| Literature DB >> 23186536 |
Adam D Hughes1, Maeve S Kelly, Kenneth D Black, Michele S Stanley.
Abstract
The economic and environmental viability of dedicated terrestrial energy crops is in doubt. The production of large scale biomass (macroalgae) for biofuels in the marine environment was first tested in the late 1960's. The culture attempts failed due to the engineering challenges of farming offshore. However the energy conversion via anaerobic digestion was successful as the biochemical composition of macroalgae makes it an ideal feedstock. The technology for the mass production of macroalgae has developed principally in China and Asia over the last 50 years to such a degree that it is now the single largest product of aquaculture. There has also been significant technology transfer and macroalgal cultivation is now well tried and tested in Europe and America. The inherent advantage of production of biofuel feedstock in the marine environment is that it does not compete with food production for land or fresh water. Here we revisit the idea of the large scale cultivation of macroalgae at sea for subsequent anaerobic digestion to produce biogas as a source of renewable energy, using a European case study as an example.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23186536 PMCID: PMC3542030 DOI: 10.1186/1754-6834-5-86
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Biofuels ISSN: 1754-6834 Impact factor: 6.040
Environmental and societal risk associated with terrestrial biofuels (after Koh and Ghazoul, [16]) and macroalgae biofuels
| Net GHG emissions from land-use change | The culture of macroalgae for biofuel would be entirely marine based and would not have the associated GHG emissions associated with land use change. |
| Threats to biodiversity | Macroalgae cultivation takes place in the water column above the seabed. Impacts of large scale macroalgae production on benthic biodiversity are currently unquantified. Likely impacts will include shading and competition for nutrients. However, most production will be in waters where the seabed is deeper than the photic zone, and where terrestrial nutrient run off creates hypernutrified water. It is likely that biodiversity would increase in the vicinity of macroalgae farms as a result of increased habitat structural complexity. |
| Impacts on food prices | Currently most macroalgae cultivation is for human consumption. Large scale production of macroalgae for biofuels is bound to distort this market. However the impacts on the supply of macroalgae to human food chain is likely to be small due to a clear market segregation and the far higher value of macroalgae as food compared to the price of energy. |
| Competition for water resources | Mass cultivation of macroalgae has a zero freshwater requirement and only modest amounts are required in anaerobic digestion |
Figure 1Natural distribution of shallow water macroalgae (red line) indicating coastal areas with the potential to culture macroalgae for biogas, and human appropriation of net primary production as a percentage of local net primary productivity (NPP) (NASA 2004 [30]). Redrawn from Santelices (2007) [31] and NASA Earth Observatory 2004.
Figure 2The energy production of biofuel crops habased on macroalgal production of 200 t ww ha, terrestrial biofuel crop estimates are from Shilton and Guieysse (2010) [3].
Figure 3Area needed to grow enough seaweed to meet domestic gas requirements for homes on the Isle of Mull, West coast of Scotland, based on a production of 200 wet tonnes ha −1.