Advanced search×

Water Footprint of U.S. Transportation Fuels

Environ Sci Technol (2011) PMID 21405015

In the modern global economy, water and energy are fundamentally connected. Water already plays a major role in electricity generation and, with biofuels and electricity poised to gain a significant share of the transportation fuel market, water will become significantly more important for transportation energy as well. This research provides insight into the potential changes in water use resulting from increased biofuel or electricity production for transportation energy, as well as the greenhouse gas and freshwater implications. It is shown that when characterizing the water impact of transportation energy, incorporating indirect water use and defensible allocation techniques have a major impact on the final results, with anywhere between an 82% increase and a 250% decrease in the water footprint if evaporative losses from hydroelectric power are excluded. The greenhouse gas impact results indicate that placing cellulosic biorefineries in areas where water must be supplied using alternative means, such as desalination, wastewater recycling, or importation can increase the fuel's total greenhouse gas footprint by up to 47%. The results also show that the production of ethanol and petroleum fuels burden already overpumped aquifers, whereas electricity production is far less dependent on groundwater.

DOI: 10.1021/es102633h
Version: za2963e q8za9 q8zb2 q8zc4 q8zde q8ze1 q8zfb q8zg0

Similar articles you may find interesting…

  1. Special infectious disease risks of expatriates and long-term travelers in tropical countries. Part II: infections other than malaria.

    J Travel Med 14(1):50-60 (2007) PMID 17241254

    A wide range of viral, bacterial, and protozoal diseases pose risk to long-term tropical travelers. Risk varies geographically and with lifestyle. For some infections, risk increases with duration of stay, coming to resemble that of the local population. Risk management strategies include vaccinatio...
  2. Occurrence and behavior of pharmaceuticals, steroid hormones, and endocrine-disrupting personal care products in wastewater and the recipien...

    J Environ Monit 13(4):871-8 (2011) PMID 21424011

    The occurrence and behavior of β-blockers, antiepileptic drug carbamazepine and its metabolites, X-ray contrast agent iopromide, natural and synthetic hormones, and several groups of hormone-like personal care products (PCPs), including antiseptics (triclocarban, triclosan, and 2-ph...
  3. The snail Potamopyrgus antipodarum grows faster and is more active in the shade, independent of food quality.

    Oecologia 167(1):85-96 (2011) PMID 21437650

    We focus on the effects of abiotic factors such as nutrients and light (known to influence food quality) on grazer growth rates. As model organism we used the mudsnail Potamopyrgus antipodarum that is native to New Zealand but invasive elsewhere. In a stream channel experiment in New Zealand, we man...