Relevance: GS III (Environment, Renewable Energy, Agriculture); Source: The Hindu / Our World in Data
Context
A recent data analysis challenges the sustainability of growing crops for fuel (Biofuels). It argues that Solar Energy combined with Electric Vehicles (EVs) is a far superior land-use strategy compared to liquid biofuels, which consume vast agricultural tracts.
Key Findings: The Efficiency Gap
- The Biological Limit:
- Biofuels (Photosynthesis): Plants are biologically inefficient at converting sunlight into energy, capturing less than 1% of solar energy as biomass.
- Solar Panels (Photovoltaics): Modern commercial solar panels are highly efficient, converting 15% to 20% of sunlight directly into electricity.
- Land Footprint Data:
- The world currently uses ~32 million hectares (an area roughly the size of Germany) to grow biofuel crops.
- The Trade-off: If this same land were used for solar panels, it would generate 23 times more energy—enough to power the entire global transport sector while leaving 75% of the land free for rewilding or food production.
The “Food vs. Fuel” Conflict
- Biofuels: Require fertile agricultural land, competing directly with food production. This can drive up food prices (inflation) and threaten food security.
- Solar Energy: Does not strictly require fertile soil. Panels can be deployed on barren wastelands, rooftops, or canal tops, avoiding the conflict with agriculture.
UPSC Value Box
Concept / Scheme | Relevance for Prelims |
| Photosynthetic Efficiency | The percentage of light energy converted into chemical energy by plants. It is naturally low (<1%), making biofuels land-intensive. |
| Ethanol Blending Programme (EBP) | Government of India initiative to blend 20% Ethanol in petrol by 2025-26. While it reduces oil imports, the “land efficiency” debate critiques its long-term viability compared to EVs. |
| PM-KUSUM | A scheme promoting solar pumps and grid-connected solar power on farm lands, aligning with the logic of using agriculture land for energy generation without sacrificing crops. |
Q. With reference to the efficiency of energy production, consider the following statements:
- The photosynthetic efficiency of plants in converting sunlight to biomass is generally higher than the photovoltaic efficiency of commercial solar panels.
- The “Food vs. Fuel” debate is primarily associated with the production of First-Generation (1G) biofuels.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2
Correct Answer: (b)
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