The defining challenge of energy research in the 21st century is the development and deployment of technologies for large-scale reconfiguration of global energy infrastructure. Modern society is built upon a concentrated yet finite reservoir of diverse hydrocarbons formed through the photosynthetic transformation of several hundred million years of solar energy. In human history, the fossil energy era will be short lived and never repeated. Although the timing of peak oil is extensively debated, it is an eventuality. It is, therefore, imperative that projections for both when it will occur and the degree to which supply will fall short of demand be taken into serious consideration, especially in the sectors of energy technology development, political and economic decision making, and societal energy usage. The requirement for renewable energy systems is no longer a point for discussion, and swift advances on many fronts are vital to counteract current and impending crises in both energy and the environment.
Revised: July 30, 2012 |
Published: March 1, 2012
Citation
Work V.H., A.S. Beliaev, A. Konopka, and M.C. Posewitz. 2012.Microbial hydrocarbons: back to the future.Biofuels 3, no. 2:103-105.PNNL-SA-86542.doi:10.4155/bfs.12.3