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Fueling Oregon with Sustainable Biofuels

A report by the Oregon Environmental Council, October 2007
Download the report by clicking here, or read it by selecting the links below.biofuelsreportcover.gif


Executive Summary

1. Introduction   
- Producing Renewable Fuels Sustainably   

2. Overview of Biofuel Technologies   
- First-Generation Biofuels 
- Second-Generation Biofuels   

3. Key Environmental Concerns for Biofuels
- Net Energy   
- Greenhouse Gas Emissions  
- Air Quality  
- Tailpipe Emissions  
- Biodiesel  
- Ethanol  
- Biofuel Refinery Emissions
- Water Quality
- Agricultural impacts on water quality
- Water Use
- Ethanol refinery water use
- Biodiesel refinery water use
- Soil Erosion
- Forest Health
- Biodiversity and Ecosystem Conversion

4. Social Sustainability

5. Biofuel Refinery Designs and Impacts
- Ethanol Plants
- Overview
- Natural gas-fired ethanol plants
- Coal-fired ethanol plants
- Biomass-powered ethanol plants
- Biogas and integrated feedlots
- Biodiesel Refinery Designs

6. Biofuel Feedstocks in Oregon
- Biodiesel Feedstocks in Oregon
- Soybeans
- Brassica oilseeds
- Waste oils and fats
- First-Generation Ethanol Feedstocks in Oregon
- Corn
- Wheat
- Sugar beets
- Potatoes
- Whey and other agricultural byproducts
- Second-Generation Biofuel Feedstocks in Oregon
- Dedicated energy crops
- Hybrid poplar
- Agricultural residues
- Wheat residues
- Grass seed residues
- Woody biomass
- Forest thinnings, slash and residues
- Wood residues/waste
- Algae
- Summary Matrix of Oregon Biofuel Feedstocks

Matrix of Biofuel Feedstocks in Oregon

7. Other Uses for Biomass
- Biogas
- Biomass Electricity
- Bio-products

8. Conclusion
- Principles for Making Renewable Fuels Sustainable
- Policy Models

Appendix 1: Policy Models

Glossary

End notes [PDF]

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