Environmental Life Cycle Implications of Fuel Oxygenate Production from California Biomass

    Research output: NRELTechnical Report

    Abstract

    Historically, more than 90% of the excess agricultural residue produced in California (approximately 10 million dry metric tons per year) has been disposed through open-field burning. Concerns about air quality have prompted federal, state, and local air quality agencies to tighten regulations related to this burning and to look at disposal alternatives. One use of this biomass is as anoxygenated fuel. This report focuses on quantifying and comparing the comprehensive environmental flows over the life cycles of two disposal scenarios: (1) burning the biomass, plus producing and using MTBE; and (2) converting and using ETBE.
    Original languageAmerican English
    Number of pages204
    StatePublished - 1999

    Bibliographical note

    Also available electronically.

    NREL Publication Number

    • NREL/TP-580-25688

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