A new report says that the world’s biofuels market is prepared to grow by an average of 12.3 percent a year between 2007 and 2017.
This post from Biofuels International says that a report by industry research specialists RNCOS shows ethanol and biodiesel production worldwide will grow at 6.04 percent and 5 percent a year respectively between 2008 and 2019:
In the near future, the increase in biofuel production will largely be driven by corn-produced ethanol from Brazil and the US, which pledged to nearly double ethanol production by 2012. The European Community recently announced that biofuel will meet 10% of its transportation fuel needs by 2020.
As second-generation biofuels such as organic waste come online in the next few years, both the cost and the environmental footprint of biofuels will drop. The production of biofuels from waste has a negative carbon footprint relative to sending the waste to landfill, since the methane produced from the decay of organic matter is a more powerful greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide.
The RNCOS report says that while the U.S. and Brazil made up nearly 80 percent of the world’s ethanol production last year, China, India and Southeast Asia are set for enormous growth over the next decade.


The U.S. wind energy sector has added 4,000 megawatts (MW) of capacity in the first six months of this year, outpacing the first half of 2008’s 2,900 MW.
According to the American Lung Association of the Upper Midwest, thousands of flexible fuel and biodiesel vehicle drivers have received educational mailings, viewed newspaper ads, and attended promotional discount events in July. Yet, the summer is not over! Supporters of ethanol and biodiesel are holding additional promotions in the weeks ahead.
August 1: 9 am – 1 pm
Why are so many people in denial that the price of gas will rise again, and continue to go up? Why are businesses and towns who are already drowning under the weight of higher energy prices not doing more to wean themselves off of oil? Could the high cost of oil take out behemoth companies like Wal-Mart? The answer is yes, according to Christopher Steiner in his new book, 

The two offshore wind leases, for sites in the Gulf of Mexico, are the sixth and seventh leases for offshore wind farms signed by the General Land Office since 2005, the land office said in a statement. The third site is on state land in the Texas panhandle.
A North Carolina city that had tried using biodiesel in the past is giving the green fuel another chance.
It’s harvest time somewhere and it’s in Texas. Today, the first cob collection of 2009 is complete and
Oregon Governor Ted Kulongoski signed HB 3497 to amend Oregon’s ethanol mandate by allowing service stations to sell premium, higher-octane gasoline without ethanol. House Republican Leader Bruce Hanna and Rep. Tim Freeman introduced introduced the bill.