Agricultural Biomass - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Agricultural Biomass

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Title: Agricultural Biomass


1
Agricultural Biomass
Resources
Soil Water Quality Improvement
Potential Resources
Health Benefits
  • Resources, Opportunities, and Constraints
  • Presentation to the Western Governors
    Association
  • Clean and Diversified Energy Advisory Committee
  • Biomass Task Force
  • April 14-15, 2005
  • Denver, Colorado

2
Agriculturally-based Biomass Resources and
Technologically Viable End-uses
  • Prominent National Resources End-Uses
  • herbaceous energy crops
  • switchgrass and big bluestem bioethanol,
    heat, and electricity
  • agricultural crop residues
  • corn stover, wheat, barley, and oat straw
    bioethanol
  • oilseed crops
  • soybeans, sunflower, canola/rapeseed,
    perennial oilseeds biodiesel
  • agribusiness processing residues
  • edible and inedible tallows and waste greases,
    walnut shells, potato wastes biodiesel, heat,
    bioethanol
  • livestock manures
  • dairy and swine operations heat and
    electricity
  • other
  • biochemicals and biomaterials

3
Advantages of Agriculturally-based Biomass
Resources
  • Energy
  • utilization of sustainable resources
    sustainable energy balance
  • Environmental
  • decreased CO2, SOx, and mercury emissions
  • improved localized air quality
  • improved water quality
  • potential for carbon sequestration
  • Economic
  • improvement of foreign trade balance
  • Security
  • decreased petroleum dependence

4
Environmental Advantages of Herbaceous Energy
Crops
  • Rainfall and wind soil erosion reduction
  • Herbaceous energy crops provide excellent
  • continuous cover significantly reducing
  • surface rainfall impact and wind forces
  • Surface runoff reduction
  • Herbaceous energy crops have extensive
  • root systems allowing for greater
    infiltration
  • (decreased risk of flooding)
  • Nitrogen and agricultural chemical mitigation
  • Herbaceous energy crops use less nitrogen,
  • phosphorus, and agricultural chemicals than
  • conventional commodity crops
  • Increased soil organic carbon
  • Extensive root system of switchgrass allows for
    carbon sequestration
  • Switchgrass for renewable energy purposes
    provides a psuedo closed-carbon loop ?
    significant reduction in the greenhouse gas CO2
  • Restoration of marginal lands

Marginal Lands in Need of Restoration
Topsoil Completely Eroded from Rainfall Erosion
5
Perennial Oilseed Crop Systems
  • Many factors that disqualify land for annual
    cropping
  • may not apply to perennial crops!
  • Environmental Advantages of Perennial Oilseed
    Production
  • Exposure to wind and water erosion occurs
    primarily during establishment of annual crops is
    minimized with perennials
  • Perennials can provide N fixation, decrease in
    rainfall erosion impact, and provide windbreaks
  • Perennial oilseeds could reduce NPS pollution
    while also providing a return to the landowner
    through alternative energy production
    (double-benefit)
  • Energetic Advantages of Perennial Oilseed
    Production
  • Since the living plant, instead of the processing
    plant, adds the energy benefit, the energy ratio
    (ER) will be higher

Castor (SW KS TX)
Chinese Tallow Tree
6
Agricultural Crop Residue RemovalSustainability
Considerations
Corn Stover seen as a waste resource
  • Residue Required for Erosion Control is a
    function of
  • Type of Erosion (wind or rainfall (water))
  • Field management practices (tillage)
  • Soil type
  • Climate (rainfall, temperature, retained
    moisture)
  • Physical field characteristics ( slope,
  • soil erodibility)
  • Crop and cropping rotation
  • Tolerable Soil Loss, T
  • Grain yield (bu/ac)
  • Tolerable Soil Loss, T
  • Maximum rate of soil erosion that will not lead
    to prolonged soil deterioration and/or loss of
    productivity

Rotation Field Topology
Soil Tilth Carbon Constraints !!!
Field Management
7
ConstraintsAgricultural Biomass Resource
Production Issues
  • Land Resource
  • arable versus non-arable crops production
  • competing uses and cost/benefit
  • Environmental Concerns
  • production versus soil quality (soil erosion)
  • water quality
  • water resource
  • soil tilth carbon cycle
  • Quantity of Sustainable Resource
  • Others?

8
Potential Renewable Energy and Environmental/Pollu
tion Credit Markets for Agriculturally-based
Biomass Resources
  • Renewable Energy Credits and Environmental/Polluti
    on Trading Markets
  • Sale of end-use energies derived from bioenergy
  • Air emission credits for CO2, SOx, NOx, mercury
  • Water quality/pollution trading (sediment,
    nutrient and chemical savings)
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