The Economic Feasibility of Partially Replacing Coal with Poultry Litter during the Production fo Energy in Virginia's Chesapeake Bay Watershed

Nutrient runoff from excess land application of poultry litter in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed has caused damage to the Chesapeake Bay and lead to the need for alternative poultry litter disposal methods. This study provided an economic feasibility analysis of the use of poultry litter as a partial...

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Main Author: Rios, Arturo Daniel
Other Authors: Agricultural and Applied Economics
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31355
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02262003-181443/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-313552021-08-14T05:30:06Z The Economic Feasibility of Partially Replacing Coal with Poultry Litter during the Production fo Energy in Virginia's Chesapeake Bay Watershed Rios, Arturo Daniel Agricultural and Applied Economics Taylor, Daniel B. Bosch, Darrell J. Stephenson, Stephen Kurt Emissions Energy Economic Feasibility Poultry Litter External Combustion Nutrient runoff from excess land application of poultry litter in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed has caused damage to the Chesapeake Bay and lead to the need for alternative poultry litter disposal methods. This study provided an economic feasibility analysis of the use of poultry litter as a partial replacement of coal at an electrical generating unit in Virginiaâ s Chesapeake Bay Watershed. Previous research on the feasibility of converting litter to energy failed to include uncertainty in benefit-cost variables, therefore, this study used risk analysis to incorporate variable uncertainty. Project net worth in previous studies was measured under a public investment scenario with risk neutral preferences but did not take into account risk averse preferences common in private investment. This paper compared benefits under both public risk neutral and private risk averse investor preferences. NPV results showed the proposed project to be feasible but sensitive to the acquisition cost of poultry litter, the unit ash value of litter, and future coal price projections. The maximum level of risk aversion required for feasibility increased when expected returns were measured on an investment scale compared to an annual income scale. Poultry litter combustion produced lower levels of NOx and SO2 emissions compared to coal, therefore, emission allowance trading through the EPA market based trading programs generated additional benefits to the model and increased the maximum level of risk aversion permitted for feasibility. Results suggested the potential to dispose of 110 thousand tons of poultry litter per year from the Chesapeake Bay Watershed without violating EPA emission standards. Master of Science 2014-03-14T20:32:12Z 2014-03-14T20:32:12Z 2003-01-28 2003-02-26 2012-04-12 2003-03-10 Thesis etd-02262003-181443 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31355 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02262003-181443/ Thesis.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Emissions
Energy
Economic Feasibility
Poultry Litter
External Combustion
spellingShingle Emissions
Energy
Economic Feasibility
Poultry Litter
External Combustion
Rios, Arturo Daniel
The Economic Feasibility of Partially Replacing Coal with Poultry Litter during the Production fo Energy in Virginia's Chesapeake Bay Watershed
description Nutrient runoff from excess land application of poultry litter in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed has caused damage to the Chesapeake Bay and lead to the need for alternative poultry litter disposal methods. This study provided an economic feasibility analysis of the use of poultry litter as a partial replacement of coal at an electrical generating unit in Virginiaâ s Chesapeake Bay Watershed. Previous research on the feasibility of converting litter to energy failed to include uncertainty in benefit-cost variables, therefore, this study used risk analysis to incorporate variable uncertainty. Project net worth in previous studies was measured under a public investment scenario with risk neutral preferences but did not take into account risk averse preferences common in private investment. This paper compared benefits under both public risk neutral and private risk averse investor preferences. NPV results showed the proposed project to be feasible but sensitive to the acquisition cost of poultry litter, the unit ash value of litter, and future coal price projections. The maximum level of risk aversion required for feasibility increased when expected returns were measured on an investment scale compared to an annual income scale. Poultry litter combustion produced lower levels of NOx and SO2 emissions compared to coal, therefore, emission allowance trading through the EPA market based trading programs generated additional benefits to the model and increased the maximum level of risk aversion permitted for feasibility. Results suggested the potential to dispose of 110 thousand tons of poultry litter per year from the Chesapeake Bay Watershed without violating EPA emission standards. === Master of Science
author2 Agricultural and Applied Economics
author_facet Agricultural and Applied Economics
Rios, Arturo Daniel
author Rios, Arturo Daniel
author_sort Rios, Arturo Daniel
title The Economic Feasibility of Partially Replacing Coal with Poultry Litter during the Production fo Energy in Virginia's Chesapeake Bay Watershed
title_short The Economic Feasibility of Partially Replacing Coal with Poultry Litter during the Production fo Energy in Virginia's Chesapeake Bay Watershed
title_full The Economic Feasibility of Partially Replacing Coal with Poultry Litter during the Production fo Energy in Virginia's Chesapeake Bay Watershed
title_fullStr The Economic Feasibility of Partially Replacing Coal with Poultry Litter during the Production fo Energy in Virginia's Chesapeake Bay Watershed
title_full_unstemmed The Economic Feasibility of Partially Replacing Coal with Poultry Litter during the Production fo Energy in Virginia's Chesapeake Bay Watershed
title_sort economic feasibility of partially replacing coal with poultry litter during the production fo energy in virginia's chesapeake bay watershed
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31355
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02262003-181443/
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