donate now
Truly Sustainable Renewable Future
March 17, 2009 – 10:42 am | One Comment

Advanced Biofuels are high-energy liquid transportation fuels derived from: low nutrient input/high per acre yield crops; agricultural or forestry waste; or other sustainable biomass feedstocks including algae.  The key word is “sustainable.”
A technical definition that …

Read the full story »
Business News/Analysis

Federal Legislation

Political news and views from Capitol Hill.

More Coming Events

Conferences and Events List in Addition to Coming Events Carousel (above)

Original Writing, Opinions Advanced Biofuels USA

Sustainability

Home » Federal Agency, Feedstocks, Germany, Green Jobs, International, Opinions, Policy, Sustainability

Beyond Biofuels: Renewable Energy Opportunities for U.S. Farmers

Submitted by on August 2, 2010 – 9:09 amNo Comment

(Heinrich Böll Stiftung North America)   In cooperation with 25x’25, the Heinrich Böll Stiftung North America hosted a transatlantic roundtable discussion on its new report Beyond Biofuels: Renewable Energy Opportunities for U.S. Farmers.

As farmers struggle with increasing energy costs and decreasing farm incomes, untapped business opportunities in renewable energy hold the promise of addressing both of these problems, while also offering numerous other benefits such as rural economic development, national energy security and improved environmental conditions.  American farmers have captured some renewable energy opportunities available to them, notably those associated with ethanol production, but have not yet developed most renewable technologies to their full potential.  German farmers, on the other hand, have used renewable to their advantage and have established a much more robust agriculture-renewables connection than their American counterparts.

At the roundtable, the authors explored these lessons at the intersection of renewable energy and agriculture on both sides of the Atlantic. They provided an overview of renewable energy on farms and the drivers for deployment in Germany and the U.S. Participants at the roundtable discussed the prospects of feed-in tariffs in US states, the benefits of a biogas strategy for the US, and the role of sustainability standards for using biomass in energy production.  The presentation concludes with suggestions for which drivers in Germany may benefit U.S. farmers and proposed recommendations to help American farmers become “energy farmers” in the 21st century.  READ MORE    Download Report

Related posts:

  1. Thailand Biofuels: Feedstocks and Market Opportunities
  2. Market Interactions, Farmers’ Choices, and the Sustainability of Growing Advanced Biofuels: a Missing Perspective?
  3. The Paradox of Rising U.S. Ethanol Exports: Increased Market Opportunities at the Expense of Enhanced National Energy Security?
  4. Corn Farmers Coalition Publishes The Corn Fact Book
  5. New Renewable Fuel Standard A Mixed Blessing For Agriculture

Tags:

Comments are closed.