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  2. Biofuel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biofuel

    Biofuel is a fuel that is produced over a short time span from biomass, rather than by the very slow natural processes involved in the formation of fossil fuels such as oil. Biofuel can be produced from plants or from agricultural, domestic or industrial bio waste.

  3. Sustainable biofuel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sustainable_biofuel

    Biofuel development and use is a complex issue because there are many biofuel options which are available. Biofuels, such as ethanol and biodiesel , are currently produced from the products of conventional food crops such as the starch, sugar and oil feedstocks from crops that include wheat , maize , sugar cane , palm oil and oilseed rape .

  4. What are biofuels and why is it so confusing whether they are ...

    www.aol.com/news/biofuels-why-confusing-whether...

    India, the current president of the Group of 20 industrialized and developing nations, has proposed a global biofuel alliance that seeks to accelerate the development of sustainable biofuels to ...

  5. Alternative fuel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alternative_fuel

    Biofuels are also considered a renewable source. Although renewable energy is used mostly to generate electricity, it is often assumed that some form of renewable energy or a percentage is used to create alternative fuels. Research is ongoing into finding more suitable biofuel crops and improving the oil yields of these crops.

  6. Biodiesel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biodiesel

    The effect on carbon dioxide emissions is highly dependent on production methods and the type of feedstock used. Calculating the carbon intensity of biofuels is a complex and inexact process, and is highly dependent on the assumptions made in the calculation. A calculation usually includes:

  7. Renewable fuels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renewable_fuels

    Renewable fuels are fuels produced from renewable resources. Examples include: biofuels (e.g. Vegetable oil used as fuel, ethanol, methanol from clean energy and carbon dioxide [1] or biomass, and biodiesel), Hydrogen fuel (when produced with renewable processes), and fully synthetic fuel (also known as electrofuel) produced from ambient carbon dioxide and water.

  8. United States biofuel policies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_biofuel_policies

    Biofuels have a number of properties that will make it difficult to fully and effectively incorporate them into the gasoline infrastructure and vehicle fleet. Biofuels can differ from gasoline in a number of ways, depending on the particular fuel: lower energy content, different physical and combustion characteristics, and corrosive properties.

  9. Carbon-based fuel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon-based_fuel

    Carbon-based fuel is any fuel principally from the oxidation or burning of carbon.Carbon-based fuels are of two main kinds, biofuels and fossil fuels.Whereas biofuels are derived from recent-growth organic matter [1] and are typically harvested, as with logging of forests and cutting of corn, fossil fuels are of prehistoric origin [2] and are extracted from the ground, the principal fossil ...