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HJ0130 |
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LRB094 20463 DRH 58691 r |
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| HOUSE JOINT RESOLUTION
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| WHEREAS, America's increasing dependence on foreign oil |
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| has contributed to rising gasoline prices throughout Illinois
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| and the nation; numerous economic development and |
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| environmental
benefits result from the use of renewable fuels, |
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| including
strengthening our agricultural sector by creating |
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| new renewable fuels industry related
jobs, reducing our |
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| dependence on foreign oil, improving our
energy security, and |
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| reducing greenhouse gas emissions; and
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| WHEREAS, Replacing fossil fuels with renewable raw |
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| material significantly reduces the consumption of limited |
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| energy sources; the hybrid grass miscanthus requires little |
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| energy input for infrastructure, fertilizers and pesticides, |
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| and growing and processing;
use of non-renewable raw materials |
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| in miscanthus production and processing is limited to |
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| infrastructure and transport; miscanthus requires |
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| significantly less fertilizer and pesticide input than other |
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| energy crops;
miscanthus is a plant that thrives on less water |
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| than other crops; targeted below-ground irrigation via pipe |
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| systems increases yields; and
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| WHEREAS, Mining fossil fuels entails large-scale |
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| interference in the landscape, but establishing energy crops |
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| preserves rather than endangers landscapes; miscanthus has the |
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| best energy per space ratio of all energy crops; harvested |
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| miscanthus can be processed down to the last fibre, leaving no |
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| production waste; ashes from combustion can re-enter the cycle |
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| as fertilizer; and
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| WHEREAS, Renewable energy sources have a closed carbon |
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| cycle: the CO2 released while burning biomass is absorbed by |
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| the next crop growing; in contrast to fossil fuels like coal, |
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| petroleum, and natural gas, the atmosphere is not polluted by |
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| additional greenhouse gas and CO2 emissions; the danger of |
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HJ0130 |
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LRB094 20463 DRH 58691 r |
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| water pollution by excessive fertilization is low; compared to |
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| food production the pesticide input is extremely low, and |
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| miscanthus requires pesticide input only during the first and |
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| second year of establishment to keep out competing field |
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| plants; so far, no significant pests or diseases have affected |
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| miscanthus; and
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| WHEREAS, The energy yield from miscanthus is not high |
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| enough to make transportation over long distances economically |
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| viable, favoring localized conversion and use at the place of |
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| availability and the establishment of local infrastructure;
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| growing miscanthus has some advantages over conventional food |
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| agriculture; perennials offer more animal and plant kinds a |
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| habitat than a crop like corn could; the soil improves, and as |
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| miscanthus requires only a low fertilizer input, the danger of |
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| water pollution is low; miscanthus stabilizes soil threatened |
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| by erosion; fields planted with miscanthus produce annual |
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| yields over decades without harming the natural balance of soil |
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| and ground water; and
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| WHEREAS, Growing and converting miscanthus as an energy |
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| crop is highly cost-effective;
the conversion of biomass to |
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| biogenic solid fuels is labor-intensive and creates jobs; |
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| growing miscanthus offers farmers an additional foothold; new |
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| employment opportunities benefit economically weak areas; |
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| miscanthus can be harvested with existing machinery; biomass |
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| fuels are easy to store, even for longer periods of time, which |
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| ensures year-round availability; up-to-date conversion |
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| facilities pose no health risks; appropriate handling will |
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| prevent the development of hazardous fungus spores or toxins |
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| that is possible in biofuel storage; and
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| WHEREAS, Dry miscanthus stems can be used as a solid fuel; |
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| the perennial grass grows from an underground stem-like organ |
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| called a rhizome; miscanthus, a crop native to Asia and a |
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| relative of sugarcane, drops its leaves in the winter, leaving |
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HJ0130 |
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LRB094 20463 DRH 58691 r |
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| behind tall bamboo-like stems that can be harvested in early |
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| spring and burned for fuel; grasses such as miscanthus are very |
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| clean fuels; nutrients such as nitrogen are transferred to the |
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| rhizome and are saved until the next growing season;
burning |
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| miscanthus produces only as much carbon dioxide as it removes |
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| from the air as it grows, that balance means there is no net |
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| effect on atmospheric carbon dioxide levels, which is not the |
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| case with fossil fuels; and
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| WHEREAS, Miscanthus also is a very efficient fuel, because |
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| the energy ratio of input to output is less than 0.2; in |
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| contrast, the ratios exceed 0.8 for ethanol and biodiesel from |
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| canola, which are other plant-derived energy sources;
besides |
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| being a clean, efficient, and renewable fuel source, miscanthus |
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| also is remarkably easy to grow; upon reaching maturity, |
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| miscanthus has few needs, as it outgrows weeds, requires little |
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| water and minimal fertilizer, and thrives in untilled fields; |
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| in untilled fields, various wildlife species make their homes |
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| in the plant's leafy canopy and in the surrounding undisturbed |
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| soil; Illinois researchers have found that miscanthus grown in |
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| the State has greater crop yields than in Europe, where it has |
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| been used commercially for years; full-grown plants produce |
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| 10-30 tons per acre dry weight each year; and
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| WHEREAS, The Illinois miscanthus crop began three years |
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| ago, when 400 miscanthus rhizomes were planted at the |
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| University of Illinois, and the three 33-by-33 feet miscanthus |
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| plots are considered mature; nine different fields across the |
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| State are being used to help estimate miscanthus productivity; |
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| plots in Champaign and Christian counties each have more than 2 |
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| acres of miscanthus, and DeKalb, Pike, Pope, Wayne, Fayette, |
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| and Mason counties have smaller plots; plots in Champaign |
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| County have shown the greatest yearly yields, according to the |
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| 2004 progress report to the Illinois Council on Food and |
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| Agricultural Research, which funded the experiments; and
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HJ0130 |
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LRB094 20463 DRH 58691 r |
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| WHEREAS, The next step is to demonstrate how miscanthus |
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| goes from a plant to a power source; existing U.S. power plants |
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| could be modified to use miscanthus for fuel, as in Europe; |
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| therefore, be it
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| RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE |
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| NINETY-FOURTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, THE |
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| SENATE CONCURRING HEREIN, that we urge the United States |
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| Department of Agriculture and the Illinois Department of |
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| Agriculture to fund research and make grants available to |
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| determine the efficacy of using miscanthus as a power source; |
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| and be it further
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| RESOLVED, That suitable copies of this resolution be |
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| delivered to the United States Secretary of Agriculture and to |
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| the Illinois Director of Agriculture.
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