Biofuels: More Than Just Ethanol
ScienceDaily (Apr. 6, 2007)
As the United States looks to alternate fuel sources, ethanol has
become one of the front runners. Farmers have begun planting corn in the
hopes that its potential new use for corn will be a new income source.
What many don't realize, is the potential for other crops, besides corn,
to provide an alternate energy source to fossil fuels. Scientists studied
the greenhouse gas emissions and bioenergy of corn, hybrid poplar,
switchgrass, and other crops to determine the efficiency of various
biocrops in terms of energy consumption and energy output.
"Biofuels have a great potential to reduce our dependence on gasoline and
diesel fuel," says Parton. "We have performed a unique analysis of the net
biofuel greenhouse emissions from major biofuel cropping systems by
combining ecosystem computer model data with estimates of the amount of
fossil fuels used to grow and produce crop biofuels."
Adler, Del Grosso and Parton used the Daycent biogeochemistry model,
developed by Parton and Del Grosso to asses greenhouse gas fluxes and
biomass yields for corn, soybean, alfalfa, hybrid poplar, reed canary grass
and switchgrass.
The results of the study showed that when compared with gasoline and
diesel, ethanol and biodisel from corn and soybean rotations reduced
greenhouse gas emissions by almost 40 percent, reed canarygrass by 85
percent. Greenhouse gas emissions were reduced by about 115 percent for
switchgrass and hybrid poplar. Both switchgrass and hybrid poplar offset the
largest amounts of fossil fuels reduced emissions compared to other biofuel
crops and offset two times as much fossil fuels if they are used for
electricity generation via biomass gasification.
Study results showed that nitrogen (N2O) emission resulting
from production of the biofuel crops is the largest greenhouse gas source,
while displaced fossil is the largest greenhouse gas sink followed by soil
carbon sequestration.
This research shows that farmers will have a variety of biofuel crop
options available in the future and that these biofuel crop rotations will
have different environmental impacts. Detailed studies of the environmental
impact of biofuel crops similar to this study need to be done at the
regional and national levels before biofuel national policy decisions are
finalized.
The study, "Net greenhouse gas flux of bioenergy cropping systems using
Daycent", was completed by Paul Adler (United State Department of
Agriculture - USDA), Stephen Del Grosso (USDA and Colorado State
University), and William Parton (Colorado State University). Results appear
in the April issue of Ecological Applications.
Adapted from materials provided by
Ecological Society of America, via
EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS. |