But criticism about food vs. fuel and scalability abounded and, by 2008, cellulosic ethanol became known as a so-called second-generation-biofuel and, maybe, the answer to our oil-addicted prayers.
Biofuels - either bioethanol or biodiesel - are made from agricultural produce or organic waste and are used in traditional ...
New NIST research results are a step toward more efficient production of cellulosic ethanol, a biofuel that can be made from corn-harvest leftovers -- stalks, husks, leaves -- and the inedible ...
Industry trade magazine Wards Auto World takes a look at next generation biofuels in their new issue. These new biofuels are those derived from cellulosic feed-stocks like wood and grasses as ...
This image relates to article that appeared in the ... was titled "Carbon-Negative Biofuels from Low-Input High-Diversity Grassland Biomass." ...