construction 
activities  for  a  new  green  building  and  continues  through  to  the  daily 
routines  of  the  inhabitants.  Green  builders  have  learned  to  use  methods 
Water Conservation Devices
Device How It Saves Water
composting toilet removes wastes to a composting area without 
reliance on water fushing
dishwasher new countertop models can reduce normal 
dishwasher volume by almost half
dual-fush toilet one volume for fushing solid waste and a smaller 
volume for fushing liquid waste
fash heater (on-
demand water heater)
electric heating unit near the tap quickly heats 
small volumes of water, then turns of automatically 
when the fow stops
fow restrictors constricted inner diameter of device allows less 
water to fow through, about 2.5 gallons (9.5 l) per 
minute
front-loading washer reduces volume by one-third to one-half of top-
loading machines, which use 814 gallons (3053 l) 
of water per load
gray water reuse rerouted wastewater from showers, sinks, and 
laundry rinse cycle goes to fush toilets or irrigation
low-fow showerhead 
and faucet
aerates water to lower the volume of the fow
low-fush toilet reduces normal fush volume by half from 45 
gallons (1519 l) per fush to 1.6 gallons (6.1 l) per 
fush
  Green Building Design  11
that  reduce  wood  wastes  and  other  excesses,  but  construction  inevitably 
creates some waste materials. Good construction planning includes a list 
of sites where waste wood, concrete, stone, granite, fabric, and insulation 
may be sent for reuse.
Inside  a  green  home,  the  owners  manage  their  own  waste  streams, 
which are the total types and amounts of waste that the building produces 
in a period of time. Te main waste streams consist of food wastes, paper 
and other recyclable materials, liquid wastes from toilets, washers, sinks, 
and showers, and solid human wastes. Most households reduce their waste 
loads  by  separating  the  recyclable  materials  to  be  picked  up  by  a  waste 
hauler.  Green  buildings  include  additional  features  to  keep  the  other 
wastes from entering the larger community waste streams.
Many  small  and  specialized  companies  ofer  products  for  reducing 
household waste. Composting toilets have been gaining acceptance as a 
safe way to reduce solid wastes and remove health hazards. Composting 
toilets work in either of two ways. First, a toilet can contain a receptacle 
that  provides  enzymes  for  breaking  down  the  waste.  Second,  the  toilet 
can  treat  the  waste  with  enzymes  and  then  direct  the  partially  treated 
waste  to  an  artifcial  wetland.  Specialists  can  construct  wetlands  that 
contain  a  variety  of  plants  and  provide  a  slow  but  steady  fow  of  water, 
both of which help natural microbes decompose the waste. Constructed 
wetlands therefore work exactly as natural wetlands work in decompos-
ing organic matter.
Other  techniques  in  waste  reduction  consist  of  an  outdoor  compost 
pile for nonmeat kitchen wastes, a gray water reuse system, and the collec-
tion of clothes for use in periodically reinforcing the houses insulation.
off The energy grid
Individuals  who  are  committed  to  living  without  overtaxing  the  Earths 
natural resources have found inventive ways to exist of the energy grid. 
Even  small  communities  have  developed  of-the-grid  lifestyles  through 
the  cooperation  of  all  the  communitys  residents.  Rock  Port  (population 
1,300) in the northwestern corner of Missouri converted its energy use in 
2008  to  a  completely  of-the-grid  system  powered  by  four  massive  wind 
turbines.  Skeptics  in  Rock  Port  doubted  the  town,  even  one  as  small  as 
theirs, could go of the grid, but their land lies on the central plains where 
wind blows, and blows strong. A resident Eric Chamberlain, who led the 
1z  Renewable Energy
conversion to of-the-grid living, admitted, Did I ever think this would 
happen? Now, not in a million years . . . Tis is beyond my imagination. 
In high-wind seasons, Rock Port makes more electricity than it can use, so 
the town puts the excess on the municipal energy grid. In low winds, the 
town makes up the diference by drawing electricity from the grid. Rock 
Ports future may include the installation of energy storage systems so that 
the excess energy the turbines make can be saved for later.
Rock Port, Missouri, proves that of-the-grid living can take place in 
an  entire  municipality,  although  this  town  is  small.  Maybe  the  simplest 
way to move a larger and larger proportion of households and businesses 
from the energy grid rests in the hands of each individual. Te environ-
mental  author  Alex  Stefen  wrote  in  the  2006  book  Worldchanging:  A 
Users  Guide  for  the  21st  Century,  If  houses  with  solar  panels  on  their 
roofs and wind turbines in their backyards make you think of communes 
and hippies, your mental picture is out-of-date. Anyone with a bit of do-it-
Tis map shows the spots of highest energy use in the United States, correlating with high population centers. 
Te map also suggests the challenges ahead for developing a national energy grid that is a smart grid, manages 
breakdowns in emergencies, and has the capacity to adjust to a growing population.  (NASA)
  Green Building Design  1!
yourself mindset and a little disposable income can beneft from installing 
a home-energy system. Tese setups can save you real money over the long 
term and provide most or all of your power in clean, homegrown ways. 
Put that way, there hardly seems a reason not to convert an existing build-
ing to some type of renewable energy source.
Advocates of wind power feel that establishing of-the-grid communi-
ties  powered  by  wind  may  be  cheaper  and  more  feasible  than  installing 
solar energy systems. Rather than taking on the enormous job of converting 
large towns or cities, smaller communities of less than 10,000 people may 
be the best approach. Te community wind advocate Mike Bowman told 
E/Te Environmental Magazine in 2009, We have a distribution system in 
this country where 80 percent of the geography is served by rural electrics. 
What we have today, 70 years later, is a system thats in place for delivering 
small amounts of power to thousands of places simultaneously. In other 
words, U.S. energy utilities already have a good distribution infrastructure 
for bringing renewable energy to thousands of small communities.
Bowman pointed out the advantages of community-scale wind power 
stations compared with large corporate wind farms. Te following sugges-
tions could apply just as well to utilities that supply solar power, geother-
mal power, or energy from biomass:
 Interconnected  midsize  installations  can  make  better  use 
of local geography than single large power plants.
 Most  current  transmission  line  grids  do  not  have  enough 
lines  in  the  right  places  to  carry  electricity  from  solar  or 
wind farms or geothermal sources.
 Plant managers could better control distribution and stor-
age when the energy source fuctuates.
Small systems can use existing power transmission lines.
Solar,  wind,  geothermal,  and  other  renewable  energies  have  estab-
lished enough success stories in the United States and abroad to show that 
these of-the-grid methods are possible. Tey require only good planning, 
economic supportprobably as tax creditsand a commitment from the 
community. Te public has a bounty of resources at its disposal to make 
of-the-grid  living  practical.  Te  best  chance  for  success  will  likely  be  a 
strong economy that supports an innovative and growing green industry.
14  Renewable Energy
ConClusion
Green  buildings  provide  the  backbone  of  sustainable  living  in  either 
large  cities  or  tiny  rural  towns.  Each  building  constructed  today  to  use 
more  solar  energy  and  less  coal-fred  energy,  more  gray  water  and  less 
city  tap  water,  and  more  on-site  recycling  of  wastes  and  less  wastes  sent 
to a treatment plant, helps build sustainability. Architects, designers, and 
environmental  engineers  all  contribute  to  establishing  these  new  green 
buildings.
Green building may have one of the brightest futures of all sustain-
ability  initiatives  because  new  technologies  in  this  area  emerge  fre-
quently. Programs such as LEED help both homeowners and businesses 
by  ofering  incentives  to  build  green,  and  as  an  increasing  number  of 
towns require new buildings to be built green, the United States might 
move toward the once unthinkable status of being an of-the-grid soci-
ety. Although the United States and other countries remain today very 
far from this goal, the desire and the technology becomes more focused 
every  day  on  reaching  some  degree  of  sustainability  in  the  near  rather 
than the far future.
In  order  to  take  the  big  step  to  of-the-grid  living,  builders  begin 
with  simple  steps  in  the  construction  of  energy-efcient  heating,  cool-
ing,  and  electrical  systems.  New  technologies  in  insulation,  windows, 
water  recycling,  and  waste  management  support  these  systems.  Green 
builders  have  excellent  examples  of  homes  that  have  transitioned  from 
power-consuming  to  power-generating  structures,  and  green  build-
ing  has  become  one  of  the  fastest  growing  aspects  of  the  construction 
industry.
Te  future  of  green  building  design  will  be  led  by  the  newest  tech-
nologies  in  feedback  mechanisms  so  that  appliances,  rooms,  and  entire 
structures can use energy at peak efciency. Tis will be a major advance 
from  the  conventional  energy  distribution  systems  that  most  towns  still 
rely  upon,  as  described  by  the  environmental  writer  Michael  Prager  in 
2009, Te present grid has hardly changed in a century: massive amounts 
of power generated at behemoth plants are sent downstream via transmis-
sion  wires.  Te  system  is  stout  and  brawny  .  .  .  but  it  was  never  brainy, 
and dont even talk about its communication skills. (Have you ever con-
sidered that the only way the electric company knows your power is out 
is  if  you  call  and  tell  them?)  With  this  image  in  mind,  it  seems  certain 
  Green Building Design  1
that  scientists,  engineers,  and  the  public  can  improve  on  current  energy 
production.
New technologies in building design, construction materials, energy-
efcient methods of assembling new buildings, and a broadening array of 
renewable energy sources will be the future of green buildings. In many 
places, that encouraging future has already begun.
16
L
iquid biofuels and solid biomass originate from matter that contains 
organic compounds. Tese substances are ofen referred to collectively 
as bioenergy sources. Most of the biofuel and biomass that have been  bioenergy bioenergy
envisioned as major future energy sources come from crops and crop resi-
dues lef over afer harvesting. Biofuels consist of mainly ethanol, an alco-
hol made from plant material (also called grain alcohol); the plant material 
from which ethanol is produced makes up biomass.
Ethanol and biodiesel are the two main biofuels in use today. A gal-
lon  (3.78  l)  of  ethanol  contains  about  67  percent  of  the  energy  supplied 
by a gallon of gasoline. Biodiesel comes from the processing of vegetable 
oils from various plants such as corn or soybeans or from vegetable fats. 
Biodiesel  contains  a  diferent  mixture  of  hydrocarbons  than  ethanol,  so 
has a diferent quantity of energy: A gallon of biodiesel contains about 86 
percent of the energy supplied by a gallon of gasoline.
Biofuels  became  the  primary  focus  of  the  burgeoning  alternative-
fuel industry in the 1990s. As interest in new fuels and renewable energy 
sources bloomed, the worldwide investment in biofuels increased from $5 
billion in 1995 to $38 billion on 2005, and it will top $100 billion by 2010. 
But  the  clamor  for  biofuels  created  unintended  efects  across  the  globe 
with an increase in corn pricesthe main source of ethanol fuelbigger 
than any increase farmers had seen since World War II. U.S. growers and 
farmers  in  other  countries  jumped  at  the  chance  to  earn  more  by  grow-
ing corn for the biofuel industry than stay with lower paying crops. From 
2003 to 2008, the amount of U.S. corn planted has doubled.
7
Energy from Solid 
Biomass
  Energy from Solid Biomass  1
High  grain  prices  have  meant  increased  prices  of  the  items  that  use 
grains,  such  as  beef,  poultry,  and  breakfast  cereal,  among  hundreds  of 
other  products.  World  food  prices  have  begun  to  rise,  and  this  rise  has 
led to environmental harm. Te scenario described by Time magazine in 
2008 explained the efect of biofuels on the economy and in turn on the 
environment, as follows:
 One-ffh of the U.S. corn crop diverts to ethanol refneries 
rather than food production.
 Te increased demand for corn raises world corn prices.
 Extra  land  planted  with  corn  makes  the  supply  of  other 
crops, such as soybeans, decline.
 Soybean prices rise.
 Farmers already growing soybeans in developing countries de-
cide to increase their crop to take advantage of soys rising value.
 Te  farmers  turn  pastureland  into  cultivation,  displacing 
ranchers.
Ranchers remove forests for more pastureland.
Forests that disappear in the name of biofuels equate to a loss of habi-
tat for endangered species. Te fallen trees additionally add large amounts 
of  carbon  dioxide  (CO
2
)  to  air  that  is  already  polluted  as  the  ranchers 
burn  whatever  timber  they  cannot  sell.  Impoverished  regions  that  can-
not  grow  plentiful  harvests  of  any  kind  fall  victim  to  skyrocketing  food 
prices. Growing corn for ethanol production furthermore consumes fuel 
for trucks and harvesters and for running ethanol refneries (called biore-
fneries). Cornell Universitys David Pemental said bluntly in 2007, Bio-
fuels  are  a  total  waste  and  misleading  us  from  getting  at  what  we  really 
need to do: conservation. Tis [biofuels] is a threat, not a service. Global 
environmental  organizations  and  economists  like  Nathaneal  Greene  of 
the National Resources Defense Council have now acknowledged, Were 
all  looking  at  the  numbers  in  an  entirely  new  way.  A  renewable  energy 
source cannot have a future if it ultimately worsens poverty and devastates 
the environment. Studies on the worth of biofuels have continued. While 
environmentalists  and  some  economists  have  identifed  the  cautionary 
outcome to biofuel production, biofuel organizations and members of the 
federal government still support biofuel research.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
18  Renewable Energy
Biomass  as  an  energy  source  has  meanwhile  developed  in  biofuels 
shadow. Te United States currently gets about 45 billion kilowatt-hours 
from biomass yearly, accounting for less than 2 percent of total electricity 
production.  Energy  from  biomass  may  soon  increase,  however,  because 
biomass  does  not  interfere  with  current  agricultural  production,  and  it 
recycles the worlds organic waste. Biomass as an energy source has already 
been shown to work, as this chapter discusses.
Tis chapter follows the growing importance of biomass as renewable 
energy.  It  defnes  biomass  and  compares  it  with  other  renewable  energy 
sources. Te chapter also describes the processes used in converting solid 
wastes to energy and fnishes with a discussion on the future of biomass 
as a crucial energy source in sustainable communities. Finally, the discus-
sion  presented  here  ofers  ideas  on  how  biomass  may  be  optimized  as  a 
cheap, useful, and ecologically sound choice in energy production.
The eArThs biomAss
Biologists think of biomass as the dry weight of all of the organic matter 
produced  on  Earth  by  plants  and  photosynthetic  microbes.  In  environ-
mental science, biomass is total plant materials but also animal wastes that 
can be burned as fuel.
Biological fuels will play a part in building a strong renewable energy industry. Biofuels 
contain slightly more energy than most biomass fuels, but overall biomass may have 
lower costs regarding the energy needed to produce the feedstocks, the production 
process, and harm to the environment.
  Energy from Solid Biomass  19
Biomass is the energy-storage form for all living things in food chains. 
Te chemical energy held in biomass serves each member of a food chain. 
For example, plant biomass in the form of carbohydrates provides energy 
to grazing animals; the biomass in these animals in the form of fats, pro-
teins, and carbohydrates acts as the energy source for predators higher on 
the food chain. When animals produce waste or when they die, the biomass 
furnishes energy for microbes and for scavenger animals such as condors. 
Biomass therefore plays a central role in the Earths nutrient recycling.
All of the Suns energy stored on Earth in the compounds that make up 
plants and animals equals an ecosystems gross primary productivity (GPP). 
When a plant or animal taps into this energy supply to live, grow, and repro-
duce, it must use some of the gross primary productivity for its own needs. 
Once those needs have been met, the energy lef over is called net primary 
productivity (NPP), which is available for other organisms to use.
NPP = GPP  R, where R is the energy needed for an organisms systems
A portion of the energy in biomass disappears as heat whenever energy 
changes from one form to another. For example, a salmon in an Alaskan 
river consumes aquatic grasses for energy, but the fsh cannot convert 100 
percent of the plant energy into animal energy; some of the grasss energy 
dissipates as heat. Similarly, a grizzly bear feeding on the salmon can con-
vert only a portion of the energy stored in the salmons fesh. Te rest of 
the energy also dissipates as heat. Such a stepwise scheme in food chain 
energy transfer is called an ecological pyramid. A large quantity of energy 
and organisms inhabit the bottom of the pyramid, but with each step to a 
higher level, the predators become less numerous and the energy available 
to them declines.
Activities on Earth convert biomass into energy in three diferent bio-
logical methods and one chemical method. In biology, microbes degrade 
biomass into simpler compounds with the release of heat and gases. Te 
frst  microbial  method  is  fermentation,  which  converts  biomass  to  alco-
hols and other end products such as CO
2
. Te second microbial method 
entails anaerobic reactions, which are reactions that occur in the absence 
of  oxygen.  Anaerobic  reactions  produce  mainly  methane  gas.  Te  third 
biological method, respiration, is used by animals and some microbes. In 
respiration, an organism consumes oxygen as it converts sugars to energy 
and then releases CO
2
 with other end products. Te chemical method that 
occurs on Earth for releasing biomasss energy is combustion. A lightning 
160  Renewable Energy
strike may ignite a forest and cause the burning of dead leaves and branches 
as well as living trees. Tis burning converts the compounds making up 
biomass into diferent compounds with the release of heat energy. Making 
use of the energy that can be liberated from biomass through combustion 
is the basis of biomass energy production.
Types of biomAss
Diferent  types  of  biomass  can  be  used  for  making  energy  in  biomass 
power plants. When used in this manner for commercial or home energy 
Biology and chemistry must follow the laws of thermodynamics: (1) Energy cannot be created or destroyed and (2) 
some energy will be lost each time energy is converted from one type to another. An ecological pyramid illustrates 
energy use and energy loss. Each step up a food chain is associated with energy loss, usually as heat. A vehicle 
burning fuel works on the same principle: Most of the energy in fuel makes a vehicle run, but an amount of energy 
is always lost as heat.
  Energy from Solid Biomass  161
production,  the  biomass  materials  are  called  feedstock.  Feedstock  origi-
nates from the following sources: agricultural crop waste (called bagasse), 
horticulture waste, wood and charcoal, pulp processing sludge, municipal 
solid waste (MSW), wastewater treatment solids, animal waste, and land-
fll waste. Sometimes used vegetable oils and animal fats also ft into the 
category of energy-producing biomass.
Biomass  energy  ofers  an  advantage  because  it  can  be  almost  any 
solid  material  that  when  burned  releases  a  usable  form  of  energy.  Te 
main types of biomass used throughout the world difer in source so they 
contain  various  constituents,  which  make  them  more  or  less  efcient  as 
energy sources. Some of the variations in biomass are listed in the follow-
ing table.
Civilization  has  used  wood  as  its  main  biomass  energy  source  for 
hundreds of centuries. In the United States in the 1800s, wood provided 
about 90 percent of energy use, but new energy sources replaced wood as 
new  mechanized  innovations  came  forward.  Today,  wood  provides  little 
more than 3 percent of the energy used in the United States. In develop-
ing countries, however, wood dominates all other energy sources, particu-
larly in small rural communities. Te Food and Agriculture Organization 
of  the  United  Nations  (FAO)  estimates  that  more  than  2  billion  people 
worldwide fulfll their energy needs with wood.
Types of Solid Biomass with   
Variable Composition
Solid Biomass Possible Constituents
agricultural waste stalks, straw, cuttings, leaves, hulls, shells, 
vines, fruit and vegetable skins, seeds, 
animal manure
landfll waste and MSW paper, cardboard, household garbage, 
restaurant waste, clothes and fabric, 
furniture
wood pellets, chips and shavings, logging waste, 
branches, treetops, demolition waste, 
construction waste, cut timber, charcoal
16z  Renewable Energy
Plant-derived  biomass,  such  as  wood,  crop  wastes,  and  paper,  con-
tains fbrous compounds that serve as the main storage form of the energy 
released in combustion. Te three main fbers in plant biomass are lignin, 
cellulose, and hemicellulose, and materials high in these fbers are called 
lignocellulosic biomass. Tese three fbers vary quite a bit as evidenced by a 
woody log compared with a supple leaf from a grapevine. In general plant 
materials contain the following range of fbers: lignin 1525 percent; cel-
lulose 3850 percent; and hemicellulose 2332 percent.
Lignin provides strength to plant stalks and occurs at higher concen-
trations in woody materials. Burning biomass high in these fbers benefts 
Biomass energy production uses materials that an industry considers waste: crop 
residues, tree cuttings and trimmings, and wood scraps. Wood scraps make up an 
abundant biomass feedstock. In some timber applications, half of the tree goes 
into making a product and the other half is left as waste and can be used in energy 
production.  (National Wild Turkey Federation)
  Energy from Solid Biomass  16!
T
he  metabolism  inside  cells  of  living  organisms  provides  a  good 
demonstration of how most work takes place in larger systems on 
the Earth. In order to move, communicate, and maintain their structure, 
cells and the larger organism that they compose must make energy. Just 
as important, cells must store energy until it is needed. Renewable energy 
systems work on the same principle: T ey make energy when fuel (sun-
light, wind, steam, etc.) is available, and they should be able to store the 
energy in a form to be used later. Earth uses biomass as one of its main 
storage  forms  for  energy;  fossil  fuels  act  as  the  other  important  storage 
form.  Living  organisms  store  their  energy  in  a  chemical  structure  called 
the phosphate bond.
T e  phosphate  group  (PO
4