Citation Information

  • Title : Life-cycle assessment of biogas production under the environmental conditions of northern Germany: greenhouse gas balance
  • Source : JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCE
  • Publisher : CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
  • Volume : 152
  • Issue : S1
  • Pages : S172-S181
  • Year : 2014
  • DOI : 10.1017/S0021859613000683
  • ISBN : 0021-8596
  • Document Type : Journal Article
  • Language : English
  • Authors:
    • Gericke, D.
    • Dittert, K.
    • Senbayram, M.
    • Kage, H.
    • Sieling, K.
    • Svoboda, N.
    • Wienforth, B.
    • Taube, F.
    • Claus, S.
    • Pacholski, A.
    • Herrmann, A.
  • Climates:
  • Cropping Systems: Maize.
  • Countries: Germany.

Summary

A considerable expansion of biogas production in Germany, paralleled by a strong increase in maize acreage, has caused growing concern that greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions during crop substrate production might counteract the GHG emission saving potential. Based on a 2-year field trial, a GHG balance was conducted to evaluate the mitigation potential of regionally adapted cropping systems (continuous maize, maize-wheat-Italian ryegrass, perennial ryegrass ley), depending on nitrogen (N) level and N type. Considering the whole production chain, all cropping systems investigated contributed to the mitigation of GHG emissions (6.7-13.3 t CO2 eq/ha), with continuous maize revealing a carbon dioxide (CO2) saving potential of 55-61% compared with a fossil energy mix reference system. The current sustainability thresholds in terms of CO2 savings set by the EU Renewable Energy Directive could be met by all cropping systems (48-76%). Emissions from crop production had the largest impact on the mitigation effect (>= 50%) unless the biogas residue storage was not covered. The comparison of N fertilizer types showed less pronounced differences in GHG mitigation potential, whereas considerable site effects were observed.

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