| Adapted from The Sunday Times: 27 April
2008
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SWITCHGRASS
FACTS |
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• A fast-growing grass that produces about 320 gallons of
bioethanol per acre
• Generates about 3-4 times more energy than is used to manufacture
the fuel in the first place
• Ethanol production from switchgrass
seems to emit vastly less carbon dioxide than does petrol production
• Scientific
name: Panicum virgatum L
• Species is a perennial grass
• Distribution: North and South America, parts of Africa
• Grows to heights of 0.5-2.5m
(Source: USDA; Cardiff School of Biosciences)
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Britain's armed forces could acquire a new tinge
of green under plans to end the military dependency on fossil fuels, according
to the Ministry of Defence (MoD).
Possible innovations include the following.
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Ships could run completely on electricity produced
from generators powered by synthetic fuels made from grass.
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Unmanned attack aircraft powered by the sun. They
would fire missiles fuelled with hydrogen produced by feeding algae
to microbes.
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Tanks could be electrically powered or run on fuel
produced from oil squeezed out of weeds so hardy they can grow in
the desert.
The Royal Navy’s new Type-45 destroyers already
use all-electric propulsion (albeit produced by gas generators) and greener
ways of producing the electricity are being explored in conjunction with
the French.
The MoD has said that many of the ideas would come to
fruition only in the next generation. They pointed out that factors influencing
the proposal to use "green" fuels include:
- the opportunity to cut costs - both the £400m annual fuel bill,
which has doubled in four years, and transport costs from places like
the Middle East;
- the reduction of reliance on the unstable Middle East;
- the need to reduce the carbon footprint of the forces’ gas-guzzling
tanks, jets and other equipment.
The MoD’s science and technology experts envisage
more efficient engines and greater use of solar power, microbe-powered
fuel cells and lightweight and remotely operated aircraft and robots.
Future biofuels are likely to focus on inedible plants such as the jatropha,
which thrives as a weed on arid land and desert and needs little water.
It is already being cultivated in dry parts of India for biodiesel.

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