| Literature DB >> 26661066 |
Brian J Walsh1, Felicjan Rydzak1, Amanda Palazzo1, Florian Kraxner1, Mario Herrero2, Peer M Schenk3, Philippe Ciais4, Ivan A Janssens5, Josep Peñuelas6, Anneliese Niederl-Schmidinger1, Michael Obersteiner1.
Abstract
Net carbon sinks capable of avoiding dangerous perturbation of the climate system and preventing ocean acidification have been identified, but they are likely to be limited by resource constraints (Nature 463:747-756, 2010). Land scarcity already creates tension between food security and bioenergy production, and this competition is likely to intensify as populations and the effects of climate change expand. Despite research into microalgae as a next-generation energy source, the land-sparing consequences of alternative sources of livestock feed have been overlooked. Here we use the FeliX model to quantify emissions pathways when microalgae is used as a feedstock to free up to 2 billion hectares of land currently used for pasture and feed crops. Forest plantations established on these areas can conceivably meet 50 % of global primary energy demand, resulting in emissions mitigation from the energy and LULUC sectors of up to 544 [Formula: see text] 107 PgC by 2100. Further emissions reductions from carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) technology can reduce global atmospheric carbon concentrations close to preindustrial levels by the end of the present century. Though previously thought unattainable, carbon sinks and climate change mitigation of this magnitude are well within the bounds of technological feasibility.Entities:
Keywords: BECCS; Biofuels; CCS; Climate change; FeliX; Food security; Livestock; Protein
Year: 2015 PMID: 26661066 PMCID: PMC4666903 DOI: 10.1186/s13021-015-0040-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Carbon Balance Manag ISSN: 1750-0680
Biomass streams for bioenergy production in the four main scenarios in this analysis
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| Forest plantations (10) |
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| Energy crops (20) |
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| Agricultural residues (5.5) |
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| Microalgae ( |
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In the Alg-Feed scenario, algal biomass is used as feedstock, not for energy production. Biomass from all sources is assumed to generate energy (17.45 GJ tDM) and net emissions (0.049 tC tDM, excluding land use change) uniformly
Dependence of cumulative (2011–2100) energy and land use sector emissions projections on critical model parameters
| Cumulative emissions (2011–2100) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Nominal | ||
| Parameter shift | Down (Rel.) | Up (Rel.) |
| Agricultural emissions | 539 (−0.9 %) | 550 (1.0 %) |
| Agricultural residues | 521 (−4.2 %) | 565 (3.8 %) |
| Agricultural yields | 540 (−2.6 %) | 543 (−0.3 %) |
| Algae program start | – | 494 (−9.2 %) |
| Biomass fixed emissions | 602 (10.6 %) | 487 (−10.5 %) |
| Energy crop productivity | 572 (5.1 %) | 538 (−1.2 %) |
| Energy demand | 516 (−5.1 %) | 569 (4.5 %) |
| Feed Pct. from algae | 453 (−16.8 %) | – |
| Food demand (Ani.) | 547 (0.5 %) | 541 (−0.6 %) |
| Food demand (Veg.) | 540 (−0.8 %) | 548 (0.8 %) |
| Forest C sequestration | 517 (−5.0 %) | 571 (5.0 %) |
| Global GDP | 537 (−1.2 %) | 549 (0.9 %) |
| Non-CO | 544 (0.0 %) | 544 (0.0 %) |
| Plantation productivity | 507 (−6.8 %) | 578 (6.3 %) |
| World population | 530 (−2.5 %) | 554 (1.9 %) |
| Total error (uncorrelated, symmetrized): | ||
Cumulative emissions from the energy and land use sectors in the BAU and Alg-Feed scenarios are recalculated with each model parameter shifted independently as discussed in the SI. Emissions abatement for Alg-Feed relative to BAU is reported in absolute terms and as a percentage of the nominal value (544 PgC). Positive percentages indicate greater Alg-Feed scenario impact relative to BAU (additional climate mitigation), and negative values indicate diminished impact. Nominal parameters values and shift magnitudes are defined in this paper’s SI. All errors are assumed to be uncorrelated and summed quadratically in the bottom row
Fig. 1Total annual primary energy production [EJ] through 2100 in the a BAU, b BioEnergy, c Alg-Fuel, and d Alg-Feed scenarios. Grey and black curves indicate historical data and projected demand, respectively. Colored numbers on the right display the primary supply of each energy source in EJ. Historical data from IEA used for calibration [39]
Fig. 2From top: time series of total extent of permanent pastures and meadows; arable land and permanent crops; and forest plantations. In the Alg-Feed scenario, microalgae is used to meet 40 % of demand for feed, and the land (1.8 Bha) spared is converted to plantation. Shaded ranges show the effects of population growth, the leading source of systematic error on agricultural land use projections. Historical data from FAOSTAT is used for model calibration [27]
Fig. 3Net annual emissions. Defined as sum of carbon emissions from energy and land use sectors minus the carbon sequestered in biomass growth for bioenergy. Dark shaded ranges show the effects of population growth on the BAU and Alg-Feed+CCS projections, and the lighter range depicts sensitivity of the latter scenario to energy crop land productivity. For comparison to established emissions benchmarks, the four IPCC RCPs are also displayed [28]. Historical data from CDIAC is used for results validation [40]
Fig. 4Global observed average temperature change relative to preindustrial levels. Dark shaded ranges show the effects of population growth on temperature change in the BAU and Alg-Feed+CCS scenarios. The lighter-shaded regions display the sensitivity of BAU results to alternative RCP scenarios and of Alg-Feed results to the biomass productivity of afforested land. For comparison to established emissions benchmarks, median IPCC temperature anomaly predictions in 2100 are shown at right with errors representing a 90 % confidence interval [1]. HadCRUT4 data are used for results validation, and represent observed temperature increases over preindustrial era from the Met Office Hadley Center
Projected atmospheric CO2 concentrations [ppm] in year 2100 of the simulation
A range of energy sector emissions mitigation from CCS (at top) are applied to a range of algae production scenarios (listed at left as percentages of total feed consumption). Yellow shaded cells indicate warming of 2.0 ± 0.2 C. Red shaded cells indicate warming projections in excess of this threshold, while green shaded cells indicate sub-1.8 C warming