This video explains that biofuel is not widely used because it is expensive to produce and the manufacturing process can release more greenhouse emissions than burning fossil fuels.
Students will learn that scientists have started to make biofuel out of algae, cellulosic material, and used french fry grease. These biofuels require less land use conversion, but they still require a lot of energy.
This video presents a balanced view of the pros and cons of using biofuels.
The video description offers links to a variety of articles for further reading.
Additional Prerequisites
This video begins with an advertisement.
Differentiation
Chemistry classes could discuss the chemical reactions that occurwhen biomass is fermented, distilled, and dehydrated.
Social studies classes could do an advertisement campaign for cars that run on biofuel. Students could think about the advantages (environmental, economic, health, etc.) that biofuel cars might have over cars that use gasoline.
Other resources on this topic include this Project Look Sharp lesson on ethanol, this interactive map on biofuel infrastructure in the United States, and this scientific paper on how the aviation industry uses biofuels to greenwash their data.
Scientist Notes
Teaching Tips
Standards
Resource Type and Format
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All resources can be used for your educational purposes with proper attribution to the content provider.