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New research shows corn ethanol GHG emissions 46% lower than gasoline : Biofuels Digest
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New study highlights benefits of ethanol industry | Biofuels International Magazine
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Study finds GHG emissions from corn ethanol now 46% lower than gasoline
A new study by a team from Environmental Health & Engineering (EH&E) has found that greenhouse gas emissions from corn ethanol are 46% lower than those from gasoline a decrease in emissions from the estimated 39% done by previous modeling.
The report, led by David MacIntosh, Chief Science Officer of Environmental Health & Engineering, Inc. (EH&E) and Adjunct Professor of Environmental Health at Harvard’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health, and consulted by dozens of experts in academia, updates ethanol’s carbon intensity score to reflect how continuous improvements in technology and practices have driven further emissions reductions in the lifecycle of ethanol and will lead to net zero renewable fuel in the future.
Corn Ethanol Emits 46% Less Greenhouse Gases Than Gasoline
Finding Differs from Conventional Wisdom Suggesting Only 20%
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NEWTON, Mass., Jan. 26, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Research from
Environmental Health & Engineering, Inc.(EH&E) shows that greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions for ethanol, a biofuel made from corn, are 46% lower than gasoline. Conventional wisdom based on a prior analysis done by EPA had pegged the difference to only 20%. EH&E s topical review of the latest science shows that this renewable biofuel is less carbon intensive and more climate-favorable than previously thought. This research provides an up-to-date accounting of corn starch ethanol s GHG profile in comparison to that of gasoline refined from crude oil, says EH&E Chief Science Officer
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