Agricultural residues bioenergy potential that sustain soil carbon depends on energy conversion pathways

Abstract Agricultural crop residues represent a significant part of the biomass potentially available for renewable energy systems. Sustaining soil organic carbon (C) is a common limiting factor applied to the biophysically available resource to determine crop residues potential for bioenergy. Studi...

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Main Authors: Julie H. Hansen, Lorie Hamelin, Arezoo Taghizadeh‐Toosi, Jørgen E. Olesen, Henrik Wenzel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-11-01
Series:GCB Bioenergy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/gcbb.12733
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spelling doaj-cf809f753f444a5cb7c28aefdaaaae0b2020-11-25T03:43:36ZengWileyGCB Bioenergy1757-16931757-17072020-11-0112111002101310.1111/gcbb.12733Agricultural residues bioenergy potential that sustain soil carbon depends on energy conversion pathwaysJulie H. Hansen0Lorie Hamelin1Arezoo Taghizadeh‐Toosi2Jørgen E. Olesen3Henrik Wenzel4Institute of Chemical Engineering, Biotechnology and Environmental Technology University of Southern Denmark Odense DenmarkToulouse Biotechnology Institute (TBI) INSA INRAE UMR792 and CNRS UMR5504 Federal University of Toulouse Toulouse FranceDepartment of Agroecology Aarhus University Tjele DenmarkDepartment of Agroecology Aarhus University Tjele DenmarkInstitute of Chemical Engineering, Biotechnology and Environmental Technology University of Southern Denmark Odense DenmarkAbstract Agricultural crop residues represent a significant part of the biomass potentially available for renewable energy systems. Sustaining soil organic carbon (C) is a common limiting factor applied to the biophysically available resource to determine crop residues potential for bioenergy. Studies quantifying this potential have so far largely considered crop biomass to produce renewable energy as being independent from the energy conversion pathway. However, the conversion method has great influence on how much C in crop residues can be returned back and retained in soils. Here, we applied the C‐TOOL soil C model for two extreme conversion pathways of agricultural straw management in terms of C returned back to soils, using Denmark as a case study. Those were anaerobic digestion, involving the return of recalcitrant C to fields, and combustion, involving no C returns to agricultural fields. Danish agriculture was represented by six different soil‐cropping schemes units on which our two extreme bioenergy pathways were modelled. We applied a premise that for a given geographical unit, the same long‐term soil C level needs to be achieved under these extreme bioenergy scenarios; therefore, we identified how much straw could be removed from agricultural fields in each case while maintaining equal soil organic carbon (SOC) levels. We found that at the scale of the whole country, only 26% of the straw potential can be harvested for use in combustion to maintain in average long‐term SOC at the same level as it would have been with the anaerobic digestion scenario. Thus, consideration for the biomass conversion pathway is important when identifying agricultural residue potentials for energy conversion while ensuring that SOC level is not compromised.https://doi.org/10.1111/gcbb.12733biomass potentialC‐TOOLenergy conversion pathwayenergy system analysessoil carbon
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Julie H. Hansen
Lorie Hamelin
Arezoo Taghizadeh‐Toosi
Jørgen E. Olesen
Henrik Wenzel
spellingShingle Julie H. Hansen
Lorie Hamelin
Arezoo Taghizadeh‐Toosi
Jørgen E. Olesen
Henrik Wenzel
Agricultural residues bioenergy potential that sustain soil carbon depends on energy conversion pathways
GCB Bioenergy
biomass potential
C‐TOOL
energy conversion pathway
energy system analyses
soil carbon
author_facet Julie H. Hansen
Lorie Hamelin
Arezoo Taghizadeh‐Toosi
Jørgen E. Olesen
Henrik Wenzel
author_sort Julie H. Hansen
title Agricultural residues bioenergy potential that sustain soil carbon depends on energy conversion pathways
title_short Agricultural residues bioenergy potential that sustain soil carbon depends on energy conversion pathways
title_full Agricultural residues bioenergy potential that sustain soil carbon depends on energy conversion pathways
title_fullStr Agricultural residues bioenergy potential that sustain soil carbon depends on energy conversion pathways
title_full_unstemmed Agricultural residues bioenergy potential that sustain soil carbon depends on energy conversion pathways
title_sort agricultural residues bioenergy potential that sustain soil carbon depends on energy conversion pathways
publisher Wiley
series GCB Bioenergy
issn 1757-1693
1757-1707
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Abstract Agricultural crop residues represent a significant part of the biomass potentially available for renewable energy systems. Sustaining soil organic carbon (C) is a common limiting factor applied to the biophysically available resource to determine crop residues potential for bioenergy. Studies quantifying this potential have so far largely considered crop biomass to produce renewable energy as being independent from the energy conversion pathway. However, the conversion method has great influence on how much C in crop residues can be returned back and retained in soils. Here, we applied the C‐TOOL soil C model for two extreme conversion pathways of agricultural straw management in terms of C returned back to soils, using Denmark as a case study. Those were anaerobic digestion, involving the return of recalcitrant C to fields, and combustion, involving no C returns to agricultural fields. Danish agriculture was represented by six different soil‐cropping schemes units on which our two extreme bioenergy pathways were modelled. We applied a premise that for a given geographical unit, the same long‐term soil C level needs to be achieved under these extreme bioenergy scenarios; therefore, we identified how much straw could be removed from agricultural fields in each case while maintaining equal soil organic carbon (SOC) levels. We found that at the scale of the whole country, only 26% of the straw potential can be harvested for use in combustion to maintain in average long‐term SOC at the same level as it would have been with the anaerobic digestion scenario. Thus, consideration for the biomass conversion pathway is important when identifying agricultural residue potentials for energy conversion while ensuring that SOC level is not compromised.
topic biomass potential
C‐TOOL
energy conversion pathway
energy system analyses
soil carbon
url https://doi.org/10.1111/gcbb.12733
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AT jørgeneolesen agriculturalresiduesbioenergypotentialthatsustainsoilcarbondependsonenergyconversionpathways
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