Home
|
Contact Us
|
Partnership
|
Site Map
CheckOrphan
Home
Treatment
Research
People
Events
Team
Advisory Board
Sponsorship
BioEnergy
Home
News
Events
About Us
Sponsorship
GreenBio
Home
News
Events
Organizations
Companies
Research
About Us
Sponsorship
BioBasel
Home
News
Events
About Us
Sponsorship
Checkbiotech - for emerging fields of science
NEWSLETTERS
SUBMIT CONTENT
Checkbiotech Home
Sign In
|
Register
View
Edit
Domain:
BioEnergy
Title:
*
Body:
THE HAGUE, The Netherlands - Enthusiasm for biofuels is receding and European legislators have become more sensitive to the needs of the food industry, hit by soaring commodities prices, the head of the Dutch brewers` association (CBK) says."I am not as afraid as last year that vast areas will be planted with rape seed, replacing grain crops," Jack Verhoek told Reuters in an interview on Tuesday. "I think wisdom has returned."<br /><br />Lawmakers and scientists are warning of problems with large-scale planting of crops for first-generation biofuels, which have been blamed in part for high world food prices because of competition for farmland, Verhoek said.<br /><br />"I think if this understanding continues to grow, then people will realize we shouldn`t use land for growing fuel crops alone. We should use it first for grain," he said.<br /><br />The CBK, which represents such brewers as Heineken, advocates a "second generation" of biofuel, which are produced from non-food crops.<br /><br />First-generation biofuels usually are produced from food crops, including wheat, maize, sugar or vegetable oils.<br /><br />Second-generation biofuels are made using new production methods that turn plant cellulose from non-food crops and waste biomass into ethanol or biodiesel.<br /><br />Second-generation methods use much less energy and land, which supporters of the processes say ease competition for land.<br /><br />"There are industries working very hard to find out the best way to gain from second-generation fuels. It has to do with fermentation and distillation techniques," Verhoek said.<br /><br />"There is also at the moment a discussion on algae from the sea, which can produce kerosene, which is very promising."<br /><br />Verhoek said Dutch beer brewers and other members of the food industry had appealed for more government funding for second-generation biofuels.<br /><br />Rising grain prices have hit brewers` profits.<br /><br />Heineken said last week that while it posted a 7.4 percent rise in operating profit in the first half of 2008, its raw materials and input costs rose 15 percent and it expected them to rise by 8 percent next year.<br /><br /><br />© Thomson Reuters 2008
Captcha:
Please Enter Code :
*
Time Zone:
*
(UTC -12:00) Eniwetok, Kwajalein
(UTC -11:00) Midway Island, Samoa
(UTC -10:00) Hawaii
(UTC -9:00) Alaska
(UTC -8:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
(UTC -7:00) Mountain Time (US & Canada)
(UTC -6:00) Central Time (US & Canada), Mexico City
(UTC -5:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada), Bogota, Lima
(UTC -4:00) Atlantic Time (Canada), Caracas, La Paz
(UTC -3:30) Newfoundland
(UTC -3:00) Brazil, Buenos Aires, Georgetown
(UTC -2:00) Mid-Atlantic
(UTC -1:00 hour) Azores, Cape Verde Islands
(UTC) Western Europe Time, London, Lisbon, Casablanca
(UTC +1:00 hour) Brussels, Madrid, Paris, Zurich
(UTC +2:00) Kaliningrad, South Africa
(UTC +3:00) Baghdad, Riyadh, Moscow, St. Petersburg
(UTC +3:30) Tehran
(UTC +4:00) Abu Dhabi, Muscat, Baku, Tbilisi
(UTC +4:30) Kabul
(UTC +5:00) Ekaterinburg, Islamabad, Karachi, Tashkent
(UTC +5:30) Bombay, Calcutta, Madras, New Delhi
(UTC +5:45) Kathmandu
(UTC +6:00) Almaty, Dhaka, Colombo
(UTC +7:00) Bangkok, Hanoi, Jakarta
(UTC +8:00) Beijing, Perth, Singapore, Hong Kong
(UTC +9:00) Tokyo, Seoul, Osaka, Sapporo, Yakutsk
(UTC +9:30) Adelaide, Darwin
(UTC +10:00) Eastern Australia, Guam, Vladivostok
(UTC +11:00) Magadan, Solomon Islands, New Caledonia
(UTC +12:00) Auckland, Wellington, Fiji, Kamchatka
Select the time zone
Vocabularies
Newsletter:
- None selected -
checkorphan.com newsletter
Domain:
BioEnergy
Show summary in full view
Input format
Filtered HTML
Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
Full HTML
Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
news_filter
Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
More information about formatting options
Related Articles
UK researchers to assess algae's environmental impacts in Eu...
Hawaii Utility Turns to Biofuel To Lessen Reliance on Oil
Minn. commissioners recommend delaying move from B5 to B10
Biofuels Law and Regulation Conference is April 22
Germany Passes More Aggressive Renewable Energy Law
Europe Will Not Meet 20% Renewable Energy Target by 2020
Exclusive - EU to delay action on biofuels' indirect impact
Industry split emerges over biofuels' indirect impact
Research by Energy Biosciences Institute Suggests Exclusive ...
New program aims to boost clean-tech
Top BioEnergy Articles
Home
|
Partnership
|
Contact Us
|
Site Map
|
News Site Map
© 2000-2012 Checkbiotech.org |
Disclaimer