I: Introduction to Bioenergy
1. Bioenergy Economy, Development and Food Security
2. Technology, Policy and Institutional Options
II: Technological Options
3. From Biomass to Biofuel
4. Interaction Between Biofuel and Agricultural Market
III: Sector/Market Integration, Contributions, Debates and
Challenges
5. Food-Fuel-Fiber Debate
6. Exploring the Potential for Riparian Marginal Lands to Enhance
Ecosystem Services and Bioenergy Production
7. Implication of Biofuel Production on Direct and Indirect Land
Use Change: Evidence from Brazil
8. Biofuels’ Contribution to Date to Greenhouse Gas Emission
Savings
IV: Analyzing Policy Options
9. Consequences of US and EU Biodiesel Policies on Global Food
Security
10. The Impact of Key US Biofuel Policies: An LCFS and RFS
Example
11. Assessing the Possibility of Price-Induced Yield Improvements
to Reduce Land-Use Change Emissions from Ethanol
V: Institutional Challenges and Option
12. Food Security, Biofuels and Sustainability
13. Advanced Biofuels: Supply Chain Management
14. The Role of Biofuels in a 2 Degrees Scenario
An in-depth examination of complex bioenergy markets from a policy perspective, including impacts on the global challenge of food security
Deepayan Debnath serves as senior research scientist at the Institute for Sustainability, Energy, and Environment at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, where his role is to conduct problem-oriented policy-relevant research in the broader field of bioenergy and biofuels and their implications for land use change, water and water quality, and greenhouse gas emissions. He has served as a senior research associate with Food and Agricultural Policy Research Institute at the University of Missouri-Columbia, where he developed models of agricultural and biofuel markets. He has worked at Organization for Economic Cooperation Development, Paris, France and at the Center for Agricultural and Rural Development at Iowa State University. Dr. Debnath has published extensively in high impact journals including Applied Energy, Energy, and Biomass & Bioenergy. He has also written an op-ed in The Economics Times, the world’s second most widely read business newspaper. He received Ph.D. in Agricultural Economics from Oklahoma State University with Leonard F. Miller Distinguished Graduate and Endowed International Agricultural Economics Fellowships. Suresh Chandra Babu is a senior fellow and a program leader at the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) in Washington, D.C and extraordinary professor of agricultural economics at the University of Pretoria, South Africa. Before joining IFPRI as a research fellow in 1992, Dr. Babu was a research economist at Cornell University. He has published 20 books and monographs and more than 100 peer-reviewed journal papers on food and agricultural policies in developing countries. He has conducted research on food and agricultural policy in developing countries for the past 30 years. He has held visiting or honorary professorships at American University, Washington, D.C.; Indira Gandhi National Open University, India; University of Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa; and Zhejiang University, China. He currently serves on the editorial boards of several leading academic journals including, Food Security, Agricultural Economics Research Review, African Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics, Journal of Sustainable Development, and Food and Nutrition Bulletin. Dr. Babu received his Ph.D. and M.S. in economics from Iowa State University, where he was awarded the Outstanding Young Alumnus Award for his services to global development.
"This book discusses the importance of bioenergy in the context of climate change, to the potentially positive environmental consequences. This book also discusses the world biofuel market by country, including a summary of the existing biofuel policies, role of investment opportunities, and rural development potential. This book is intended for students, scientific community, policy makers, and investors in the bioenergy industry." --IFIS Publishing
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