Environmentally sustainable production of food, feed and fuel from natural resources in the tropics

Trop Anim Health Prod. 2009 Aug;41(6):873-82. doi: 10.1007/s11250-008-9265-8. Epub 2008 Nov 16.

Abstract

Responding to the challenges posed by global warming, peak oil and biofuels will require a paradigm shift in the practice of agriculture and in the role of live stock within the farming system. Farming systems should aim at maximizing plant biomass production from locally available diversified resources, processing of the biomass on farm to provide food, feed and energy and recycling of all waste materials. The approach that is the subject of this paper is that the generation of electricity can be a by-product of food/feed production. The concept is the fractionation of biomass into inedible cell wall material that can be converted to an inflammable gas by gasification, the gas in turn being the source of fuel for internal combustion engines driving electrical generators. The cell contents and related structures such as tree leaves are used as human food or animal feed. As well as providing food and feed the model is highly appropriate for decentralized small scale production of electricity in rural areas. It also offers opportunities for sequestration of carbon in the form of biochar the solid residue remaining after gasification of the biomass.

MeSH terms

  • Agriculture / methods*
  • Biomass
  • Carbon / chemistry
  • Conservation of Natural Resources / methods*
  • Energy-Generating Resources*
  • Ethanol / chemistry
  • Greenhouse Effect*
  • Tropical Climate

Substances

  • Ethanol
  • Carbon