76 research outputs found
Algal food and fuel coproduction can mitigate greenhouse gas emissions while improving land and water-use efficiency
The goals of ensuring energy, water, food, and climate security can often conflict.Microalgae (algae) are
being pursued as a feedstockfor both food and fuelsâprimarily due to algaeâs high areal yield and ability
to grow on non-arable land, thus avoiding common bioenergy-food tradeoffs. However, algal cultivation
requires significant energy inputs that may limit potential emission reductions.We examine the tradeoffs
associated with producing fuel andfood from algae at the energyâfoodâwaterâclimate nexus.We use the
GCAM integrated assessment model to demonstrate that algalfood production can promote reductions
in land-use change emissions through the offset of conventional agriculture. However,fuel production,
either via co-production of algal food and fuel or complete biomass conversion to fuel, is necessary to
ensure long-term emission reductions, due to the high energy costs of cultivation. Cultivation of saltâ
water algae for food products may lead to substantial freshwater savings; but, nutrients for algae
cultivation will need to be sourced from waste streams to ensure sustainability. By reducing the land
demand of food production, while simultaneously enhancingfood and energy security, algae can further
enable the development of terrestrial bioenergy technologies including those utilizing carbon capture and
storage. Our results demonstrate that large-scale algae research and commercialization efforts should
focus on developing both food and energy products to achieve environmental goals.https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/11/11/114006/metaPublished versio
Marine microalgae commercial production improves sustainability of global fisheries and aquaculture
publishedVersio
Marine Microalgae: Climate, Energy, and Food Security From the Sea
Climate, energy, and food security are three of the greatest challenges society faces this century. Solutions for mitigating the effects of climate change often conflict with solutions for ensuring societyâs future energy and food requirements. For example, BioEnergy with Carbon Capture and Storage (BECCS) has been proposed as an important method for achieving negative CO2 emissions later this century while simultaneously producing renewable energy on a global scale. However, BECCS has many negative environmental consequences for land, nutrient, and water use as well as biodiversity and food production. In contrast, large-scale industrial cultivation of marine microalgae can provide society with a more environmentally favorable approach for meeting the climate goals agreed to at the 2015 Paris Climate Conference, producing the liquid hydrocarbon fuels required by the global transportation sector, and supplying much of the protein necessary to feed a global population approaching 10 billion people
Population-based prevalence of cervical infection with human papillomavirus genotypes 16 and 18 and other high risk types in Tlaxcala, Mexico
This study was supported by the National Institute of Public Health of
Mexico, the CoordinaciĂłn de InvestigaciĂłn en Salud del Instituto Mexicano
del Seguro Social, the SecretarĂa de Salud Tlaxcala, the Instituto Nacional de
las Mujeres, and the Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y TecnologĂa [FOSISS 2013
202468]. Additional support has been provided by Roche Diagnostics, BD
Diagnostics, DICIPA and Arbor Vita Corporation. The study sponsors did not
played a role in designing the study, collecting, analyzing or interpreting the
data, writing the report, or submitting this paper for publication. UC Berkeley
Center for Global Public Health, Schoeneman Grant, Joint Medical Program
Thesis Grant, and Cancer Research UK (C569/A10404)
Comprehensive evaluation of algal biofuel production: Experimental and target results
Worldwide, algal biofuel research and development efforts have focused on
increasing the competitiveness of algal biofuels by increasing the energy and financial
return on investments, reducing water intensity and resource requirements, and increasing
algal productivity. In this study, analyses are presented in each of these areasâcosts,
resource needs, and productivityâfor two cases: (1) an Experimental Case, using mostly
measured data for a lab-scale system, and (2) a theorized Highly Productive Case that
represents an optimized commercial-scale production system, albeit one that relies on
full-price water, nutrients, and carbon dioxide. For both cases, the analysis described herein
concludes that the energy and financial return on investments are less than 1, the water
intensity is greater than that for conventional fuels, and the amounts of required resources at a meaningful scale of production amount to significant fractions of current consumption
(e.g., nitrogen). The analysis and presentation of results highlight critical areas for
advancement and innovation that must occur for sustainable and profitable algal biofuel
production can occur at a scale that yields significant petroleum displacement. To this end,
targets for energy consumption, production cost, water consumption, and nutrient
consumption are presented that would promote sustainable algal biofuel production.
Furthermore, this work demonstrates a procedure and method by which subsequent
advances in technology and biotechnology can be framed to track progress.Mechanical Engineerin
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Constraints on algal biofuel production
textThe aspiration for producing algal biofuel is motivated by the desire to replace conventional petroleum fuels, produce fuels domestically, and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Although, in theory, algae have the potential to produce a large amount of petroleum fuel substitutes and capture carbon emissions, in practice, profitable algal biofuel production has proven quite challenging. This dissertation characterizes the production pathways for producing petroleum fuel substitutes from algae and evaluates constraints on algal biofuel production. Chapter 8 provides a summary of the entire dissertation.
The first chapter provides a framework for reporting the production of renewable diesel from algae in a consistent way by using data that are specific and by presenting information with relevant metrics. The second chapter presents a review of analytical tools (i.e., microscopy, spectroscopy, and chromatography) that can be used to analyze the structure and composition of intermediate products in an algal biofuel production pathway.
In chapters 3 through 6, the energy return on investment, water intensity, and financial return on investment are presented for three cases: 1) an Experimental Case in which data were measured during five batches of algal biocrude production with a combined processed volume of about 7600 L, 2) a hypothetical Reduced Case that assumes the same energy output as the Experimental Case, with reduced energy and material inputs, and 3) a Highly Productive Case that assumes higher energy outputs than the Experimental Case, with reduced energy and material inputs, similar to the Reduced Case.
For all three cases, the second-order energy return on investment was determined to be significantly less than 1, which means that all three cases are energy negative. The water intensity (consumption and withdrawal) for all cases was determined to be much greater than that of conventional petroleum fuels and biofuels produced from non-irrigated crops. The financial return on investment was also found to be significantly less than 1 for all cases, indicating production would be unprofitable. Additionally, it was determined that large-scale algal biofuel production would be constrained by the availability of critical energy and material inputs (e.g., nitrogen and carbon dioxide).
The final part of this dissertation presents a first-principles thermodynamic analysis that represents an initial attempt at characterizing the thermodynamic limits for algal biofuel production. In that analysis, the energy, entropy, and exergy is calculated for each intermediate product in the algal biofuel production pathway considered here.
Based on the results presented in this body of work, game-changing technology and biotechnology developments are needed for sustainable and profitable algal biofuel production.Mechanical Engineerin
Sustainability Assessment of Alternative Jet Fuel for the U.S. Department of Defense
Excerpt: The United States Department of Defense (DoD) is considering replacing the 2.8 billion gallons of petroleum jet fuel consumed within the continental United States (CONUS) annually with alternative jet fuels to reduce vulnerability to price and supply fluctuations and improve sustainability. We evaluate the feasibility of replacing DoD CONUS jet fuel with alternative jet fuel from domestic feedstocks and assess the cost, greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, energy balance, land, water, and fertilizer impacts of nine alternative jet fuel pathways
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