The
title of this post is from a recent paper: Captain T.A. ‘Ike’ Kiefer,
Twenty-First Century Snake Oil: Why the United States Should Reject Biofuels as
Part of a Rational National Security Energy Strategy, Waterloo Institute for Complexity & Innovation Occasional Paper No.4, January 2013.
The
paper argues that biofuels do more to harm the causes of national and
global security than to help them. To reach this conclusion he looks in depth at factors such as energy return on
investment (EROI), energy density, power density, water footprint, food
competition, environmental damage, land confiscation, and lifecycle greenhouse
gases emissions.
I personally
would not expect a uniformed officer
from an operational background to
dig into these details. But this
was not the first time I have been
surprised. In the past, I had the pleasure to share my views with a few
military officers doing research for their thesis. This
is once again a proof that the US Department of Defense employs plenty of
bright people but (unfortunately) it doesn’t consult them. Instead, it pays
plenty of money to private consultancy companies for subjects that could well
be done by its own personnel.
Back to Capt
Kiefer’s paper. The concept of Energy Returned on Energy Invested (EROI) is not
much investigated by the DoD’s green lovers. Capt Kiefer makes a very good
point: “Accelerating the use of fossil fuels by foolishly and wastefully using
them to make much lower EROI biofuels brings any day of future fossil fuel
scarcity that much closer and is completely counterproductive to every “clean”
and “green” energy goal. Applying ammonia fertilizer to any crop intended for
biofuel is an indefensible waste of energy.”
In discussing
markets and price volatility he points out something which is largely ignored
by the DoD’s greens: “Deriving fuel from farming does not liberate it from
petroleum dependence or oil market price volatility, but rather increases price
volatility by adding an additional linkage to global agricultural commodities
markets.” He adds later on that “Converting fossil fuel hydrocarbons into plant
carbohydrates and then back into hydrocarbon fuels is a futile attempt at
perpetual motion in chemistry.”
He demonstrates
elegantly the point I have been trying to do on my blog for years: “The civilian leadership of the US Navy is often heard quoting the statistic that a $1 rise in the cost of a barrel of oil increases annual fuel costs by $31 million. Yet, the cheapest price the Navy has paid for any biofuel to date is $1,080.66 per barrel ($25.73 per gallon). Since 2007, the military has spent $67.8 million on 1.35 million gallons of biofuel, averaging more than $50 a gallon or $2,100 a barrel, and costing the taxpayers $60 million more than if conventional fuel had been purchased. This does not include more than $47 million paid for pure research on alternative fuels. "
By the way, do not forget that since 2007, DoD
has paid less than $4 per gallon of conventional petroleum derived fuel.
Because of this fact, he adds towards the end of his paper that “Regardless of
this, it is logically indefensible to buy a $30.00 per gallon fuel over worries
about the price volatility of a $3.00 per gallon fuel.To dig up with these numbers is not easy,
believe me. You can see here the
Table he meticulously researched (On Page 30).
(I had given up a similar effort last year).
If the DOD had
added the external cost of producing and transporting biofuels in its Fully
Burdened Cost of Fuel
methodology the dark side of biofuels for the US military would have been more
dramatic.
Let me now
quote some bitter truths from Capt Kiefer’s paper:
“Imagine if the
US military developed a weapon that could threaten millions around the world
with hunger, accelerate global warming, incite widespread instability and
revolution, provide our competitors and enemies with cheaper energy, and reduce
America's economy to a permanent state of recession. What would be the sense
and the morality of employing such a weapon? We are already building that
weapon—it is our biofuels program. We need to quit the moonshine and face the
sober facts. The DoD should pivot away from biofuels in its own energy strategy
and the federal government should recraft its overall national energy strategy
to be compatible with physics and biology and economics for the sake of
national and global security.
…The US
government should not push to commercialize any energy candidate until it has
demonstrated lifecycle performance at competitive EROI without subsidy……The
government should end subsidies and market-distorting policies that encourage
low-EROI energy sources over high-EROI sources.
…The US
military and federal government need to rationally and authoritatively define
“renewable,” “sustainable,” and “green,” and enforce empirical standards for
meeting these criteria based upon rigorous lifecycle and opportunity cost
analyses.
…Sound
decisions cannot be made based solely upon popular opinion, personal opinion,
orthodox worldviews, or even common sense. Wise leaders must have
"uncommon sense" founded upon a broad and deep education, and keen
insight achieved through thorough study of the science and the empirical
evidence of the issue at hand. National energy strategy is nothing less than
national survival strategy. Those who would craft such strategy or advise
policy-makers need to be well-grounded in chemistry, thermodynamics, biology,
and economics, so they might discern the difference between promising avenues
of research and perpetual motion schemes that defy physical laws and waste our
nation’s time and treasure. Trying to biofuel our way to energy independence is
like medieval physicians trying to bleed their patients back to health. It is
time to stop the bleeding.”
Wow, bravo. The
US Navy Secretary Ray Mabus must read Capt Kiefer’s paper before giving the
next speech on the “great benefits” of biofuels for the US military.
Meanwhile, the biofuels
comedy continues in the US. You know that the Environmental Protection Agency
announced in January that it would be increasing the mandated amount of
cellulosic biofuel refineries must purchase in 2013 to 14 million gallons.
Let’s put this into context. How much cellulosic biofuel is produced today in
the US? Zero! To meet the EPA’s mandate, refiners are simply forced to purchase
biofuel credits for cellulosic biofuel. Well, capitalism always finds options. See, especially this: The Biofuels Train
To Nowhere: No Government Schemes That Cannot Be Scammed
1 Comments:
well done
Whether we go willingly or don't, Science marches on.
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