Novel Miscanthus Germplasm-Based Value Chains: A Life Cycle Assessment

In recent years, considerable progress has been made in miscanthus research: improvement of management practices, breeding of new genotypes, especially for marginal conditions, and development of novel utilization options. The purpose of the current study was a holistic analysis of the environmental...

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Main Authors: Moritz Wagner, Andreas Kiesel, Astley Hastings, Yasir Iqbal, Iris Lewandowski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2017-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Plant Science
Subjects:
LCA
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpls.2017.00990/full
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spelling doaj-2c2bbb05ab9f40389a6e10f1ac6373da2020-11-24T23:52:07ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Plant Science1664-462X2017-06-01810.3389/fpls.2017.00990244556Novel Miscanthus Germplasm-Based Value Chains: A Life Cycle AssessmentMoritz Wagner0Andreas Kiesel1Astley Hastings2Yasir Iqbal3Iris Lewandowski4Department Biobased Products and Energy Crops, Institute of Crop Science, University of HohenheimStuttgart, GermanyDepartment Biobased Products and Energy Crops, Institute of Crop Science, University of HohenheimStuttgart, GermanyThe School of Biological Sciences, University of AberdeenAberdeen, United KingdomDepartment Biobased Products and Energy Crops, Institute of Crop Science, University of HohenheimStuttgart, GermanyDepartment Biobased Products and Energy Crops, Institute of Crop Science, University of HohenheimStuttgart, GermanyIn recent years, considerable progress has been made in miscanthus research: improvement of management practices, breeding of new genotypes, especially for marginal conditions, and development of novel utilization options. The purpose of the current study was a holistic analysis of the environmental performance of such novel miscanthus-based value chains. In addition, the relevance of the analyzed environmental impact categories was assessed. A Life Cycle Assessment was conducted to analyse the environmental performance of the miscanthus-based value chains in 18 impact categories. In order to include the substitution of a reference product, a system expansion approach was used. In addition, a normalization step was applied. This allowed the relevance of these impact categories to be evaluated for each utilization pathway. The miscanthus was cultivated on six sites in Europe (Aberystwyth, Adana, Moscow, Potash, Stuttgart and Wageningen) and the biomass was utilized in the following six pathways: (1) small-scale combustion (heat)—chips; (2) small-scale combustion (heat)—pellets; (3) large-scale combustion (CHP)—biomass baled for transport and storage; (4) large-scale combustion (CHP)—pellets; (5) medium-scale biogas plant—ensiled miscanthus biomass; and (6) large-scale production of insulation material. Thus, in total, the environmental performance of 36 site × pathway combinations was assessed. The comparatively high normalized results of human toxicity, marine, and freshwater ecotoxicity, and freshwater eutrophication indicate the relevance of these impact categories in the assessment of miscanthus-based value chains. Differences between the six sites can almost entirely be attributed to variations in biomass yield. However, the environmental performance of the utilization pathways analyzed varied widely. The largest differences were shown for freshwater and marine ecotoxicity, and freshwater eutrophication. The production of insulation material had the lowest impact on the environment, with net benefits in all impact categories expect three (marine eutrophication, human toxicity, agricultural land occupation). This performance can be explained by the multiple use of the biomass, first as material and subsequently as an energy carrier, and by the substitution of an emission-intensive reference product. The results of this study emphasize the importance of assessing all environmental impacts when selecting appropriate utilization pathways.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpls.2017.00990/fullmiscanthusbiobased value chainsLCAenvironmental performancenormalizationimpact categories
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Moritz Wagner
Andreas Kiesel
Astley Hastings
Yasir Iqbal
Iris Lewandowski
spellingShingle Moritz Wagner
Andreas Kiesel
Astley Hastings
Yasir Iqbal
Iris Lewandowski
Novel Miscanthus Germplasm-Based Value Chains: A Life Cycle Assessment
Frontiers in Plant Science
miscanthus
biobased value chains
LCA
environmental performance
normalization
impact categories
author_facet Moritz Wagner
Andreas Kiesel
Astley Hastings
Yasir Iqbal
Iris Lewandowski
author_sort Moritz Wagner
title Novel Miscanthus Germplasm-Based Value Chains: A Life Cycle Assessment
title_short Novel Miscanthus Germplasm-Based Value Chains: A Life Cycle Assessment
title_full Novel Miscanthus Germplasm-Based Value Chains: A Life Cycle Assessment
title_fullStr Novel Miscanthus Germplasm-Based Value Chains: A Life Cycle Assessment
title_full_unstemmed Novel Miscanthus Germplasm-Based Value Chains: A Life Cycle Assessment
title_sort novel miscanthus germplasm-based value chains: a life cycle assessment
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Plant Science
issn 1664-462X
publishDate 2017-06-01
description In recent years, considerable progress has been made in miscanthus research: improvement of management practices, breeding of new genotypes, especially for marginal conditions, and development of novel utilization options. The purpose of the current study was a holistic analysis of the environmental performance of such novel miscanthus-based value chains. In addition, the relevance of the analyzed environmental impact categories was assessed. A Life Cycle Assessment was conducted to analyse the environmental performance of the miscanthus-based value chains in 18 impact categories. In order to include the substitution of a reference product, a system expansion approach was used. In addition, a normalization step was applied. This allowed the relevance of these impact categories to be evaluated for each utilization pathway. The miscanthus was cultivated on six sites in Europe (Aberystwyth, Adana, Moscow, Potash, Stuttgart and Wageningen) and the biomass was utilized in the following six pathways: (1) small-scale combustion (heat)—chips; (2) small-scale combustion (heat)—pellets; (3) large-scale combustion (CHP)—biomass baled for transport and storage; (4) large-scale combustion (CHP)—pellets; (5) medium-scale biogas plant—ensiled miscanthus biomass; and (6) large-scale production of insulation material. Thus, in total, the environmental performance of 36 site × pathway combinations was assessed. The comparatively high normalized results of human toxicity, marine, and freshwater ecotoxicity, and freshwater eutrophication indicate the relevance of these impact categories in the assessment of miscanthus-based value chains. Differences between the six sites can almost entirely be attributed to variations in biomass yield. However, the environmental performance of the utilization pathways analyzed varied widely. The largest differences were shown for freshwater and marine ecotoxicity, and freshwater eutrophication. The production of insulation material had the lowest impact on the environment, with net benefits in all impact categories expect three (marine eutrophication, human toxicity, agricultural land occupation). This performance can be explained by the multiple use of the biomass, first as material and subsequently as an energy carrier, and by the substitution of an emission-intensive reference product. The results of this study emphasize the importance of assessing all environmental impacts when selecting appropriate utilization pathways.
topic miscanthus
biobased value chains
LCA
environmental performance
normalization
impact categories
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpls.2017.00990/full
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AT yasiriqbal novelmiscanthusgermplasmbasedvaluechainsalifecycleassessment
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