DocumentCode
1506633
Title
Organic (but not green)
Author
Divan, Deepak ; Kreikebaum, Frank
Volume
46
Issue
11
fYear
2009
Firstpage
48
Lastpage
53
Abstract
Sustainable, green, renewable, organic- the words come up so often in energy and climate debates that they tend to sound as if they mean the same thing. But of course they don´t. Nuclear reactors emit no carbon and are therefore in a sense green, but uranium is nonrenewable; hydropower is green and renewable but may not always be sustainable, because the ecological consequences can be bad and reservoirs are not limitless; coal is organic, but its carbon emissions make it the very opposite of green. All that is obvious enough. But even so, it may be jarring to hearas we have found and will describe-that organic biofuels can´t possibly fuel a growing world economy in a sustainable manner, whereas, in principle, inorganic fuels could.
Keywords
energy resources; inorganic compounds; sustainable development; coal; ecological consequences; hydropower; inorganic energy sources; nuclear reactors; organic biofuels; uranium; Biofuels; Carbon dioxide; Costs; Ethanol; Fuels; Government; Hydroelectric power generation; Reservoirs; Speech;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Spectrum, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9235
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MSPEC.2009.5292048
Filename
5292048
Link To Document