Biomass is renewable organic material that comes from plants and animals. Biomass can be burned directly for heat or converted to liquid and gaseous fuels through various processes.
Biomass is material produced by the growth of microorganisms, plants or animals. [1] Beyond this general definition, there are differences in how the term is used and applied depending on industry or subject-matter norms.
Biomass, the weight or total quantity of living organisms of a species (species biomass) or of all the species in a community (community biomass), commonly referred to a unit area or volume of habitat.
Biomass is any organic material that comes from plants or animals and can be used as a source of energy. Wood, crop residues, food waste, manure, and even algae all qualify.
Biomass is organic, meaning it is made of material that comes from living organisms, such as plants and animals. The most common biomass materials used for energy are plants, wood and waste.
Traditional biomass is wood, peat, or animal waste gathered and burned by people for cooking and heating. Traditional biomass is easy to store but has a low energy density and generates severe indoor air pollution with significant human health effects (almost 3 million deaths in 2023).
Wood and wood pellets, corn kernels, sugar cane, and other biomass materials that are harvested after a primary crop has been collected; if not used as biomass, these materials go to waste.
Biomass refers to renewable organic matter derived from plants and animals, containing stored chemical energy from the sun, generated through photosynthesis. It can be directly combusted for heat or transformed into liquid and gaseous fuels through various processes.