| Literature DB >> 27917177 |
Iris Lewandowski1, John Clifton-Brown2, Luisa M Trindade3, Gerard C van der Linden4, Kai-Uwe Schwarz5, Karl Müller-Sämann6, Alexander Anisimov7, C-L Chen3, Oene Dolstra3, Iain S Donnison2, Kerrie Farrar2, Simon Fonteyne8, Graham Harding9, Astley Hastings10, Laurie M Huxley2, Yasir Iqbal1, Nikolay Khokhlov7, Andreas Kiesel1, Peter Lootens8, Heike Meyer5, Michal Mos9, Hilde Muylle8, Chris Nunn2, Mensure Özgüven11, Isabel Roldán-Ruiz8, Heinrich Schüle12, Ivan Tarakanov7, Tim van der Weijde3, Moritz Wagner1, Qingguo Xi13, Olena Kalinina1.
Abstract
This paper describes the complete findings of the EU-funded research project OPTIMISC, which investigated methods to optimize the production and use of miscanthus biomass. Miscanthus bioenergy and bioproduct chains were investigated by trialing 15 diverse germplasm types in a range of climatic and soil environments across central Europe, Ukraine, Russia, and China. The abiotic stress tolerances of a wider panel of 100 germplasm types to drought, salinity, and low temperatures were measured in the laboratory and a field trial in Belgium. A small selection of germplasm types was evaluated for performance in grasslands on marginal sites in Germany and the UK. The growth traits underlying biomass yield and quality were measured to improve regional estimates of feedstock availability. Several potential high-value bioproducts were identified. The combined results provide recommendations to policymakers, growers and industry. The major technical advances in miscanthus production achieved by OPTIMISC include: (1) demonstration that novel hybrids can out-yield the standard commercially grown genotype Miscanthus x giganteus; (2) characterization of the interactions of physiological growth responses with environmental variation within and between sites; (3) quantification of biomass-quality-relevant traits; (4) abiotic stress tolerances of miscanthus genotypes; (5) selections suitable for production on marginal land; (6) field establishment methods for seeds using plugs; (7) evaluation of harvesting methods; and (8) quantification of energy used in densification (pellet) technologies with a range of hybrids with differences in stem wall properties. End-user needs were addressed by demonstrating the potential of optimizing miscanthus biomass composition for the production of ethanol and biogas as well as for combustion. The costs and life-cycle assessment of seven miscanthus-based value chains, including small- and large-scale heat and power, ethanol, biogas, and insulation material production, revealed GHG-emission- and fossil-energy-saving potentials of up to 30.6 t CO2eq C ha-1y-1 and 429 GJ ha-1y-1, respectively. Transport distance was identified as an important cost factor. Negative carbon mitigation costs of -78€ t-1 CO2eq C were recorded for local biomass use. The OPTIMISC results demonstrate the potential of miscanthus as a crop for marginal sites and provide information and technologies for the commercial implementation of miscanthus-based value chains.Entities:
Keywords: LCA; Miscanthus; bioeconomy; costs; genotypes; marginal land; stress tolerance; value chains
Year: 2016 PMID: 27917177 PMCID: PMC5114296 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2016.01620
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Figure 1Overview of the research and development activities in OPTIMISC work packages (WP).
Miscanthus germplasm investigated in OPTIMISC and its origin.
| 1 | Schwarz | 1 | |
| 111 | IBERS | 6 | |
| WU | 100 | ||
| Schwarz | 4 | ||
| ILVO | 1 | ||
| 35 | IBERS | 15 | |
| Dongying | 20 | ||
| 16 | IBERS | 16 | |
| Total number of genotypes investigated | 163 |
IBERS, Aberythwyth University (UK); WU, Department of Plant Breeding, Wageningen University (the Netherlands); Schwarz, Schwarz, Braunschweig (Germany), ILVO, Institute for Agricultural and Fisheries Research (Belgium); Dongying, Dongying Agricultural Institute (China).
Overview of trait screen experiments.
| Chilling | 56 | Growth chambers | ILVO | Fonteyne et al., |
| Chilling—early vigor | 102 | Field trial (chilling tolerance trial) | ILVO, WP4 partners | |
| Frost—winter survival—shoot frost tolerance | 102 | Field trial (chilling tolerance trial, mini-plots trial, multi-location trial) | ILVO, WP4 partners | Fonteyne et al., |
| Frost—rhizomes | 95 | Rhizomes pieces temperature-controlled bath | ILVO | Fonteyne et al., |
| Drought | 87 | Greenhouse, pots and 1-m long plastic tubes | IBERS | van der Weijde et al., |
| Salinity | 70 | Greenhouse, hydroponics system | DLO |
IBERS, University of Aberythwyth (UK); DLO, Wageningen University and Research Centre, Plant Research International (the Netherlands); ILVO, Institute for Agricultural and Fisheries Research (Belgium).
Miscanthus genotypes used in plot-based field trials.
| OPM-01 | IBERS | ||
| OPM-02 | IBERS | ||
| OPM-03 | IBERS | ||
| OPM-04 | IBERS | ||
| OPM-05 | IBERS | ||
| OPM-06 | IBERS | ||
| OPM-07 | IBERS | ||
| OPM-08 | IBERS | ||
| OPM-09 | IBERS | ||
| OPM-10 | Schwarz | ||
| OPM-11 | IBERS | ||
| OPM-12 | IBERS | Seedlings raised in plugs | |
| OPM-13 | WUR | ||
| OPM-14 | WUR | ||
| OPM-15 | IBERS |
Location characteristics and previous land use of the six OPTIMISC field trials established in May 2012.
| Turkey | Adana | 37.00 | 35.00 | 27 | Arable | 19.0 | 575.2 |
| Germany | Stuttgart | 48.74 | 8.93 | 463 | Arable | 9.8 | 725.4 |
| Ukraine | Potash | 48.89 | 30.44 | 237 | Arable | 8.9 | 537.2 |
| Netherlands | Wageningen | 51.59 | 5.39 | 10 | Horticultural | 10.3 | 826.4 |
| UK | Aberystwyth | 52.43 | –4.01 | 39 | Grassland | 9.7 | 1038.1 |
| Russia | Moscow | 55.50 | 37.33 | 140 | Arable | 4.1 | 644.0 |
Overview of development needs for miscanthus, how these were approached and relevant results.
| Growing the crop | Adaptation to different climatic conditions and to adverse and marginal site conditions | Provision (WP2) and evaluation of new breeding material (WP3, 4, 5, 6) | More than 160 miscanthus genotypes were provided for screening under field and controlled conditions. |
| Better understanding of genotype x environment interactions (WP4, 5) | Recommendations for optimal choice of genotypes for all European regions. | ||
| Northern Europe: OPM-08, -06, -10, -09 | |||
| Central Europe: OPM-09, -10, -06, -03 | |||
| Southern Europe: OPM-11, -14, -02, -03 | |||
| Develop chilling and frost tolerant genotypes (WP3) to: | Genotypes identified with relative tolerance to chilling and frost and with high early vigor, which have potential for cultivation in regions further north and east and as starting material for breeding. | ||
| Develop water-use efficient and water-stress tolerant genotypes (WP3) to: | |||
| Several genotypes were identified with improved yield compared to | |||
| A few genotypes are very high yielding under drought conditions despite only having medium drought tolerance. These genotypes may not perform so well under continuous drought. Of 7 genotypes with drought yields significantly higher than | |||
| Drought tolerance mechanisms include reduced water loss, such as leaf rolling, and water seeking strategies such as increased root to shoot ratio. | |||
| Develop salinity-tolerant genotypes (WP3) for marginal land | Genotypes identified with high yields under both optimal and saline conditions. | ||
| Starting material for breeding for salt tolerance through improved ion-exclusion activity. | |||
| Land areas with soil electric conductivity (EC) up 2.5 S/m suitable for miscanthus production. | |||
| Develop establishment methods for marginal land and grasslands | In Germany, 80% establishment success rate for miscanthus into C3 grassland was achieved with both a no-till method and conventional pre-planting disturbance (i.e. mowing or herbicide spraying applied before planting miscanthus). | ||
| Competitive miscanthus genotypes with tall, thick shoots to be chosen for establishment in grassland. | |||
| Reduction of biomass production costs | Target the development of genotypes that can be established via seeds (WP2, WP5) | Commercially scalable protocols for plug planting seed-based hybrids were developed. (The project produced 100,000 plants needed for large-scale trials in three locations: UK, Germany and Ukraine). | |
| Identify more winter-hardy genotypes to reduce or avoid over-winter losses (WP3) | See above | ||
| Reduce the input demands, e.g. nitrogen fertilization, of biomass production | As expected, significantly lower nutrient offtake in early senescing genotypes. This reduces the fertilizer offtake and increases biomass quality when used for heat production. Unexpectedly, leaf share not always linked to offtakes at harvest. | ||
| Improvement of yield and biomass supply stability | Identify high-yielding genotypes adapted to different climatic conditions (WP4) | Several genotypes were identified with high yields (exceeding that of | |
| Increase yields of valuable biomass co-products (WP5, 6) | Chlorophyll and protein can be extracted before biomass goes to biogas production. | ||
| Harvesting | Reduction of harvest and logistic costs | Reduce harvest, logistic and drying costs by selection of genotypes with dry biomass at harvest (WP4, 5). Reduce pre- and post-harvest losses (WP 5) | Direct chipping with a 7.5-m cutter on a self-propelled forage harvester was the most time-efficient cutting method. However, in climates with mild winters and inadequate senescence, the indirect mowing and baling methods are more scalable due to more efficient transport and storage. |
| Optimization of harvest time in terms of quality and reduction of harvest losses | Select genotypes with improved senescence patterns for dry harvestable biomass (WP4, 6) | Significant GxE (Genetic x Environment) interaction for senescence was observed. The interspecies hybrids tested senesced earlier than wild types. | |
| Connecting to market | Biomass quality suitable for purpose of user | Understand genetic variation and effect of drought on biomass quality performance (WP 3, 6) | GxE interaction for biomass quality relevant for combustion and production of ethanol and biogas. |
| Drought has a negative effect on yield but a positive effect on biomass quality. Developing drought resistant genotypes would create opportunities for growing high-quality miscanthus biomass on marginal soils (in particular dry areas). | |||
| Diversity in biomass quality of miscanthus genotypes | There are large differences in biomass quality, and consequently performance in different chains, e.g. bioethanol and biogas, among miscanthus genotypes. | ||
| Many genotypes have been identified with better biomass quality than | |||
| Development of novel value chains | Biogas production was identified as a promising value chain for miscanthus biomass (WP6). | October was identified as optimum biomass harvest date for Central Europe due to a very high biogas potential and sufficient cutting tolerance. | |
| Novel genotypes showed significantly higher specific biogas/methane yield (up to 520 ml/g DM) than | |||
| Optimization of biomass supply chain | Develop logistics for the supply of transportable, storable and tradeable biomass (WP5) | Shorter hybrids with thinner stems had the benefits of lower moisture content (13%), higher bale weights (500 kg for | |
| Pellets: highest bulk density for | |||
| All miscanthus genotypes can be pelleted. | |||
| Pelleting costs 40–80 Euro/ton pellets. | |||
| Optimization of miscanthus-based product chains | Identify cost-optimized and environmentally benign miscanthus-based product chains (WP7). | Up to 25 t (small-scale combustion, chips) and 31 t (insulation material) CO2eq./ha*a savings. | |
| In Central Europe cost of fuel for domestic small-scale combustion (≤ 2 ct/kWth) compete well with other fuels. | |||
| Lowest carbon mitigation costs of -78 Euro/t CO2eq. avoided for local small-scale combustion of chips. |
These are listed from top to bottom along the production to utilization chain.
Yield ranking across the six sites, in the first 3 years (spring harvest years) after planting miscanthus.
| Best Yield | OPM-09 | OMP-06 | OPM-06 |
| Second Best Yield | OMP-06 | OPM-09 | OPM-09 |
| Best Yield Adana | OPM-09 | OPM-09 | OPM-09 |
| Best Yield Stuttgart | OPM-01 | OPM-03 | OPM-06 |
| Best Yield Potash | OPM-06 | OPM-06 | OPM-02 |
| Best Yield Wageningen | OPM-06 | OPM-09 | OPM-08 |
| Best Yield Aberystwyth | OPM-08 | OPM-08 | OPM-08 |
| Best Yield Moscow | OPM-06 | OPM-06 | OPM-06 |
| Best CoV | OPM-11 | OPM-06 | OPM-10 |
| Second Best CoV | OPM-06 | OPM-10 | OPM-06 |
| Best CoV Adana | OPM-09 | OPM-09 | OPM-10 |
| Best CoV Stuttgart | OPM-02 | OPM-07 | OPM-05 |
| Best CoV Potash | OPM-12 | OPM-01 | OPM-04 |
| Best CoV Wageningen | OPM-04 | OPM-15 | OPM-13 |
| Best CoV Aberystwyth | OPM-15 | OPM-11 | OPM-08 |
| Best CoV Moscow | OPM-12 | OPM-13 | OPM-02 |
Recommendations for the choice of miscanthus genotypes for different European regions.
| OPM-01 ( | No | Poor yields, spreading (creeping) rhizome. |
| OPM-02 ( | Sometimes | Only in southern Europe with irrigation where drought possible. Excellent yield but requires high temperatures and susceptible to drought. Has spreading rhizome but can be managed by mowing field plot borders once or twice mid-season. |
| OPM-03 ( | Sometimes | Mainly in southern Europe with irrigation where drought is possible; also possible for Central Europe. High yielding in some locations. It has a spreading rhizome but can be managed by mowing field plot borders once or twice mid-season. |
| OPM-4 ( | No | Poor yields and a spreading rhizome. |
| OPM-05 ( | No | Acceptable yield but out-performed by similar hybrids. |
| OPM-06 ( | Yes | Central and eastern parts of northern Europe. Excellent yields but lodging crop not acceptable to farmers. |
| OPM-07 ( | No | Poor yields. |
| OPM-08 ( | Yes | Northern Europe. Excellent yields at the cooler sites. |
| OPM-09 ( | Yes | Most of Europe. Excellent yields generally sufficient for large areas of Europe, especially with the projected climate changes of warmer wetter winters, which is consistent with the years these trials were conducted. Limited by clonal propagation. |
| OPM-10 ( | Yes | Most of Europe. Excellent yields and low moisture content at harvest on account of early senescence. |
| OPM-11 ( | Yes | Southern Europe. Good yields at the locations with warm summers and frequent droughts (this clone did not perform well in Aberystwyth or Moscow). |
| OPM-12 ( | No | This seeded germplasm entry is heterogeneous. It flowers too early to attain high yields. It produces viable seeds. (In the WP4 trials, establishment problems were largely linked to logistical issues around planting, rather than being a reflection of germplasm establishment ability.) |
| OPM-13 ( | Yes | Potential in areas with warm summers and drought. Advantages: seed-based and non-creeping. More homogeneous than OPM-12 and OPM-15. Generally lower yielding than interspecies hybrids. It was less susceptible to drought conditions in Turkey. |
| OPM-14 ( | Yes | Southern Europe. Similar to OPM-13, but on average slightly lower yielding. |
| OPM-15 ( | No | As for OPM-12. This seeded germplasm entry is heterogeneous. It flowers too early to attain high yields. It produces viable seeds. |
Figure 2Bioclimatic envelope of . Excluded area is shown in light gray. Left (A) shows the original Hastings et al. (2009) bioclimatic envelope and right (B) shows the revised estimation of the bioclimatic envelope for M. × giganteus and the new trialed hybrids resulting from the research in this project. The crop yield prediction for M. × giganteus is displayed on a scale from 41 Mg ha−1 (black) to 0 Mg ha−1 (gray). Both bioclimatic envelopes are based on recent climate data (2000 to 2009) and FAO/IGBP plant-available water estimates on a 5-min grid. The new cold limit considers the data from in-field soil temperature measurements and the overwinter survival success. The new drought limit is based on observed in-field drought responses and water balances with estimates of plant-available water derived from depth and soil textures measurements. This high-level analysis does not identify the marginal lands within the grids where the yields may be lower than those indicated.
Figure 3(A) Miscanthus establishment starting with seeds sown in modules (plugs) and grown in the greenhouse. (B) A Checci & Magli planter in action and planted field. (C) Film technology protects modules from drying out and provides them with extra heat units.
Figure 4Average yield accumulation during the growing season and changes in combustion-quality-relevant traits (moisture and ash content) from autumn to spring for the leading clone OPM-06 grown in Stuttgart in the third and fourth year after establishment.
Optimized miscanthus-based value chains.
| Insulation | OPM-06 (10, 9) | March | Steam explosion | Mixing/pressing | Insulation material |
| Heat–chips | OPM-06 (10, 9) | March | Chipping | Combustion | Heat |
| CHP–bales | OPM-06 (10, 9) | March | Baling | Combustion | Heat + Power |
| CHP–pellets | OPM-06 (10, 9) | March | Pelleting | Combustion | Heat + Power |
| Heat–pellets | OPM-06 (10, 9) | March | Pelleting | Combustion | Heat |
| Biogas | OPM-06 (10, 14) | October | Ensiling | Anaerobic digestion | Heat + Power |
| Ethanol | OPM-06 (10, 9) | March | Thermo-chemical | Fermentation | Ethanol |
| Insulation | OPM-06 (3, 10) | March | Steam explosion | Mixing/pressing | Insulation material |
| Heat–chips | OPM-06 (3, 9) | March | Chipping | Combustion | Heat |
| CHP–bales | OPM-06 (3, 9) | March | Baling | Combustion | Heat + Power |
| CHP–pellets | OPM-06 (3, 9) | March | Pelleting | Combustion | Heat + Power |
| Heat–pellets | OPM-06 (3, 9) | March | Pelleting | Combustion | Heat |
| Ethanol | OPM-06 (3, 10) | March | Thermo-chemical | Fermentation | Ethanol |
| Biogas | OPM-06 (3, 11) | October | Ensiling | Anaerobic digestion | Heat + Power |
| Insulation | OPM-09 (11, 14) | March | Steam explosion | Mixing/pressing | Insulation material |
| Heat–chips | OPM-09 (11, 14) | March | Chipping | Combustion | Heat |
| CHP–bales | OPM-09 (11, 14) | March | Baling | Combustion | Heat + Power |
| CHP–pellets | OPM-09 (11, 14) | March | Pelleting | Combustion | Heat + Power |
| Heat–pellets | OPM-09 (11, 14) | March | Pelleting | Combustion | Heat |
| Ethanol | OPM-09 (11, 14) | March | Thermo-chemical | Fermentation | Ethanol |
| Biogas | OPM-09 (11, 6) | October | Ensiling | Anaerobic digestion | Heat + Power |
State-of-the-art biomass supply costs, allocated costs (assessed as difference between biobased and fossil resources), and carbon mitigation costs of each value chain at the Stuttgart site.
| 1) Small-scale combustion: chips | 0.46 | €ct (MJth.)−1 | –0.77 | €ct (MJth.)−1 | –78.33 |
| 2) Small-scale combustion: pellets | 0.79 | €ct (MJth.)−1 | –0.43 | €ct (MJth.)−1 | –49.65 |
| 3) Large-scale combustion: bales | 6.25 | €ct (MJel.)−1 | 5.6 | €ct (MJel.)−1 | 82.52 |
| 4) Large-scale combustion: pellets | 6.15 | €ct (MJel.)−1 | 5.5 | €ct (MJel.)−1 | 83.54 |
| 5) Large-scale bioethanol production | 14.80 | €ct (MJBioethanol)−1 | 11.52 | €ct (MJBioethanol)−1 | 1737.56 |
| 6) Medium-scale biogas production | 2.15 | €ct (MJel.)−1 | 1.47 | €ct (MJel.)−1 | 93.69 |
| 7) Large-scale insulation plant | 27.69 | € (m3)−1 | 28.53 | € (m3)−1 | 70.75 |