Bioenergy Wrecks the Climate

– by Ellen Moy­er, Decem­ber 2, 2015, Huff­in­g­ton Post

Mas­sive log­ging oper­a­tions under­way in North Car­oli­na (Pho­to: Dog­wood Alliance)

Cli­mate change is telling us to stop pitch­ing pol­lu­tion into the atmosphere–in much the same way that the bubon­ic plague taught our ances­tors to stop dump­ing filth into the streets in the Mid­dle Ages. We lis­tened then, but not now.

Gov­ern­ments con­tin­ue pay­ing indus­tries huge bonus­es to release car­bon into the atmos­phere by burn­ing fuels from fos­silized plants and–increasingly–live plants (“bio­mass”). Accord­ing to the Inter­na­tion­al Mon­e­tary Fund (IMF), glob­al sub­si­dies of fos­sil fuel use this year total an astro­nom­i­cal $5.3 tril­lion. The IMF esti­mates that elim­i­nat­ing sub­si­dies would reduce glob­al car­bon diox­ide emis­sions by 17 per­cent, reduce pre­ma­ture deaths from air pol­lu­tion by 50 per­cent, and increase social welfare–from reduced envi­ron­men­tal dam­age and high­er revenue–by $1.8 tril­lion. Gov­ern­ments also heav­i­ly sub­si­dize biopow­erbio­fu­els, and oth­er bioen­er­gy technologies.

In this dis­cus­sion, bio­mass ener­gy, or “bioen­er­gy,” refers to the use of ener­gy pri­mar­i­ly gen­er­at­ed from plants and plant-derived mate­ri­als. “Biopow­er” refers to elec­tric­i­ty gen­er­at­ed from the burn­ing of bio­mass. “Bio­fu­el” refers to liq­uid fuel such as corn ethanol (the pri­ma­ry bio­fu­el in the U.S.) and biodiesel made from algae, ani­mal fat, grass­es, munic­i­pal sol­id waste, sug­ars, palm oil, veg­etable oil, and wood. This arti­cle excludes oth­er types of bioenergy–such as methane col­lect­ed from land­fills and wood burned for heat–and focus­es on biopow­er fueled by wood and ethanol made from corn.

Worse for the Cli­mate than Fos­sil Fuels

Gov­ern­ments jus­ti­fy sub­si­dies for bioen­er­gy by flawed car­bon account­ing poli­cies and a myth that bioen­er­gy is “car­bon neu­tral.” This myth asserts that the regrowth of plants recap­tures the car­bon released from bioen­er­gy, there­by pre­vent­ing car­bon from accu­mu­lat­ing in the atmos­phere. How­ev­er, regrowth of plants can nev­er be guar­an­teed, and even if regrowth occurs, it takes too long for bioen­er­gy to be car­bon neu­tral. Regrowth typ­i­cal­ly takes sev­er­al months for agri­cul­tur­al crops and to up to 450 years for wood. Though the car­bon-neu­tral­i­ty myth has been disproven–for exam­ple, by the Manomet Cen­ter for Con­ser­va­tion Sciences–it per­sists tena­cious­ly in gov­ern­ment poli­cies, even in Pres­i­dent Obama’s oth­er­wise ben­e­fi­cial Clean Pow­er Plan.

The stakes are high. Accord­ing to the U.S. Envi­ron­men­tal Pro­tec­tion Agency, “forestry, agri­cul­ture, and oth­er land use” is the sec­ond-largest source of green­house gas (GHG) emis­sions, account­ing for 24 per­cent of the total world­wide. This is just slight­ly less than the largest source, “elec­tric­i­ty and heat pro­duc­tion,” and much more than “trans­porta­tion.”

Fur­ther­more, when we cut down forests to feed greedy biopow­er plants, we remove nat­ur­al “scrub­bers” from our envi­ron­ment. Ecosys­tems remove sig­nif­i­cant amounts of car­bon diox­ide from the atmos­phere and store the car­bon in plants, dead organ­ic mat­ter, and soils. For exam­ple, U.S. forests store 12 per­cent of U.S. GHG emis­sions each year.

Biopow­er destroys car­bon stor­age capac­i­ty by killing plants and dis­rupt­ing soils. Biopow­er harms the cli­mate more than coal, releas­ing 1.5 times as much car­bon diox­ide per unit of elec­tric­i­ty gen­er­at­ed. It thus deliv­ers a “dou­ble wham­my” to the climate.

Bio­fu­els per­form no bet­ter. For exam­ple, it takes more than a gal­lon of petro­le­um to pro­duce a gal­lon of ethanol. Fur­ther­more, a gal­lon of ethanol con­tains less ener­gythan a gal­lon of petro­le­um. The Envi­ron­men­tal Work­ing Group esti­mates that last year’s U.S. pro­duc­tion and use of corn ethanol result­ed in 27 mil­lion tons more car­bon emis­sions than if Amer­i­cans had used straight gaso­line in their vehicles.

Not Renew­able

Biopow­er pro­po­nents often claim that they use only waste wood for fuel; how­ev­er, biopow­er plants’ vora­cious appetite for fuel invari­ably requires that they also burn whole trees. In 2009, five biopow­er plants were envi­sioned for Mass­a­chu­setts. Ani­ma­tions cre­at­ed using the state’s and project pro­po­nents’ own data show that to fuel these facil­i­ties, the state’s forests would have been logged in only 9 to 16 years.

The cheap­est way to pro­cure wood is by clear-cut­ting forests, which is stan­dard prac­tice. Biopow­er dev­as­tates forests and the ecosys­tem ser­vices they pro­vide. The Earth has already lost half its trees since human civ­i­liza­tion began. Europe has exhaust­ed its own forests, so forests in the south­east­ern U.S. are now being clear-cut and made into pel­lets that are shipped (using oil) across the Atlantic Ocean to sup­ply wood fuel to biopow­er plants in Europe.

Sim­i­lar­ly, corn for ethanol pro­duc­tion is not renew­able, says Cor­nell Uni­ver­si­ty agri­cul­tur­al sci­en­tist David Pimentel. “Corn pro­duc­tion in the U.S. erodes soil about 12 times faster than the soil can be reformed, and irri­gat­ing corn mines ground­wa­ter 25 per­cent faster than the nat­ur­al recharge rate of ground­wa­ter. The envi­ron­men­tal sys­tem in which corn is being pro­duced is being rapid­ly degrad­ed.” In the U.S., corn pro­duc­tion uses more land than any oth­er crop, equal to an area about the size of Cal­i­for­nia, and 40 per­cent of the corn crop is used to pro­duce ethanol. Fer­til­iz­er use for corn is mas­sive, and much of the chem­i­cals wash into lakes, rivers, and coastal oceans, pol­lut­ing waters and dam­ag­ing ecosys­tems along the way–such as the “dead zone” in the Gulf of Mex­i­co, an area the size of New Jer­sey that is devoid of ani­mal life. Pes­ti­cides and her­bi­cides used in corn pro­duc­tion kill wildlife and con­t­a­m­i­nate sur­face water, ground­wa­ter, and air. Ethanol also diverts corn from the food sup­ply–dri­ving up food costs world­wide. Yet gov­ern­ment poli­cies so rich­ly reward ethanol pro­duc­tion that huge areas of grass­land and prairie have been recent­ly con­vert­ed to corn pro­duc­tion, dam­ag­ing water­ways, wet­lands, and wildlife.

Con­sumer Rip-off

Part­ly owing to their inef­fi­cien­cy, biopow­er plants require gigan­tic infu­sions of cash in order to be finan­cial­ly viable. They receive tax­pay­er and ratepay­er sub­si­dies in the form of Renew­able Ener­gy Cred­its, invest­ment and pro­duc­tion tax cred­its, and loan guar­an­tees, which cost the pub­lic bil­lions of dol­lars on top of pay­ments for the elec­tric­i­ty itself. In addi­tion, near­ly every coun­try sub­si­dizes the tim­ber industry–which pro­vides the fuel–through sim­i­lar giveaways.

Ethanol con­tains about 76,000 British Ther­mal Units (BTUs) per gal­lon, where­as gaso­line con­tains about 114,000 BTUs per gal­lon. There­fore, to get the same amount of ener­gy con­tained in a gal­lon of gaso­line, a motorist must buy about 1.5 gal­lons of ethanol. As a con­se­quence, E10 (which con­tains 10 per­cent ethanol and 90 per­cent gaso­line) yields few­er miles per gal­lon than pure gaso­line. That mileage penal­ty is paid at the pump through the pur­chase of addi­tion­al fuel. Fur­ther­more, since 1982, the price per unit of ener­gy from ethanol has been about 2.4 times that of gaso­line. Between 2007 and 2014, U.S. motorists incurred rough­ly $10 bil­lion annu­al­ly in fuel costs over and above what they would have paid for straight gaso­line. Think about that the next time you fill up your gas tank.

On top of what we pay at the pump, we treat the pow­er­ful corn ethanol indus­try to a smor­gas­bord of oth­er sub­si­dies. Through fed­er­al tax cred­its, loan guar­an­tees, grants, and oth­er mech­a­nisms, “bil­lions of tax­pay­er dol­lars have been squan­dered on an indus­try that relent­less­ly seeks addi­tion­al spe­cial inter­est carve-outs,” says Ryan Alexan­der, pres­i­dent of Tax­pay­ers for Com­mon Sense, a fed­er­al bud­get watch­dog organization.

Cit­i­zens also pick up the tab for the dam­age caused by floods, droughts, tor­na­does, hur­ri­canes, and oth­er severe weath­er events that are exac­er­bat­ed by cli­mate change.

End the Subsidies

Gov­ern­ment poli­cies designed to help indus­try at the expense of peo­ple and the envi­ron­ment are wreck­ing the cli­mate. Bioen­er­gy is so inef­fi­cient and expen­sive that it can­not func­tion with­out sub­si­dies from you and me. There­fore, one way to sig­nif­i­cant­ly help the cli­mate is to end cor­po­rate wel­fare for the fos­sil fuel, big agri­cul­ture, and tim­ber indus­tries. This would spur clean ener­gy inno­va­tion and competition–because ener­gy con­ser­va­tion and effi­cien­cy and solar and oth­er non-com­bus­tion tech­nolo­gies would no longer be finan­cial­ly disadvantaged.

It’s time to say no to cor­po­rate wel­fare and yes to clean ener­gy. To suc­cess­ful­ly address our self-inflict­ed cli­mate cri­sis, we need to stop burn­ing fos­sil fuels and bio­mass for ener­gy and begin pre­serv­ing and restor­ing plants and soils. Gov­ern­ments are not like­ly to end their mis­guid­ed poli­cies on their own. Cit­i­zens must insist on con­struc­tive pol­i­cy changes, just as our ances­tors had to learn to stop dump­ing their filth in the streets in the era of the bubon­ic plague.

Ellen Moy­er, Ph.D., P.E., is an inde­pen­dent con­sul­tant ded­i­cat­ed to reme­di­at­ing envi­ron­men­tal prob­lems and pro­mot­ing sus­tain­able prac­tices to pre­vent new prob­lems. You can con­nect with her on LinkedIn and Face­book or find more infor­ma­tion or sign up for updates on her web­site.


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