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446 results for the search term: ethanol
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29
POPS
Forget Corn: Mushrooms May Hold Key to Energy
Silkweaver
by Silkweaver  11-14-2008    3
 No Remarks
24
POPS
Is America Headed for a Food Shortage?
dorine
by dorine  6-10-2007    9
 This could get serious very shortly.
22
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Life after oil: time to get ready
enbar
by enbar  1-4-2007    2
 James Kunstler's trademark pessimism, which, sadly, is probably right on the money. According to the Dept. of Energy, world energy demand now exceeds supply; get ready for a rough ride down the other side of the peak.
21
POPS
Bombing the Moon Gives A New Meaning to Lunatics
celestialdancer
by celestialdancer  10-10-2009    21
 So how much does a metaphor weigh? A lot more than NASA thinks. The first man on the moon wasn't an American or a Russian, it was The Man in the Moon we all saw when we were kids, and somebody older showed him to us. That's the first man on the moon, her permanent resident, and now he's got a NASA rocket at his backside... They used to call the mentally ill lunatics. But now I wonder who the real lunatics are. And if there is water on the moon, what are we going to do with it? Grow moon-corn for ethanol until we kill the Earth? Such a great article it touched something, it really touched something more beautiful than finding water on the moon.
21
POPS
Absinthe uncorked: The 'Green Fairy' was boozy -- but not psychedelic
wildcat
by wildcat  4-30-2008    4
 there goes another myth..
18
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Chemical breakthrough turns sawdust into biofuel
wildcat
by wildcat  7-20-2008   
 No Remarks
18
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Power your car... with watermelons?
chestnut501
by chestnut501  5-29-2009    2
 80 million watermelons are left to rot each year. Now there's a way to turn them into ethanol.
17
POPS
Some of Earth's climate troubles should face burial at sea
Silkweaver
by Silkweaver  1-29-2009   
 Strand has devised a formula to measure the carbon-sequestration efficiency of this process and others using crop residues, something no one has done before. Carefully tallying how much carbon would be released during the harvest, transportation and sinking of 30 percent of U.S. crop residues and comparing that to how much carbon could be sequestered, Strand says the process would be 92 percent efficient. That's more efficient than any other use of crop residue he considered, including simply leaving crop residue in the field, which is 14 percent efficient at sequestering carbon, or using crop residue to produce ethanol, which avoids the use fossil fuels, but is only 32 percent efficient. Worldwide, farming is mankind's largest-scale activity. Thirty percent of the world's crop residue represents 600 megatons of carbon that, if sequestered in the deep ocean with 92 percent efficiency, would mean the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere would be reduced from 4,000 megatons o
17
POPS
Ethanol - More dangerous than you think
BigBadWolf
by BigBadWolf  7-31-2007    7
 I have clipped on this subject before... Ethanol is NOT the solution we should be looking at!
17
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World’s Smallest Bowl of Ramen
Mohir
by Mohir  5-30-2008    2
 No Remarks
16
POPS
Ethanol isn't such a green fuel after all
jasontromm
by jasontromm  5-23-2007    6
 At least not the way we make it here in the U.S., from corn. I know some countries in South America make it from sugar cane and that may be more efficient, but making it from corn isn't green.
15
POPS
McCain's 44 Flip-Flops Described in Detail
dmegivern
by dmegivern  9-22-2008    1
 I could only clip about 30 of them.
15
POPS
Alcohol Cloud in Deep Space
adamc
by adamc  4-30-2007    6
 Sorry folks, can't bottle this stuff. Incredible what you find in outer space. Inspired by conversation on my clip about Virgin Galactic .
15
POPS
Killing endangered animals is always a bad idea
JohnWaterman
by JohnWaterman  11-21-2007   
 No Remarks
14
POPS
Solar Power From Space
Mikez
by Mikez  5-17-2007    5
 No Remarks
13
POPS
Why bees are important to your wallet
JICWyllie
by JICWyllie  6-9-2007    3
 The article does not mention the droughts and floods which are increasingly disrupting food production. It could become a question of survival to grow as much as possible yourself and become a vegetarian.
12
POPS
Discover Magazine: 20 Things You Didn't Know About... Death
enSue
by enSue  7-8-2007    1
 Sharing my love of Discover Magazine's "Things You Didn't Know About" series of articles, here are clips of some interesting facts about death. Got any more facts to share about death?
12
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Longer Life Linked to Specific Foods on Mediterranean Diets
Kelika
by Kelika  6-24-2009   
 No Remarks
12
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Global Warming Debunked 6
B Rosen
by B Rosen  2-25-2007    5
 No Remarks
12
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Mushrooms May Hold Key to Energy Crisis
thisnamecantbetaken
by thisnamecantbetaken  11-11-2008    3
 No Remarks
12
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Global Hunger is a "Crisis in Democracy"
chestnut501
by chestnut501  2-5-2009    4
 More Food Being Produced, More People Going Hungry
11
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Colony Collapse: Do Massive Bee Die-Offs Mean an End to Our Food System as We Know it?
JICWyllie
by JICWyllie  6-11-2007   
 Don't forget the energy intensive food production systems and the rising cost of oil, not to mention fast growing investment in ethanol production. It looks like food prices could become a very big issue.
11
POPS
Will milk become America's new oil?
JICWyllie
by JICWyllie  6-3-2007    6
 No Remarks
11
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Major Advance In Biofuel Technology: Trash Today, Ethanol Tomorrow
Mohir
by Mohir  3-11-2008   
 Major Advance In Biofuel Technology: Trash Today, Ethanol Tomorrow
11
POPS
Scum of the earth may save planet
Fast T friend
by Fast T friend  12-9-2008    2
 The demands of algae are simple: sunlight, warmth, water, nutrients and, most significantly, carbon dioxide, the much maligned gas that is a major contributor to global warming.
10
POPS
What can the budget for the Iraq War buy?
BobbyRutan
by BobbyRutan  11-9-2007    5
 Doesn't clip as well as I hoped so visit the website: Remarkable, that it is admitted these days (by generals, former administration appointees, and neocon architects of the war) that the war in Iraq is about controlling oil resources, and look what you could do with the money that we've spent on that fiasco. With $611 billion, you could convert all cars in America to run on ethanol nine times over. TheBudgetGraph.com estimates that converting the 136,568,083 registered cars in the United States to ethanol (conversion kits at $500) would cost $68.2 billion. Many, many environment-friendly cars on the road With $611 billion, you could convert all cars in America to run on ethanol nine times over. TheBudgetGraph.com estimates that converting the 136,568,083 registered cars in the United States to ethanol (conversion kits at $500) would cost $68.2 billion.
10
POPS
Pump some termites in..
balthazarus
by balthazarus  12-11-2008    2
 Where there is need, diversity appears. :)
10
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Turning Bacteria into Plastic Factories
Mohir
by Mohir  9-24-2008    2
 Cost will be the ultimate factor in whether this someday becomes a widely used plastic-making process; Genomatica says it's not sure how much its E. coli–produced BDO will cost, noting that results thus far have been confined to the lab.
10
POPS
Ethanol: The Fuel To Nowhere
merrie
by merrie  6-26-2008   
 Farm belt support for reducing or eliminating the corn ethanol mandate was higher once respondents were informed that two studies, one from Princeton University and another from the University of Minnesota, found that ethanol contributes more greenhouse gas to the atmosphere than does conventional gasoline. It does so, in part, because it encourages the clearing of so-called carbon sinks, such as rain forests, which absorb carbon dioxide, to produce crops for ethanol production. "We shouldn't sacrifice food for fuel, nor should we sacrifice carbon sinks for fuel," said Ridenour. "Ethanol is costing us as taxpayers, it is costing us as consumers, and it is costing us important environmental resources while providing little-to-no benefit for most of us in return. Ethanol is the fuel to nowhere. Like the infamous 'bridge to nowhere' earmark, ethanol mandates mean we all pay enormous costs so a few can benefit."
10
POPS
Grains Gone Wild
ericskiff
by ericskiff  4-7-2008    3
 With food prices rising quickly and a grain crisis looming, the end of cheap food may indeed be here. From a personal point of view, I know several people near the poverty line who are really feeling the pinch now between oil prices (gas, heating oil, etc) and rising food prices.
10
POPS
Tiger resurrection
Charolastra
by Charolastra  5-20-2008   
 No Remarks
10
POPS
Odds Favor Drunk Trauma Victims
chestnut501
by chestnut501  10-2-2009    3
 A study in the journal American Surgeon finds that trauma victims who were inebriated at the time of their injury have higher survival rates than their sober counterparts.
9
POPS
'End Of The Ethanol Dream' Astounding TV Commentary
merrie
by merrie  5-3-2008    5
 Frankly, I'd doubt any American broadcaster would have the nerve to say the following with cameras rolling and microphones switched on Absolutely must-see video available here, transcript follows The ethanol craze grew out of alarmism and the deep desire of governments, especially here in North America and Europe, to be seen as green. Now, it's clear that growing corn to make ethanol not only takes more energy to produce than it saves on the other end, but the subsidies, particularly in the States and Europe, for such production is one of the factors driving an international food crisis that, as always, is hardest on the poorest people of the world. (enthusiastic h/t to NBer Par for the Course) http://newsbusters.org/blogs/noel-sheppard/2008/05/02/astounding-tv-commentary-end-ethanol-dream
9
POPS
cheap energy made out of waste
mikosilk
by mikosilk  1-28-2008    1
 No Remarks
9
POPS
Biodegradable Planet-friendly Plastics -Poised to Become a Commercial Standard?
vk2yoc
by vk2yoc  8-26-2008    2
 No Remarks
9
POPS
Best Use of Grain: Food or Fuel?
gingembre
by gingembre  4-3-2007    7
 "In some U.S. Corn Belt states, ethanol distilleries are taking over the corn supply. In Iowa, a staggering 55 ethanol plants are operating or have been proposed. Iowa State University economist Bob Wisner observes that if all these plants are built, they would use virtually all the corn grown in Iowa. In South Dakota, a top-ten corn-growing state, ethanol distilleries are already claiming over half of the corn harvest." "With so many distilleries being built, livestock and poultry producers fear there may not be enough corn to produce meat, milk, and eggs. " "As the price of oil climbs, it becomes increasingly profitable to convert farm commodities into automotive fuel, either ethanol or biodiesel. In effect, the price of oil becomes the support price for food commodities. Whenever the food value of a commodity drops below its fuel value, the market will convert it into fuel." Geez, the more I learn about ethanol & biodiesel the more I see what a mistake it is for the world.
9
POPS
Environmentalism killing the Gulf of Mexico
n2sooners
by n2sooners  7-31-2008   
 No Remarks
9
POPS
How Corn-Based Ethanol Can Lead To Disaster
JICWyllie
by JICWyllie  6-13-2007    1
 No Remarks
9
POPS
Got Corn?
The REAL Napster
by The REAL Napster  3-30-2007    6
 This is when other countries realize just how dependant THEY are on the U.S. Europe simply doesn't have the room to plant 90 million acres of corn. Other countries are eagerly placing orders for the bumper crop of U.S. corn. How funny it is that the U.S. is called the scum of the Earth...that is until we have something they want and need. This is also good for alternative plastics like PLA which are made entirely of corn and are environmentally friendly. ; )
9
POPS
Flower turns animal waste into fuel
cakebelly
by cakebelly  4-13-2009    1
 continues: Duckweed, they discovered, has an appetite for animal waste, quickly converting it to leafy starch that can then be converted into ethanol. The current source for most U.S. ethanol is industrial-scale corn farming, which requires large amounts of toxic pesticides and dead zone-feeding, fuel-intensive fertilizers. When the costs are added up, corn-based ethanol may prove little cleaner than gasoline. Duckweed could help solve both problems at once. "We did small-scale tests in the laboratory to convert duckweed starch to ethanol using the same technologies as the fuel industry currently uses in corn," said Cheng. "With the same technology, we can easily convert it."
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