Advanced Gen-1, 2 and 3 biofuels research in Australia - Fuelling advanced biofuels training for international scientists


Autoria(s): Clarke, Stephen Ross; Trout, Neil; Aitchison, Tony; Habibie, Sudirman; Brown, Richard
Data(s)

26/09/2010

Resumo

Flinders University and Queensland University of Technology, biofuels research interests cover a broad range of activities. Both institutions are seeking to overcome the twin evils of "peak oil" (Hubbert 1949 & 1956) and "global warming" (IPPC 2007, Stern 2006, Alison 2010), through development of Generation 1, 2 and 3 (Gen-1, 2 & 3) biofuels (Clarke 2008, Clarke 2010). This includes development of parallel Chemical Biorefinery, value-added, co-product chemical technologies, which can underpin the commercial viability of the biofuel industry. Whilst there is a focused effort to develop Gen-2 & 3 biofuels, thus avoiding the socially unacceptable use of food based Gen-1 biofuels, it must also be recognized that as yet, no country in the world has produced sustainable Gen-2 & 3 biofuel on a commercial basis. For example, in 2008 the United States used 38 billion litres (3.5% of total fuel use) of Gen-1 biofuel; in 2009/2010 this will be 47.5 billion litres (4.5% of fuel use) and in 2018 this has been estimated to rise to 96 billion litres (9% of total US fuel use). Brazil in 2008 produced 24.5 billion litres of ethanol, representing 37.3% of the world’s ethanol use for fuel and Europe, in 2008, produced 11.7 billion litres of biofuel (primarily as biodiesel). Compare this to Australia’s miserly biofuel production in 2008/2009 of 180 million litres of ethanol and 75 million litres of biodiesel, which is 0.4% of our fuel consumption! (Clarke, Graiver and Habibie 2010) To assist in the development of better biofuels technologies in the Asian developing regions the Australian Government recently awarded the Materials & BioEnergy Group from Flinders University, in partnership with the Queensland University of Technology, an Australian Leadership Award (ALA) Biofuel Fellowship program to train scientists from Indonesia and India about all facets of advanced biofuel technology.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/37807/

Publicador

Engineers Australia

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/37807/2/Chemeca_full_paper-Clarke_revised1.pdf

http://www.chemeca2010.com/abstract/396.asp

Clarke, Stephen Ross, Trout, Neil, Aitchison, Tony, Habibie, Sudirman, & Brown, Richard (2010) Advanced Gen-1, 2 and 3 biofuels research in Australia - Fuelling advanced biofuels training for international scientists. In Chemeca 2010 - Engineering at the Edge, Engineers Australia, Adelaide, South Australia.

Direitos

Copyright 2010 Please consult the author(s)

Fonte

Faculty of Built Environment and Engineering; School of Engineering Systems

Palavras-Chave #090201 Automotive Combustion and Fuel Engineering (incl. Alternative/Renewable Fuels) #Biodiesel #Biofuel #Feedstock #algae #Jatropha
Tipo

Conference Paper