Biofuels: network analysis of the literature reveals key environmental and economic unknowns

Ridley, CE; Clark, CM; Leduc, SD; Bierwagen, BG; Lin, BB; Mehl, A; Tobias, DA

HERO ID

1850169

Reference Type

Journal Article

Subtype

Review

Year

2012

Language

English

PMID

22229835

HERO ID 1850169
Material Type Review
In Press No
Year 2012
Title Biofuels: network analysis of the literature reveals key environmental and economic unknowns
Authors Ridley, CE; Clark, CM; Leduc, SD; Bierwagen, BG; Lin, BB; Mehl, A; Tobias, DA
Journal Environmental Science & Technology
Volume 46
Issue 3
Page Numbers 1309-1315
Abstract Despite rapid growth in biofuel production worldwide, it is uncertain whether decision-makers possess sufficient information to fully evaluate the impacts of the industry and avoid unintended consequences. Doing so requires rigorous peer-reviewed data and analyses across the entire range of direct and indirect effects. To assess the coverage of scientific research, we analyzed over 1600 peer-reviewed articles published between 2000 and 2009 that addressed 23 biofuels-related topics within four thematic areas: environment and human well-being, economics, technology, and geography. Greenhouse gases, fuel production, and feedstock production were well-represented in the literature, while trade, biodiversity, and human health were not. Gaps were especially striking across topics in the Southern Hemisphere, where the greatest potential socio-economic benefits, as well as environmental damages, may co-occur. There was strong asymmetry in the connectedness of research topics; greenhouse gases articles were twice as often connected to other topics as biodiversity articles. This could undermine the ability of scientific and economic analyses to adequately evaluate impacts and avoid significant unintended consequences. At the least, our review suggests caution in this developing industry and the need to pursue more interdisciplinary research to assess complex trade-offs and feedbacks inherent to an industry with wide-reaching potential impacts.
Doi 10.1021/es2023253
Pmid 22229835
Wosid WOS:000299864400007
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English