Life Cycle Assessment and Environmental Valuation of Biochar Production: Two Case Studies in Belgium
It is unclear whether the production of biochar is economically feasible. As a consequence, firms do not often invest in biochar production plants. However, biochar production and application might be desirable from a societal perspective as it might entail net environmental benefits. Hence, the aim...
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doaj-927d43dfb74d4640af8967d8129248902020-11-25T01:14:52ZengMDPI AGEnergies1996-10732019-06-011211216610.3390/en12112166en12112166Life Cycle Assessment and Environmental Valuation of Biochar Production: Two Case Studies in BelgiumSara Rajabi Hamedani0Tom Kuppens1Robert Malina2Enrico Bocci3Andrea Colantoni4Mauro Villarini5Department of Agriculture and Forest Sciences, Tuscia University, 01100 Viterbo, ItalyEnvironmental Economics Research Group, Centre for Environmental Sciences (CMK), Hasselt University, 3590 Diepenbeek, BelgiumEnvironmental Economics Research Group, Centre for Environmental Sciences (CMK), Hasselt University, 3590 Diepenbeek, BelgiumDepartment of Innovation and Information Engineering, Marconi University, 00193 Rome, ItalyDepartment of Agriculture and Forest Sciences, Tuscia University, 01100 Viterbo, ItalyDepartment of Agriculture and Forest Sciences, Tuscia University, 01100 Viterbo, ItalyIt is unclear whether the production of biochar is economically feasible. As a consequence, firms do not often invest in biochar production plants. However, biochar production and application might be desirable from a societal perspective as it might entail net environmental benefits. Hence, the aim of this work has been to assess and monetize the environmental impacts of biochar production systems so that the environmental aspects can be integrated with the economic and social ones later on to quantify the total return for society. Therefore, a life cycle analysis (LCA) has been performed for two potential biochar production systems in Belgium based on two different feedstocks: (i) willow and (ii) pig manure. First, the environmental impacts of the two biochar production systems are assessed from a life cycle perspective, assuming one ton of biochar as the functional unit. Therefore, LCA using SimaPro software has been performed both on the midpoint and endpoint level. Biochar production from willow achieves better results compared to biochar from pig manure for all environmental impact categories considered. In a second step, monetary valuation has been applied to the LCA results in order to weigh environmental benefits against environmental costs using the Ecotax, Ecovalue, and Stepwise approach. Consequently, sensitivity analysis investigates the impact of variation in NPK savings and byproducts of the biochar production process on monetized life cycle assessment results. As a result, it is suggested that biochar production from willow is preferred to biochar production from pig manure from an environmental point of view. In future research, those monetized environmental impacts will be integrated within existing techno-economic models that calculate the financial viability from an investor’s point of view, so that the total return for society can be quantified and the preferred biochar production system from a societal point of view can be identified.https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/12/11/2166life cycle analysisenvironmental valuationbiocharwillowpig manure |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Sara Rajabi Hamedani Tom Kuppens Robert Malina Enrico Bocci Andrea Colantoni Mauro Villarini |
spellingShingle |
Sara Rajabi Hamedani Tom Kuppens Robert Malina Enrico Bocci Andrea Colantoni Mauro Villarini Life Cycle Assessment and Environmental Valuation of Biochar Production: Two Case Studies in Belgium Energies life cycle analysis environmental valuation biochar willow pig manure |
author_facet |
Sara Rajabi Hamedani Tom Kuppens Robert Malina Enrico Bocci Andrea Colantoni Mauro Villarini |
author_sort |
Sara Rajabi Hamedani |
title |
Life Cycle Assessment and Environmental Valuation of Biochar Production: Two Case Studies in Belgium |
title_short |
Life Cycle Assessment and Environmental Valuation of Biochar Production: Two Case Studies in Belgium |
title_full |
Life Cycle Assessment and Environmental Valuation of Biochar Production: Two Case Studies in Belgium |
title_fullStr |
Life Cycle Assessment and Environmental Valuation of Biochar Production: Two Case Studies in Belgium |
title_full_unstemmed |
Life Cycle Assessment and Environmental Valuation of Biochar Production: Two Case Studies in Belgium |
title_sort |
life cycle assessment and environmental valuation of biochar production: two case studies in belgium |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Energies |
issn |
1996-1073 |
publishDate |
2019-06-01 |
description |
It is unclear whether the production of biochar is economically feasible. As a consequence, firms do not often invest in biochar production plants. However, biochar production and application might be desirable from a societal perspective as it might entail net environmental benefits. Hence, the aim of this work has been to assess and monetize the environmental impacts of biochar production systems so that the environmental aspects can be integrated with the economic and social ones later on to quantify the total return for society. Therefore, a life cycle analysis (LCA) has been performed for two potential biochar production systems in Belgium based on two different feedstocks: (i) willow and (ii) pig manure. First, the environmental impacts of the two biochar production systems are assessed from a life cycle perspective, assuming one ton of biochar as the functional unit. Therefore, LCA using SimaPro software has been performed both on the midpoint and endpoint level. Biochar production from willow achieves better results compared to biochar from pig manure for all environmental impact categories considered. In a second step, monetary valuation has been applied to the LCA results in order to weigh environmental benefits against environmental costs using the Ecotax, Ecovalue, and Stepwise approach. Consequently, sensitivity analysis investigates the impact of variation in NPK savings and byproducts of the biochar production process on monetized life cycle assessment results. As a result, it is suggested that biochar production from willow is preferred to biochar production from pig manure from an environmental point of view. In future research, those monetized environmental impacts will be integrated within existing techno-economic models that calculate the financial viability from an investor’s point of view, so that the total return for society can be quantified and the preferred biochar production system from a societal point of view can be identified. |
topic |
life cycle analysis environmental valuation biochar willow pig manure |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/12/11/2166 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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