Biofuel doesn't grow anywhere, it comes from plants that have the characteristics and compounds that enable them to be used for biofuel. Such plants include corn, canola, sunflowers, and rapeseed.
Biofuels can grow in many countries around the world. Brazil makes biofuel from sugarcane. Europe uses biofuel made from palm oil (though it would be grown elsewhere). The United States uses ethanol made from heavily processed corn. Anywhere crops can be grown, they can be grown for biofuel.
As long as we choose to continue to grow the feedstocks involved, or until a better technology is invented.
There are many ways in which you could get energy from biofuel. You could for example burn the biofuel substance.
Biofuel is energy made by heat.
Different types of plants can be turned into biofuel
Different types of plants can be turned into biofuel
the answer is biofuel
biofuel is green because it does not uses fossil fuels to do things.
Biodiesel and all biofuel is renewable. It can be made again because the vegetation and algae it comes from can all grow again.
Straw can be a component used in the manufacture of biofuels, but it's not a biofuel in itself.
An effect of biofuel is the high amount of water usage that is needed for biofuel producers and putting stress on fresh water supplies. Another effect higher demand for food-biofuel crops, but there will be high prices for consumers to purchase them.
An example of a biofuel would be ethanol. A biofuel is anything that is organic, and can be grown by humans on a mass scale. Other examples are peanut oil and lamp oil.