Trees grassused generate
Andhra Pradesh ~ India ~ International ~ City ~ Entertainment ~ Business ~ Sports ~ Technology ~ Health ~ Features
Twitter ~ Facebook
Home / Technology News / 2010 / January 2010 / January 27, 2010
University of Warwick

Milky Ways fastest stars circle each other at 500 kms a second

Group talking therapy sessions can help ease back pain

High vitamin D levels reduce older adults risk of heart disease, diabetes

More on University of Warwick

University of Southampton

Older non-smokers gain most from smoking bans

Trees, grass can be used to generate renewable energy

Clever mums, not breast milk, make kids brainier

More on University of Southampton

Technology News

Inactivating Skp2 gene may help fight cancer
Scientists have discovered a novel way to force cancer cells to grow old and die rather than killing them off with toxic drugs. ANI

Key mechanism that guides cells to form heart tissue identified
Scientists have discovered a key cellular mechanism that guides embryonic heart tissue formation-a process which, if disrupted, can lead to a number of common congenital heart defects. ANI

Football replay used to fight Alzheimers
The conversational skills of a dementia sufferer, who only used to speak to reveal what he wanted for dinner or to say that he was going to bed, has returned after joining a group of men sharing their memories of great football games. ANI

Trees, grass can be used to generate renewable energy

A unique 1.1 million pound research project is investigating how coppiced trees and grass crops can be used both to generate renewable energy and to trap carbon in the soil over the long term.

Southampton (UK), Jan.27 : A unique 1.1 million pound research project is investigating how coppiced trees and grass crops can be used both to generate renewable energy and to trap carbon in the soil over the long term.

Led by Professor Gail Taylor, an expert on plants and the environment at the University of Southampton, a team of scientists across the UK will track the path of carbon, captured by plants and grasses through the process of photosynthesis, as it flows through the plant to the soil, which is inhabited by micro-organisms, before becoming locked into organic matter in the soil in which the plant is growing.

The team will also compare the process with that of arable food crops, such as wheat, and will test the idea that the 'bioenergy' crops are better at stimulating long-term retention of soil carbon.

Unlike existing food crops that are harvested after just a few months, trees and grasses can spend decades growing before they are harvested and release their trapped CO2, making the process more effective. "Scientists now believe that CO2 is an important greenhouse gas and a major cause of climate change, so it's vital we develop ways of removing it from the atmosphere," comments Professor Gail Taylor, of the University's School of Biological Sciences.

"Using trees and grasses is an efficient and cost-effective way of doing this, whilst providing a source of energy and off-setting CO2 emissions from equivalent fossil fuels. Our research has already shown that bioenergy crops could potentially reduce carbon emissions by several million tonnes in the UK over the next decade."

'Carbon opportunity' maps will be developed to identify the optimum areas of the countryside in which bioenergy crops could most effectively be grown. The crops could then be combusted alongside coal in power stations to produce electricity, producing fewer CO2 emissions than fossil fuels, or used in heating systems.

"In the future, bioenergy crops could be turned into liquid fuels such as bioethanol, avoiding the conflict between food and fuel when grain crops are used for these purposes," adds Professor Taylor.

The project is funded by the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) as part of the Living with Environmental Change research programme.

The research team comprises scientists from the University of Southampton, University of Warwick, Rothamsted Research Centre for Bioenergy and Climate Change, the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, the University of East Anglia, the University of Edinburgh and the Aberystwyth University.

ANI

Suggested pages for your additional reading





© 2000-2010 AndhraNews.net. All Rights Reserved and are of their respective owners.
Disclaimer, Terms of Service & Privacy Policy | Contact Us