Environmental Science: How green are biofuels?

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Global warming and escalating petroleum costs are creating an urgent need to find ecologically friendly fuels. Biofuels-such as ethanol from corn (maize) and sugarcane-have been increasingly heralded as a possible savior (1, 2). But others have argued that biofuels will consume vast swaths of farmland and native habitats, drive up food prices, and result in little reduction in greenhouse-gas emissions (3-5). An innovative study by Zah et al. (6), commissioned by the Swiss government, could help to resolve this debate by providing a detailed assessment of the environmental costs and benefits of different transport biofuels.

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Scharlemann, Jorn P. W. and Laurance, William F. 2008. "<a href="https://repository.si.edu/handle/10088/8643">Environmental Science: How green are biofuels?</a>" <em>Science</em>, 319, (5859) 43–44. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1153103">https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1153103</a>.

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