by lorenzo » Fri 25 Jan 2008, 17:19:37
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Permanently_Baffled', 'I') am confused.
Going back to Aarons point, can you clarify something for me please Lorenzo?

Was the energy profit calculated on the return of 5,000 barrels per acre or 200,000 barrels per acre?
In other words if they put x barrels of energy inputs in and they calculated the profit on getting 200,000 back (when they in fact only got 5,000), then surely that means that they DID NOT get a 540% return in energy invested?
Or was the 5000 barrels produced at a 540% energy proft? (ie it took less than a 1000 barrels of energy equivelant to produce?)
Please someone clarify

I understand you are confused by Aaron's message.
But since Aaron has no point, it's useless to respond to a question based on Aaron's non-point.
There is no mention of "barrels per acre" in the study at all.
Aaron referred to a blogger who corrected a mistake made by a BBC journalist who reported about the study.
The BBC journalist tried to convert the efficiency of switchgrass as demonstrated in the study, into actual fuel yields expressed in barrels per acre.
The study has nothing to do with BBC mistakes or with bloggers who report these mistakes or with Peak Oil website owners who report about bloggers reporting BBC mistakes. Now what's the value of responding to your question? Zero.
To get rid of your confusion, the best thing you can do is read the study yourself.
The report is open access. Here you go:
http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abstract/0704767105v1
So to answer your question: the scientists who wrote the study did not base their calculations of the NEV, NEY and BER on Aaron's reporting of a blogger reporting a mistake of a BBC journalist reporting on the study.
Scientists don't do that.
