Title of article :
Biomass supply from alternative cellulosic crops and crop residues: A spatially explicit bioeconomic modeling approach
Author/Authors :
Aklesso Egbendewe-Mondzozo، نويسنده , , Aklesso and Swinton، نويسنده , , Scott M. and Izaurralde، نويسنده , , César R. and Manowitz، نويسنده , , David H. and Zhang، نويسنده , , Xuesong، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Abstract :
This paper introduces a spatially-explicit bioeconomic model for the study of potential cellulosic biomass supply. For biomass crops to begin to replace current crops, farmers must earn more from them than from current crops. Using weather, topographic and soil data, the terrestrial ecosystem model, EPIC, dynamically simulates multiple cropping systems that vary by crop rotation, tillage, fertilization and residue removal rate. EPIC generates predicted crop yield and environmental outcomes over multiple watersheds. These EPIC results are used to parameterize a regional profit-maximization mathematical programming model that identifies profitable cropping system choices. The bioeconomic model is calibrated to 2007–09 crop production in a 9-county region of southwest Michigan. A simulation of biomass supply in response to rising biomass prices shows that cellulosic residues from corn stover and wheat straw begin to be supplied at minimum delivered biomass:corn grain price ratios of 0.15 and 0.18, respectively. At the mean corn price of $162.6/Mg ($4.13 per bushel) at commercial moisture content during 2007–2009, these ratios correspond to stover and straw prices of $24 and $29 per dry Mg. Perennial bioenergy crops begin to be supplied at price levels 2–3 times higher. Average biomass transport costs to the biorefinery plant range from $6 to $20/Mg compared to conventional crop production practices in the area, biomass supply from annual crop residues increased greenhouse gas emissions and reduced water quality through increased nutrient loss. By contrast, perennial cellulosic biomass crop production reduced greenhouse gas emissions and improved water quality.
Keywords :
Biomass production , Biofuel policy , Cellulosic ethanol , Agro-ecosystem economics , environmental impacts
Journal title :
Biomass and Bioenergy
Journal title :
Biomass and Bioenergy