Biofuel Carbon Footprint
Not As Big As Feared, New Analysis Finds

ScienceDaily (Jan. 19, 2009)
— Publications ranging from the journal Science to Time magazine
have blasted biofuels for significantly contributing to greenhouse
gas emissions, calling into question the environmental benefits of
making fuel from plant material. But a new analysis by Michigan
State University scientists says these dire predictions are based on
a set of assumptions that may not be correct.
"Greenhouse gas release from changes in land use – growing crops that
could be used for biofuels on previously unfarmed land – has been
identified as a negative contributor to the environmental profile of
biofuels," said Bruce Dale, MSU University Distinguished Professor of
chemical engineering and materials science. "Other analyses have
estimated that it would take from 100 to 1,000 years before biofuels
could overcome this 'carbon debt' and start providing greenhouse gas
benefits."
But as Dale and his co-authors point out in their research, published
in the journal Environmental Science & Technology, earlier analyses
didn't consider a number of variables that might influence the
greenhouse gas emissions associated with biofuels.
"Our analysis shows that crop management is a key factor in
estimating greenhouse gas emissions associated with land use change
associated with biofuels," Dale said. "Sustainable management practices,
such as no-till farming and planting cover crops, can reduce the time it
takes for biofuels to overcome the carbon debt to three years for
grassland conversion and 14 years for temperate zone forest conversion."
The discrepancies between the time it will take biofuels to offer
environmental benefits is due to the models used for each analysis, Dale
explained.
"There are no real data on what actually happens as demand increases
for land for biofuel production in one part of the world potentially
leads to land clearing, because it is impossible to track these
relationships in the real world," Dale said. "All the estimates are
based on economic relationships and theoretical models with various data
and assumptions. It's really one set of assumptions versus another set.
The other scientists believe their assumptions are more reasonable, and
we believe ours are more reasonable.
"How land is managed after it's converted to cropland is very
important," Dale continued. "The authors of the Science paper assumed
the worst-case scenario – plow tillage – which we don't think is
accurate. The actual use of sustainable management practices – no till,
reduced till and other approaches – is more than 50 percent and
increasing."
Other paper authors are Seungdo Kim, MSU visiting associate professor
of chemical engineering and materials science, and his son, Hyungtae
Kim, a student at Phillips Academy in Andover, Mass.
Dale and Seungdo Kim also are members of the Great Lakes Bioenergy
Research Center, a partnership between Michigan State and the University
of Wisconsin-Madison funded by the U.S. Department of Energy to conduct
basic research aimed at solving some of the most complex problems in
converting natural materials to energy.
Adapted from materials provided by
Michigan State University.
Journal Reference:
- Kim et al. Biofuels, Land Use Change, and Greenhouse Gas
Emissions: Some Unexplored Variables. Environmental
Science & Technology, 2009; 0 (0): 090106151313093 DOI:
10.1021/es802681k
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