2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.apenergy.2014.01.023
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Dynamic analysis of feasibility in ethanol supply chain for biofuel production in Mexico

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Cited by 56 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…Still staying in Northern America, Rendon-Sagardi et al (2014) focus on the dynamic analysis of feasibility in the ethanol supply chain for biofuel production in Mexico. This research includes an analysis of the main variables of the ethanol supply chain, as well as the feasibility for its use and the development of an SD model based on an idea suggested by the Secretariat of Energy in Mexico.…”
Section: Renewablementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Still staying in Northern America, Rendon-Sagardi et al (2014) focus on the dynamic analysis of feasibility in the ethanol supply chain for biofuel production in Mexico. This research includes an analysis of the main variables of the ethanol supply chain, as well as the feasibility for its use and the development of an SD model based on an idea suggested by the Secretariat of Energy in Mexico.…”
Section: Renewablementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In opposite to the majority of the papers which are focusing on biofuels issues related to specific countries [23][24][25][26][27], this paper provides a comparison of different regions. The specific goal is to investigate the market prospects of biofuels in different regions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Guy et al [81] discussed the importance of the interactions between technical, socio-technical and institutions for policy processes based on securitization theory. Rendon-Sagardi et al [82] used the system dynamics modeling approach to evaluate the feasibility of ethanol and biofuel supply chains in Mexico. Månsson et al [83] analyzed Sweden's energy supply chain from an energy security perspective and demonstrated that replacing imports of crude oil with imports of biofuels or of feedstock has not reduced the exposure to upstream market risk but has shifted it from the international oil market to the international agricultural market.…”
Section: Environmental Riskmentioning
confidence: 99%