4.8 Article

Energy-carbon-water footprint of sugarcane bioenergy: A district-level life cycle assessment in the state of Maharashtra, India

Journal

RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS
Volume 151, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.rser.2021.111583

Keywords

Sugarcane; Bagasse; Bioenergy; Cogeneration; Life cycle assessment; Energy-carbon-water footprint

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Sugarcane bagasse-based cogeneration plays a significant role in bioenergy conversion in India, with potential for further growth as the government aims to increase renewable energy share by 2030. A study in Maharashtra, India assessed district-wise sugarcane bagasse cogeneration potential, revealing significant variation and the potential for reducing carbon, energy, and water footprints through measures like cultivating high-yielding varieties and installing modern cogeneration technology. These improvements could enhance farmers' income and address sustainability issues in India.
Sugarcane bagasse-based cogeneration contributes significantly to bioenergy conversion in India and therefore, appropriate performance analysis is required considering the regional factors. Further increase of sugarcane bioenergy is expected in India with the Government's mandate to enhance the share of renewable energy by 2030. Herein this study, district-wise sugarcane bagasse cogeneration potential is assessed in the state Maha-rashtra, India. Variations in energy, carbon and water footprint of energy generated from bagasse-based cogeneration plants are also assessed for all the districts considering farm to gate attributional life cycle assessment (ALCA). Avoided product function (also called as System expansion) of simaPro 9.2 LCA software is used to assess the environmental benefits of sugarcane waste or by-products (leaves and tops, press-mud and bagasse ash). The annual bagasse production potential in Maharashtra is 19 million tonne, equivalent to 8206 GWh of cogenerated electricity. The potential varies markedly among the districts (2-1500 GWh). Nearly 81 % of cogeneration potential is concentrated in 6 districts alone. The life cycle carbon footprint (0.075-0.2 kg CO(2)e/ kWh), the energy footprint (0.75-2.12 MJ/kWh) and the water footprint (206-516 L/kWh)-all the three esti-mated on the life cycle basis-differ considerably among the districts. The nexus among water, energy, and carbon footprint for sugarcane bioenergy is also analyzed to understand the complex interconnectivities among these individual resources. Cultivating high yielding varieties, use of renewable energy-based micro-irrigation, and installing modern cogeneration technology can lower the estimated carbon, energy and water footprint by up to 50 %. Such measures will help enhance farmers' income while addressing the sustainability issues in India.

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