TUESDAY 22 JANUARY, 2013 |

Solar Panels Beat Biofuels For Fuelling Vehicles
by Energy Matters

Researchers from University of California - Santa Barbara (UCSB) and the Norwegian University of Science and
Technology have determined solar panels are much more efficient than biomass as
energy sources to fuel vehicles.
The USA's love affair with corn ethanol is only deepening - production grew from 4.7 billion gallons in 2007
to 7.5 billion gallons last year. But instead of reducing greenhouse gas
emissions (which was part of the goal in their use), it may be increasing
them.
Turning food into fuel has also affected corn prices globally and tied up vast
amounts of farm land.
The researchers examined various ways of using sunlight to power cars:
a) converting corn or other plants to ethanol;
b) converting energy crops into electricity for battery electric vehicles (BEVs)
rather than producing ethanol;
c) using solar panels to convert sunlight directly into electricity for BEVs.
"PV is orders of magnitude more efficient than biofuels pathways in terms of land use
- 30, 50, even 200 times more efficient - depending on the specific crop and local conditions," says
UCSB Bren School of Environmental Science & Management Professor and LCA expert Roland
Geyer. "You get the same amount of energy using much less land, and PV doesn't require farm land."
In a paper titled "Spatially Explicit Life Cycle Assessment of Sun-to-Wheels Transportation Pathways in the U.S.";
published in the journal Environmental Science & Technology, the authors
state even the most efficient biomass-based systems require 29 times more land than the PV-based alternative in the same
locations.
"PV BEV systems also have the lowest life-cycle GHG emissions throughout the U.S. and the lowest fossil fuel inputs, except in locations that have very high hypothetical switchgrass yields of 16 or more tons per
hectare," states Professor Geyer.
The Professor says photosynthesis is the bottleneck for biofuel crops.
"It's at best 1-percent efficient at converting sunlight to crop, while today's thin-film PV is at least 10-percent efficient at converting sunlight to electricity."
Silicon solar panels offer even higher conversion efficiencies; for example,
REC
solar panels currently have a module efficiency of 15.8%.
Professor Geyer says quick calculations suggest that with the USA's federal tax
credit for EV's, electric vehicles are already competitive with biofuels; which
are also heavily subsidised.
Source
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