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Backyard Revolution
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Backyard Revolution
by Alisa lisa Sophia (2019-05-28)
When you make ethanol by starting with corn Backyard Revolution Review you are forced to turn starches into sugars. Then you can turn the sugars into ethanol. In other words it takes more energy and more processing to turn corn into ethanol than to turn sugar cane into ethanol. In addition, we and our animals eat corn. If we continue to make ethanol from corn we will also be keeping food prices high in the US and around the world. Imagine if we were inadvertently the cause of world wide food riots. Solar energy is a much better long term alternative solution to our energy needs. Breakthroughs in efficiency and manufacturing will still be necessary but solar has the long term benefit of being truly renewable and sustainable. You don't have to worry about the year to year effects of crop yields for instance. The efficiency of turning sunlight into electricity is not yet where we need it to be to make solar a mainstay of our energy infrastructure. And some of the manufacturing process use harmful chemicals. Nevertheless, I am convinced that our current level of technology research will eventually solve these problems. There are some who tout wind energy as the wave of the future but a close examination shows that in order to bring the electricity generated from wind energy from where it is created to where it will be used requires the building of an immense transmission line infrastructure with it's attendant right of way problems. It appears that a lot of government investment and spending is required to make wind energy more of a reality an it's still not clear that you could generate much more that 5% of the energy we need as a nation via wind energy. I have serious doubts about the notion that we could run our country off salad dressing and hamburger grease. Yes it's nice that some cars can be modified to run off the used cooking grease. But I am fairly convinced that we are not about to eat our way out of our energy woes.
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