Daioglou et al., 2016

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Publication type: Journal article
Title: Projections of the availability and cost of residues from agriculture and forestry
Authors: V. Daioglou, E. Stehfest, B. Wicke, A. Faaij, D. P. van Vuuren
Year: 2016
Journal: GCB Bioenergy
Volume: 8
Issue: 2
Pages: 456-470
Link to the PBL-website: http://www.pbl.nl/en/publications/projections-of-the-availability-and-cost-of-residues-from-agriculture-and-forestry
DOI or URL: 10.1111/gcbb.12285
Citation: V. Daioglou, E. Stehfest, B. Wicke, A. Faaij, D. P. van Vuuren (2016). Projections of the availability and cost of residues from agriculture and forestry. GCB Bioenergy, 8(2), pp. 456-470, doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcbb.12285.
Link to PBL-website: http://www.pbl.nl/en/publications/projections-of-the-availability-and-cost-of-residues-from-agriculture-and-forestry.


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By-products of agricultural and forestry processes, known as residues, may act as a primary source of renewable energy. Studies assessing the availability of this resource offer little insight on the drivers and constraints of the available potential as well as the associated costs and how these may vary across scenarios. This study projects long-term global supply curves of the available potential using consistent scenarios of agriculture and forestry production, livestock production and fuel use from the spatially explicit integrated assessment model IMAGE. In the projections, residue production is related to agricultural and forestry production and intensification, and the limiting effect of ecological and alternative uses of residues are accounted for. Depending on the scenario, theoretical potential is projected to increase from approximately 120 EJ yr−1 today to 140–170 EJ yr−1 by 2100, coming mostly from agricultural production. To maintain ecological functions approximately 40% is required to remain in the field, and a further 20–30% is diverted towards alternative uses. Of the remaining potential (approximately 50 EJ yr−1 in 2100), more than 90% is available at costs <10$2005 GJ−1. Crop yield improvements increase residue productivity, albeit at a lower rate. The consequent decrease in agricultural land results in a lower requirement of residues for erosion control. The theoretical potential is most sensitive to baseline projections of agriculture and forestry demand; however, this does not necessarily affect the available potential which is relatively constant across scenarios. The most important limiting factors are the alternative uses. Asia and North America account for two-thirds of the available potential due to the production of crops with high residue yields and socioeconomic conditions which limit alternative uses.