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Biofuels, water resources and climate change: Solving the sustainability puzzle

May 31, 2009

Nebraska is now the second-largest producer of corn ethanol in the U.S. This is largely because of the state’s comparative advantages. For one, the state’s water resources enable a huge capacity for irrigation – Nebraska ranks second in irrigated crop acres, behind California. Nebraska is the third-largest corn producer in the U.S., with 75 percent of the crop irrigated. The state also produces nearly 5 million acres of soybeans, half of them irrigated. Both provide a large, dependable supply of feedstock for production of ethanol and other biofuels. Nebraska’s cattle feeding industry, with more than 4.5 million head on feed, utilizes ethanol byproducts such as distillers grains and enables biorefinery systems to attain high energy efficiency and profitability. This powerful nexus of agriculture, water and biofuels is highly vulnerable to changes in climate. The panelists represented a cross-section of these interests, including a manager of the state’s longest-operating ethanol plant, a farmer with extensive knowledge of ethanol production, the administrator of the state ethanol board and a project manager from a federal agency charged with tracking land use and its ties to biofuel production and climate change.

Publication Year 2009
Title Biofuels, water resources and climate change: Solving the sustainability puzzle
Authors Ralph Holzfaster, Duane Kristensen, Todd Sneller, Larry L. Tieszen, Kenneth Cassman
Publication Type Conference Paper
Publication Subtype Conference Paper
Index ID 70258669
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) Center
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