Bioethanol production from farming non-food macroalgae in Pacific island nations: Chemical constituents, bioethanol yields, and prospective species in the Philippines
Issue Date
12-2011
Abstract
Increasing biofuel production on agricultural lands in tropical island nations will likely result in increased deforestation [1], and also inflate food prices, especially in net food importing countries like the Philippines [2-4]. Compounding problems associated with promotion of biofuels in southeast Asian countries are the technical efficiencies of bioethanol production, including poor energy balances from terrestrial crops that are close to, or less than unity, unless bagasse is used as the distillation heat source [1]. As the increase in terrestrial biofuel production in Pacific island nations is potentially less sustainable than is publically stated, alternative feedstocks are required which retain the regional development benefits, while reducing the negative ecological and food security impacts [1,5]. This work presents the potential of farmed macroalgae chemical substrates as a bioethanol feedstock supply, explores macroalgae-to-bioethanol yields, and details prospective non-food macroalgae species, specific to the Philippine coastal region. Leveraging off the existing capability of the macroalgae farming industry (producing 1.7 million wet tonnes annually in the Philippines alone), a significant new market for non-food macroalgae stimulated by bioethanol producers can be developed to avoid problems related to food/feed grade ethanol feedstocks. © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Source or Periodical Title
Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews
ISSN
1364-0321
Volume
15
Issue
9
Page
4432-4435
Document Type
Article
Physical Description
tables
Language
English
Subject
Bioethanol, Macroalgae, Mariculture, Renewable biofuel, Sargassum spp
Recommended Citation
Borines, M.G., de Leon, R.L., McHenry, M.P. (2011). Bioethanol production from farming non-food macroalgae in Pacific island nations: Chemical constituents, bioethanol yields, and prospective species in the Philippines. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 15 (9), 4432-4435. doi:10.1016/j.rser.2011.07.109.
Identifier
doi:10.1016/j.rser.2011.07.109.
Digital Copy
yes