Bioenergy timeline

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This page lists key past developments and future goals related to bioenergy.

Bioenergy timeline edit
Future goals: 2030 - 2025 - 2022 - 2020 - 2017 - 2015 - 2013 - 2012 - 2011 - 2010 - 2009 - 2008

Past developments: 2008 - 2007 - 2006 - 2005 - 2004 - 2003 - 2002 - 2001 - 1996 - 1992 - 1981 - 1973 - 1947 - 1942 - 1940 - 1937 - 1935 - 1932 - 1921 - 1918 - 1906 - 1861 - 1860 - 1834 - 1826

Future goals

2030

2025

  • Target year set by the "25x'25 coalition" [2] for renewable energy to reach 25% of total energy use in the United States.
  • Target year set by the government of the US state of Iowa to achieve "energy independence"[3]

2022

2020

  • United Kingdom target calls "for one-fifth of total energy supply to come from renewable sources" [5]

2018

  • Year by which "cellulosic biofuels" potentially may become commercially viable, according to a 2008 UN FAO/OECD study.[6]

2017

  • Target year under proposal by U.S. President Bush (in his 2007 State of the Union Address) for achieving utilization of 35 billion gallons of alternative fuels within the United States.

2015

  • 30 million acres of U.S. farmland projected to be needed for corn production to meet legislated ethanol production target.[7]

2013

  • Year by which "cellulosic biofuels" potentially may become commercially viable, according to a 2008 statement by U.S. Agriculture Secretary Schafer.[8]

2012

2011

2010

  • Year of expiration of U.S. Volumetric Ethanol Excise Tax Credit (VEETC), which provides a 51-cent-per-gallon subsidy to U.S. ethanol producers.

2009

2008

  • 31 December 2008: Target date for expiration of U.S. 54-cent-per-gallon import tariff on ethanol.

Past developments

2008

  • 7 February 2008: Two studies published in Science magazine ("Land Clearing and the Biofuel Carbon Debt" and "Use of U.S. Croplands for Biofuels Increases Greenhouse Gases through Emissions from Land Use Change"), indicate that land-use change associated with production of biofuels leads to increased net carbon emissions, thus challenging a major point advanced by biofuels proponents, that biofuels are "climate friendly".
  • 6 July 2008: World Bank President Robert Zoellick reportedly calls for reform of biofuel policies in rich countries, including a reduction in mandates, subsidies and tariffs.[15]

2007

  • 23 January 2007: President Bush, in his State of the Union Address, calls for achieving utilization of 35 billion gallons of alternative fuels within the United States in 10 years (by 2017).

2006

2005

2004

2003

2002

  • 11 percent of U.S. corn crop used for fuel production.[20]

2001

1996

1992

1985

1981

1978

  • Tax incentives for ethanol proposed by US President Jimmy Carter, primarily for national security reasons.

1973

  • Nebraska Farm Crops Utilization Committee begins tests of alcohol blends. The committee later becomes the Nebraksa Gasohol Commission.

1947

  • Alcohol plants built for the war effort are sold for scrap, despite interest in ethanol production for fuel and chemicals.

1942

  • Synthetic rubber production from alcohol promoted by farm lobby. Oil industry opposes this, but is exposed by Sen. Harry Truman's war investigating committee. By 1944, 3/4 of all US rubber production is from alcohol.

1940

  • Ethyl Gasoline Corp. loses anti-trust lawsuit brought by Justice Dept. for anti-competitive behavior.

1937

  • Agrol plant opens in Atchison, KS as part of the Chemurgy experiment. About 2000 service stations across the Midwest use the 10% alcohol blend in gasoline. Plant is bankrupt by 1939.

1935

  • First Farm Chemurgy conference in Dearborn, MI, sponsored by Henry Ford. Chemurgy seeks new uses for farm products, such as ethanol as an outlet for surplus corn, through scientific research.

1932

  • Leo Christensen and others in Iowa State University's chemistry department advocate use of alcohol blends as anti-knock fuels and for Depression-era farm relief.

1921

  • General Motors researchers discover anti-knock effect of tetra-ethyl lead. Leaded gasoline, as it comes to be known, displaces most US ethanol anti-knock blends. GM and Standard Oil Co. of NJ form the Ethyl Gasoline Corp. as a 50-50 joint venture.

1918

  • Scientific American reports: "It is now definitely established that alcohol can be blended with gasoline to produce a suitable motor fuel..." Two years later, the magazine reports "a universal assumption that [ethyl] alcohol in some form will be a constituent of the motor fuel of the future."

1906

  • Civil War tax repealed; President Teddy Roosevelt signs a bill allowing tax-free use of industrial alcohol on June 8.

1861

  • Alcohol taxed; $2.08 per gallon tax imposed on beverage and industrial alcohol in stages between 1862 and 1864 as part of the Internal Revenue Act to pay for the Civil War. The tax was meant to apply to beverage alcohol, but without any specific exemption, it was also applied to fuel and industrial uses for alcohol. "The imposition of the internal-revenue tax on distilled spirits ... increased the cost of this 'burning fluid' beyond the possibility of using it in competition with kerosene..," said Rufus F. Herrick, an engineer with the Edison Electric Testing Laboratory who wrote one of the first books on the use of alcohol fuel.

1860

  • German inventor Nicholas August Otto uses ethyl alcohol as a fuel in an early engine because it was widely available for spirit lamps throughout Europe. He devised a carburetor which, like Morey's, heated the alcohol to help it vaporize as the engine was being started. A patent application was turned down because the carburetor was considered to be well established technology.

1834

  • The first U.S. patent for alcohol as a lamp fuel was awarded in 1834 to S. Casey, of Lebanon, Maine, but it is clear that alcohol was routinely used a fuel beforehand.

1826

  • Samuel Morey uses readily available alcohol in the first American prototype internal combustion engine at the surprisingly early date of 1826. Morey's work was lost in the enthusaism for the steam engine and a lack of funding. No other internal combustion engine would be developed until Nicholas Otto began his experiments 35 years later.


Bioenergy timeline edit
Future goals: 2030 - 2025 - 2022 - 2020 - 2017 - 2015 - 2013 - 2012 - 2011 - 2010 - 2009 - 2008

Past developments: 2008 - 2007 - 2006 - 2005 - 2004 - 2003 - 2002 - 2001 - 1996 - 1992 - 1981 - 1973 - 1947 - 1942 - 1940 - 1937 - 1935 - 1932 - 1921 - 1918 - 1906 - 1861 - 1860 - 1834 - 1826


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