Literature DB >> 24066845

Water consumption footprint and land requirements of large-scale alternative diesel and jet fuel production.

Mark D Staples1, Hakan Olcay, Robert Malina, Parthsarathi Trivedi, Matthew N Pearlson, Kenneth Strzepek, Sergey V Paltsev, Christoph Wollersheim, Steven R H Barrett.   

Abstract

Middle distillate (MD) transportation fuels, including diesel and jet fuel, make up almost 30% of liquid fuel consumption in the United States. Alternative drop-in MD and biodiesel could potentially reduce dependence on crude oil and the greenhouse gas intensity of transportation. However, the water and land resource requirements of these novel fuel production technologies must be better understood. This analysis quantifies the lifecycle green and blue water consumption footprints of producing: MD from conventional crude oil; Fischer-Tropsch MD from natural gas and coal; fermentation and advanced fermentation MD from biomass; and hydroprocessed esters and fatty acids MD and biodiesel from oilseed crops, throughout the contiguous United States. We find that FT MD and alternative MD derived from rainfed biomass have lifecycle blue water consumption footprints of 1.6 to 20.1 Lwater/LMD, comparable to conventional MD, which ranges between 4.1 and 7.4 Lwater/LMD. Alternative MD derived from irrigated biomass has a lifecycle blue water consumption footprint potentially several orders of magnitude larger, between 2.7 and 22 600 Lwater/LMD. Alternative MD derived from biomass has a lifecycle green water consumption footprint between 1.1 and 19 200 Lwater/LMD. Results are disaggregated to characterize the relationship between geo-spatial location and lifecycle water consumption footprint. We also quantify the trade-offs between blue water consumption footprint and areal MD productivity, which ranges from 490 to 4200 LMD/ha, under assumptions of rainfed and irrigated biomass cultivation. Finally, we show that if biomass cultivation for alternative MD is irrigated, the ratio of the increase in areal MD productivity to the increase in blue water consumption footprint is a function of geo-spatial location and feedstock-to-fuel production pathway.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24066845     DOI: 10.1021/es4030782

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Sci Technol        ISSN: 0013-936X            Impact factor:   9.028


  2 in total

1.  Life-cycle analysis of greenhouse gas emissions from renewable jet fuel production.

Authors:  Sierk de Jong; Kay Antonissen; Ric Hoefnagels; Laura Lonza; Michael Wang; André Faaij; Martin Junginger
Journal:  Biotechnol Biofuels       Date:  2017-03-14       Impact factor: 6.040

2.  Potential yields and emission reductions of biojet fuels produced via hydrotreatment of biocrudes produced through direct thermochemical liquefaction.

Authors:  Susan van Dyk; Jianping Su; Mahmood Ebadian; Don O'Connor; Michael Lakeman; Jack John Saddler
Journal:  Biotechnol Biofuels       Date:  2019-12-05       Impact factor: 6.040

  2 in total

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