4.5 Article

Renewable Energy from Biomass: an Overview of the Amazon Region

Journal

BIOENERGY RESEARCH
Volume 15, Issue 2, Pages 834-849

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12155-021-10308-x

Keywords

Renewable energy; Biomass waste; Thermochemical conversion; Isolated communities

Funding

  1. Federal University of Amazonas (Universiade Federal do Amazonas)
  2. Amazonas State Research Foundation (FAPEAM) [PAMEQ-062.01094/2019]
  3. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) [425522/2018-0]
  4. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior [001]

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Global economic and social development has led to an increased demand for energy, requiring technological advancements in the development of new safe, renewable, and sustainable energy sources. Biomass has become important due to its abundance and renewable nature. This study focuses on the availability and characteristics of unexplored Amazonian biomass sources for potential energy production, aiming to provide important information for renewable energy policies in the Amazon region.
Economic and social development around the world has contributed to increased energy demands, which have strained the energy supply chain. The global energy matrix depends on the exploitation of fossil fuels, which are responsible for disastrous social, political, and environmental impacts. This situation has led to the need for technological advances in the development of new sources of safe, renewable, and sustainable energy production. In recent years, biomass has gained importance among emerging sources of energy production due to its abundance and renewable nature. Therefore, this study reviews the availability and physicochemical properties of unexplored Amazonian biomass sources, which, in principle, neither compete with food production nor have disastrous environmental impacts on the Amazon forest. This review also focuses on thermochemical conversion methods for possible application of the biomasses under study to produce electricity for geographically isolated communities in the Amazon, whose electricity comes from generators powered by diesel oil, a nonrenewable and relatively expensive resource. The information provided in this article is important for the formulation of alternative and renewable energy government policies for the Amazon region, in addition to presenting a scientific study of the main biomass available in the region, including thermochemical characteristics for energy conversion.

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