HOW MUCH OF SYNTHETIC FUELS COULD WE REPLACE WITH BIOFUELS?
HOW MUCH OF SYNTHETIC FUELS COULD WE REPLACE WITH BIOFUELS? We are now hearing more frequently about shortages in synthetic fuels—and that should worry us. But perhaps the bigger question is this: why are we still so dependent on imported fuels when we are sitting on a goldmine of local biofuel resources? Let’s start with the obvious. The Philippines is not poor in energy resources—we are simply underutilizing what we already have. Seaweeds, water hyacinths, coconut oil, nipa palms, and sugarcane are not just agricultural or environmental assets. They are potential energy lifelines. If properly harnessed, these could significantly offset our dependence on fossil fuels. The real issue is not availability—it is scale, coordination, and political will. Take sugarcane, for example. It produces bioethanol, a renewable, high-octane fuel that is already blended into gasoline as E10. The science is straightforward: extract the juice, ferment it, distill it, and dehydrate it into near-pure etha...