buttholes
R. Skrinde has written: 'Engineering Feasibility of Fuels From Biomass Utilizing Dairy Farm Residue' -- subject(s): Fuel, Biomass energy, Dairy farming, Manures
The different sources of energy are:CoalMineral oilNatural gasHydroelectricityAtomic EnergyOther sources of Energy: sun, wind, tides, geothermal energy obtained in volcanic regions, biomass, farm and animal waste, including human excreta.
Burning biomass (plant and wood material) should not harm wildlife habitats, if the vegetation comes from the residue of farm crops. In some parts of the world the stalks of sugar cane (bagasse) are burnt after the sugar has been extracted. This is useful. Other farm crops (corn etc) can be used. If wildlife habitats are cut down for biomass then they will obviously be harmed and the animals endangered. This is not proper management. Biomass is being used today because it is a way of generating electricity without adding to the greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. Biomass is renewable energy and better than burning fossil fuels.
The energy saving refer to the potential energy store in term of fossil fuel that had long duration of processing. The fossil fuel had very long cycle of 100,000 year while it can be used in matter of century. Rely on these energy and if it would deplete (which is not too long from now) we will have hardship maintaining the civilization. It is then to save the earth's energy and move toward shorter energy cycle such as biomass or wind farm or even the photo voltaic.
In theory the carbon balance should be neutral, the carbon emitted during burning is compensated by that absorbed during growing. However if you are burning wood that has taken perhaps a hundred years to grow, you are in effect taking the carbon absorbed in the past and emitting it now, when we are so concerned about rising carbon levels. In any case, the wood (or other biomass material) must be replanted and left to mature before cropping again. This sounds OK in a well regulated economy, but what has happened in many poorer parts of the world is simply deforestation, where a rising population needs energy and the simplest way to get it is just to cut down the nearest trees. This has resulted in catastrophic flash flooding in many areas, like the slopes of the Himalayas.
Randall Dean Schnepf has written: 'Nutritional status of Rwandan households' -- subject(s): Households, Food consumption, Cost and standard of living 'Agriculture-based renewable energy production' -- subject(s): Biomass energy, Wind power, Renewable energy sources, Energy policy 'High agricultural commodity prices' -- subject(s): Prices, Farm produce
Weather.
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a farm
Use cow manure as a renewable fuel source to produce electricity for the farm and the home.
To understand the potential of "biomass" as a fuel supply, it is necessary to understand the term in the first place. Biomass refers to material of recent biological origin from which energy or energy-rich compounds can be derived. Biomass has been used for all of human history as a fuel source. Inits most crude form, the burning of stalks, wood, dung, and the like as domestic fuel is the use of biomass. Such conversions (the burning) tend to release little of the available energy and produces large amounts of pollution because of its incomplete combustion. Biomass, as it is used today, typically refers to the conversion of mass crops such as corn, rice hulls, switch grass, and other agricultural products or byproducts in to either electricity or high-density fuel storage compounds (ethanol, for instance). To convert biomass into electricity, it is typically burned under close supervision (so as to maximize the actual combustion process). The burned biomass releases heat which boils water which, in turn, turns large electric turbines. This is, in fact, much the same method that is used in nuclear plants (with nuclear reactions being replaced by burning biomass). In this way, there is a wide availability of resources "to burn." Some plants can be converted into other compounds; corn is the product that is used to produce ethanol. Such a process is now, through dedicated research, finally becoming economically viable. A downside of this is that each crop generally requires a different fuel-production process. Another downside, one that is rarely mentioned, is that for such crops to be grown in the amounts that they have to be to satisfy modern societies, massive amounts of fertilizer are necessary. Corn, for instance, is well-suited to produce ethanol because, among other reasons, corn holds a lot of energy. This energy comes mainly from the sun but also from the nitrogen in the various compounds inside corn. The solar energy is stored within the bonds of the nitrogen compounds by "fixing" (that is, "nitrogen fixing")- making molecules with the potential energy stored as chemical bonds with nitrogen atoms. This nitrogen comes from the soil. The natural land cannot support such a massive debt of nitrogen and crops that grow on this land are forced to rely on the nitrogen from commercial fertilizers such as ammonia. Production of this fertilizer generally requires intensive use of petroleum. It should also be noted that massive fertilization practices are also changing the natural fabric of rural environments in ways that science is just beginning to understand. Biomass-derived fuels tend to burn much cleaner than their petroleum counterparts; this is typically the tagline associated with their use, and it does typically hold true. Biomass as a fuel source does have its drawbacks, but there are also numerous benefits to its use and further research. It is important, however, to remember that there is no single panacea to the need for energy. The eventual solution will involve many different brands of "alternative energy" and biomass will likely be among the most viable.
Snowball Suggest they make a Windmill to provide energy for the farm and make the jobs easier.