jatropha biofuel

Should the American farmers thinking about growing (Jatropha Curcas) Jatropha Fruit for Biofuel.?
Biodiesel company’s are buying hundred of thousand of hectares of land and thinking about growing Jatropha fruit and using as Biofule or Biodiesel.
http://www.ecoworld.com/home/articles2.cfm?tid=356
I read in Scientific American that company’s are buying land and planting has began in Swaziland, Zambia and South Africa and they are growing for the seed now to get enough. They say there is no trade off between food and fuel. They say the rain forest are unlikely to be threaten this stuff can grow in harsh conditions.
But what I think about maybe it might be of some use if it also grown in American after all we use corn as biofuel (ethanol) maybe this might be grown in place of corn for what we already use as ethanol.
I forgot to put the” be” in there.
I meant to say:
Should the American farmers be thinking about growing (Jatropha Curcas) Jatropha Fruit for Biofuel.?
They should do all they can.
Currently the oil from Jatropha curcas seeds can be used for making biodiesel fuel in India, and is being promoted as an easily grown biofuel crop in hundreds of projects throughout India and the third world. The rail line between Mumbai and Delhi is planted with Jatropha and the train itself runs on 15-20% biodiesel.
The plant can grow in wastelands, and it yields more than four times as much fuel per hectare as soybean, and more than ten times that of corn. A hectare of jatropha produces 1,892 liters of fuel (about 6.5 barrels per acre). Also Jatropha is a one-stage conversion to biodiesel
Jatropha curcas, also called physic nut, is used to produce the non-edible Jatropha oil, for making candles and soap, and as a feedstock for the production of biodiesel. The cakes remaining after the oil is pressed can be used as feed in digesters and gasifiers to produce biogas for cooking and in engines, or the cakes can be used for fertilizing, and sometimes even as animal fodder; alternatively, the entire seed (with oil) can be used in digesters to produce biogas. Large plantings and nurseries of this tree have been undertaken in India by numerous research institutions, and by women’s Self Help Groups, who use a system of microcredit to ease poverty among the nation’s semi-literate population of women. Extracts from this species have also been shown to have anti-tumor activity. The seeds can be used as a remedy for constipation, wounds can be dressed with the sap, and the leaves can be boiled to obtain a malaria and fever remedy.
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Jatropha Curcas As a Premier Biofuel: Cost, Growing and Management (Energy Science, Engineering and Technology)
$128.72 Among the oil-bearing tree species, Jatropha curcas is currently becoming an interesting crop for the production of biodiesel due to some of its interesting properties including resistance to drought, possibility to grow well and quickly on marginal lands without much fertiliser inputs and the need for only moderate rainfall. In this book, a series of biotechnological methodologies is reported, su... |
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Biofuel Crops: Cultivation and Management (Jatropha, Sweet Sorghum and Sugarbeet)
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