Citation Information

  • Title : The potential for short-rotation woody crops to reduce U.S. CO2 emissions
  • Source : Climatic Change
  • Publisher : Springer
  • Volume : 22
  • Issue : 3
  • Pages : 223-238
  • Year : 1992
  • DOI : 10.1007/BF001430
  • ISBN : 10.1007/BF00143029
  • Document Type : Journal Article
  • Language : English
  • Authors:
    • Turhollow, A. F.
    • Wright, L. L.
    • Graham, R. L.
  • Climates:
  • Cropping Systems: Crop-pasture rotations.
  • Countries: USA.

Summary

Short-rotation woody crops (SRWC) could potentially displace fossil fuels and thus mitigate CO 2 buildup in the atmosphere. To determine how much fossil fuel SRWC might displace in the United States and what the associated fossil carbon savings might be, a series of assumptions must be made. These assumptions concern the net SRWC biomass yields per hectare (after losses); the amount of suitable land dedicated to SRWC production; wood conversion efficiencies to electricity or liquid fuels; the energy substitution properties of various fuels; and the amount of fossil fuel used in growing, harvesting, transporting, and converting SRWC biomass. Assuming the current climate, present production, and conversion technologies and considering a conservative estimate of the U.S. land base available for SRWC (14 x 106 ha), we calculate that SRWC energy could displace 33.2 to 73.1 x 106 Mg of fossil carbon releases, 3-6% of the current annual U.S. emissions. The carbon mitigation potential per unit of land is larger with the substitution of SRWC for coal-based electricity production than for the substitution of SRWC-derived ethanol for gasoline. Assuming current climate, predicted conversion technology advancements, an optimistic estimate of the U.S. land base available for SRWC (28 x 106 ha), and an optimistic average estimate of net SRWC yields (22.4 dry Mg/ha), we calculate that SRWC energy could displace 148 to 242 x 106 Mg of annual fossil fuel carbon releases. Under this scenario, the carbon mitigation potential of SRWC-based electricity production would be equivalent to about 4.4% of current global fossil fuel emissions and 20% of current U.S. fossil fuel emissions.

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