Washington, DC
March 8, 2005
Studies indicate that the U.S. Congress and
Administration should increase support for bioenergy
“Two recently released reports point to a
brighter energy future for all Americans and more profits for
farmers if Congress takes the necessary action to support
bioenergy,” said Brent Erickson, Vice President for Industrial
and Environmental Technology at the
Biotechnology Industry Organization.
The first report, “Growing Energy: How Biofuels
Can Help End America’s Oil Dependence,” provides further weight
to the potential benefit of biofuels -- typically ethanol from
grain and crop residues -- in reducing America’s dependence on
foreign oil while adding $5 billion annually to farm profits by
2025 if production commitments are made now. The report was
issued by the nonprofit National Resources Defense Council and
is available at
http://www.bio.org/ind/GrowingEnergy.pdf.
“Renewable agriculture resources are readily
available for more domestic energy production. A new type of
biotechnology called
industrial biotechnology
is so innovative that now companies in this area have the means
to convert straw to gold. By using advanced biotech enzymes to
convert crop residues to sugars and then to ethanol and other
products, farmers can harvest and sell two crops from every
field planted -- a food crop and a biomass energy crop,”
Erickson said.
The second report, “25 by 25: Agriculture’s Role
in Ensuring U.S. Energy Independence” by the Ag Energy Working
Group of the Energy Future Coalition, shows how America’s
farmers can contribute 25 percent of the total energy consumed
in the United States by 2025 and not at the expense of producing
abundant, safe and affordable food and feed. The group comprises
a blue-ribbon panel of farmers, educators, co-op directors, and
members of a broad range of agriculture associations. The report
is available at
http://www.bio.org/ind/25x25.pdf.
“Farmers and those in the ethanol and biotech
industries need to pull together to get the federal government
to develop new policies that reward the construction of
ultra-modern biorefineries that can employ industrial
biotechnology to convert corn stover, wheat straw and other crop
residues to ethanol. If we do that, in a few short years, the
United States could be producing tens of billions of gallons of
ethanol more than we are producing today and the farm economy
would get a real boost,” Erickson said.
“The United States currently makes about 3
billion gallons of ethanol a year from grain. New biotechnology
processes are now available that could result in 40 to 70
billion gallons of ethanol a year being produced from crop
residues,” Erickson said. “Because of lead times needed to build
new plants we must work now on getting the next generation of
advanced biorefineries built so we can ratchet up ethanol
production.”
The “25X25” report calls on America and its
farmers to focus on energy production as a primary objective.
Benefits include added income, added value for crops and
byproducts, diversification to alternative enterprises,
productive use of marginal land, reducing pollution, reducing
reliance on government payments and creating new jobs in rural
areas.
“What must be overcome is our lack of focus on
harnessing agriculture’s renewable energy opportunities, lack of
vision, and lack of action plans,” Erickson said. “Congress and
the administration are not doing enough to help us make the farm
belt the energy fields of tomorrow and to kick the addiction of
foreign oil. We should do more tilling for energy and less
drilling for energy.”
The “25X25” report calls on America’s agriculture
sector to step up and educate decision-makers and the general
public. Other tasks include crafting new public policy,
developing production and marketing strategies, creating
alliances, securing capital, building commercial-scale plants,
and solving processing, transportation, transmission and
distribution challenges.
The “Growing Energy” report predicts a brighter
future for farmers, noting that using biomass for ethanol
production could result in $5 billion in added farm profits. The
prediction is based on $40 per dry ton and 200 million tons of
biomass, which is less than one-sixth the total amount of
biomass farmers could produce by 2050.
The result of a two-year study by agricultural,
engineering and environmental experts, the “Growing Energy”
report is the first to focus on what bioenergy technologies can
do when commercially mature and operating on a large scale. In
addition to adding to farm profits, biofuels have the potential
of being cheaper than gasoline and diesel. This could save about
$20 billion per year on fuel costs by 2050 while reducing
greenhouse gas emissions by 1.7 billion tons per year. That is
equal to more than 80 percent of transportation-related
emissions and 22 percent of total emissions in 2002.
For more information see BIO’s Industrial and
Environmental webpage at
www.BIO.org/ind/.
BIO represents more than 1,000 biotechnology
companies, academic institutions, state biotechnology centers
and related organizations in all 50 U.S. states and 33 other
nations. BIO members are involved in the research and
development of health-care, agricultural, industrial and
environmental biotechnology products. |