T. W. Patzek
Thermodynamics of the Corn-Ethanol Biofuel Cycle
Critical Reviews in Plant Sciences,
23(6), 519-567, 2004

Abstract
In this paper I define sustainability, sustainable
cyclic processes, and quantify the degree of non-renewability of a
major biofuel: ethanol produced from industrially-grown corn.
First, I demonstrate that more fossil energy is used to produce
ethanol from corn than the ethanol's calorific value. Analysis of the
carbon cycle shows that all leftovers from ethanol production must be
returned back to the fields to limit the irreversible mining of soil
humus. Thus, production of ethanol from whole plants is unsustainable.
In 2004, ethanol production from corn will generate ~11 million tonnes
of incremental CO2, over and above the amount of CO2
generated by burning gasoline with 115% of the calorific value
of this ethanol.
Second, I calculate the cumulative exergy (available free energy)
consumed in corn farming and ethanol production, and estimate the
minimum amount of work necessary to restore the key non-renewable
resources consumed by the industrial corn-ethanol cycle. This amount
of work is compared with the maximum useful work obtained from the
industrial corn-ethanol cycle. It appears that if the corn ethanol
exergy is used to power a car engine, the minimum restoration work is
about 7 times the maximum useful work from the cycle. This ratio drops
down to 2.4, if an ideal fuel cell is used to process the ethanol.
Third, I estimate the U.S. taxpayer subsidies of the industrial
corn-ethanol cycle at $3.5 billion in 2004. The parallel subsidies by
the environment are estimated at $2.0 billion in 2004. The latter
estimate will increase manifold when the restoration costs of
aquifers, streams and rivers, and the Gulf of Mexico are also
included.
Finally, I estimate that (per year and unit area) the inefficient
solar cells produce ~100 times more electricity than corn ethanol. We
need to rely more on sunlight, the only source of renewable energy on
the earth.
|
|
|
|