Mains: GS3 - Science and Technology: Developments and their applications and effects in everyday life | Infrastructure - Energy
The recent global shift towards renewable energy sources, Biofuels have emerged as a promising alternative to fossil fuels, leaving the questions about its efficiency in net energy consumption.
| 
			 Generation  | 
			
			 Source  | 
			
			 Example  | 
		
| 
			 First generation (1G)  | 
			
			 Food sources - corn, sugarcane, and vegetable oils.  | 
			
			 Bioethanol, biodiesel, biogas  | 
		
| 
			 Second generation (2G)  | 
			
			 Non-food sources and the waste left from the food resources - Municipal solid waste, wood chips etc.,  | 
			
			 Cellulose ethanol, biodiesel  | 
		
| 
			 Third generation (3G)  | 
			
			 Algae - It consists of 40% of lipids which can be converted to biodiesel or synthetic petroleum.  | 
			
			 Butanol, Gasoline, Jet fuel  | 
		
| 
			 Fourth generation (4G)  | 
			
			 Produced from genetically engineered bio algae  | 
			

Humans directly manage around 0.5 % of global biomass, mostly as food crops.
Aerobic Respiration uses oxygen to fully extract energy from glucose, releasing CO₂ and water for cellular work. Anaerobic Respiration is faster but less efficient, producing energy-rich byproducts like ethanol and lactic acid.
Sugarcane ethanol reduces greenhouse gas emissions, but most biofuels do not.
| 
			 Biofuel-Ethanol  | 
		
			
  |