Biofuels and Land Use Change: Applying Recent Evidence to Model Estimates

Biofuels impact on global land use has been a controversial yet important topic. Up until recently, there has not been enough biofuels to have caused major land use change, so the evidence from actual global land use data has been scant. However, in the past decade, there have been 72 million hectar...

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Main Authors: Wallace E. Tyner, Farzad Taheripour
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2013-01-01
Series:Applied Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/3/1/14
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spelling doaj-2d2d9b2bcd1a48ad853ebb019b0da2392020-11-25T01:10:59ZengMDPI AGApplied Sciences2076-34172013-01-0131143810.3390/app3010014Biofuels and Land Use Change: Applying Recent Evidence to Model EstimatesWallace E. TynerFarzad TaheripourBiofuels impact on global land use has been a controversial yet important topic. Up until recently, there has not been enough biofuels to have caused major land use change, so the evidence from actual global land use data has been scant. However, in the past decade, there have been 72 million hectares added to global crop cover. In this research we take advantage of this new data to calibrate the Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) model and parameters. We make two major changes. First, we calibrate the land transformation parameters (called constant elasticity of transformation, CET) to global regions so that the parameters better reflect the actual land cover change that has occurred. Second, we alter the land cover nesting structure. In the old GTAP model, cropland, pasture, and forest were all in the same nest suggesting, everything else being equal, that pasture or forest convert to cropland with equal ease and cost. However, we now take advantage of the fact that pasture converts to cropland at lower cost than forest. The paper provides the theoretical and empirical justification for these two model improvements. Then it re-evaluates the global land use impacts due to the USA ethanol program using the improved model tuned with actual observations. Finally, it shows that compared to the old model, the new model projects: (1) less expansion in global cropland due to ethanol expansion; (2) lower U.S. share in global cropland expansion; (3) and lower forest share in global cropland expansion.http://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/3/1/14general equilibriumbiofuelsland use changesland transformation elasticitynesting structure
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wallace E. Tyner
Farzad Taheripour
spellingShingle Wallace E. Tyner
Farzad Taheripour
Biofuels and Land Use Change: Applying Recent Evidence to Model Estimates
Applied Sciences
general equilibrium
biofuels
land use changes
land transformation elasticity
nesting structure
author_facet Wallace E. Tyner
Farzad Taheripour
author_sort Wallace E. Tyner
title Biofuels and Land Use Change: Applying Recent Evidence to Model Estimates
title_short Biofuels and Land Use Change: Applying Recent Evidence to Model Estimates
title_full Biofuels and Land Use Change: Applying Recent Evidence to Model Estimates
title_fullStr Biofuels and Land Use Change: Applying Recent Evidence to Model Estimates
title_full_unstemmed Biofuels and Land Use Change: Applying Recent Evidence to Model Estimates
title_sort biofuels and land use change: applying recent evidence to model estimates
publisher MDPI AG
series Applied Sciences
issn 2076-3417
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Biofuels impact on global land use has been a controversial yet important topic. Up until recently, there has not been enough biofuels to have caused major land use change, so the evidence from actual global land use data has been scant. However, in the past decade, there have been 72 million hectares added to global crop cover. In this research we take advantage of this new data to calibrate the Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) model and parameters. We make two major changes. First, we calibrate the land transformation parameters (called constant elasticity of transformation, CET) to global regions so that the parameters better reflect the actual land cover change that has occurred. Second, we alter the land cover nesting structure. In the old GTAP model, cropland, pasture, and forest were all in the same nest suggesting, everything else being equal, that pasture or forest convert to cropland with equal ease and cost. However, we now take advantage of the fact that pasture converts to cropland at lower cost than forest. The paper provides the theoretical and empirical justification for these two model improvements. Then it re-evaluates the global land use impacts due to the USA ethanol program using the improved model tuned with actual observations. Finally, it shows that compared to the old model, the new model projects: (1) less expansion in global cropland due to ethanol expansion; (2) lower U.S. share in global cropland expansion; (3) and lower forest share in global cropland expansion.
topic general equilibrium
biofuels
land use changes
land transformation elasticity
nesting structure
url http://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/3/1/14
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