Boosting the efficiency of bio-fuel production from 30% to 100%...plausable?

In this article, they make a claim:

I realize that the method is theoretical so far (anyone know anything about this process of reclaiming lost CO2? Is it plausable in itself?), but could the entire US transportational energy needs be met by the 1.3 billion tons of biomass?

For a bonus, could someone put that figure into perspective? COULD the US produce 1.3 billion tons of biomass solely for transportation? What effect would this figure have on our current food production?

-XT

Agrawal appears to be talking about a cheap way of making hydrogen gas:

From his Page at Purdue:

Once you have the hydrogen, you can make methane out of CO[sub]2[/sub], if you have the hydrogen.

The article looks to me like a typical sciencey piece by an overexitable journalist.

Using better methods so that you can supply 100% of the energy needs of the U.S. transportation system instead of 30% of the energy needs is not “boosting the efficiency of bio-fuel production from 30% to 100%.” The efficiency of energy use is a technical term, and it’s utterly impossible to get 100% efficiency. That would violate various physical laws. Be more careful in your thread titles.

Well an increase from 10% to 20% efficent would be a 100% increase in efficency.

But the wording is, “boosting efficiency from 30% to 100%”. Not ‘boosting it by 100%’. The former is impossible.

lol…ok, so my OP title is incorrect. Maybe a friendly OP will come along to fix it. Just for the record, I’m aware of the mistake and didn’t mean it the way it came out. Sheesh guys. :stuck_out_tongue:

-XT