Concepts

Biofuels Generations

CAPF wiki1 min read7 sections
At a glance
SubjectScience

Definition

A classification of biofuels by the type of raw material (feedstock) used to make them, from food crops to waste, algae, and engineered organisms.

Key points

  • First-generation biofuels are made from food crops such as sugarcane, corn, and edible oils (for example ethanol from sugarcane and biodiesel from edible oils); they compete with food supply and land.
  • Second-generation biofuels are made from non-food biomass such as crop residues, agricultural waste, wood, and grasses, avoiding the food-versus-fuel conflict; India's interest in stubble (parali) for ethanol falls here.
  • Third-generation biofuels are made from algae, which can yield large amounts of oil without using farmland.
  • Fourth-generation biofuels use genetically engineered organisms and aim to capture more carbon than they emit.
  • India runs an Ethanol Blended Petrol programme and promotes compressed biogas; blending ethanol with petrol reduces import dependence and emissions.

Why it matters for CAPF

The generation-wise feedstock distinction, the food-versus-fuel concern of first-generation fuels, the use of crop residue in second-generation fuels, and India's ethanol-blending push are recurring environment and energy facts.

Common confusion

First-generation biofuels use food crops and so raise food-security concerns, while second-generation fuels deliberately use non-food waste to avoid that conflict; do not treat all biofuels as equally land-hungry. Biofuels are renewable but still emit carbon dioxide when burned.

One-line recall

Biofuel generations: first from food crops (sugarcane ethanol), second from non-food waste and residue, third from algae, fourth from engineered organisms; India runs ethanol blending of petrol.

concept biofuels, concept types of renewable energy, concept fuel cells and hydrogen

Parent note

chemistry everyday

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