4.6 Article

Residential Heating Using Woody Biomass in Germany-Supply, Demand, and Spatial Implications

Journal

LAND
Volume 11, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/land11111937

Keywords

renewable energy; land demand; fuelwood; carbon sequestration; ecosystem services

Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [01LE1804B1]

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This paper examines the relationship between land demands for biomass heating and ecosystem services. By utilizing residues from forestry and the wood processing industry, sustainable supply of woody biomass is possible. Therefore, the use of pellets and wood chips for heating purposes should be expanded.
Low-carbon energy requires more land than the non-renewable resources. This paper balances holistic assessments of the land demands for biomass heating and their ecosystem services. It is predicted that biomass will continue to play an important role in the heating sector in Germany by 2050, as it is one way to increase the use of renewable energy and reduce CO2 emissions. To balance this out, it is important to ensure that the substitution of fossil fuels with fuelwood does not result in losses in biodiversity, natural forest, and agricultural land. Based on the observed types of fuel demand, the need for space in terms of the growing area is characterized as the corresponding land under the consideration of a given land-use type. Formulas have been applied at the federal level in Germany. The area required to supply an average German household is 0.64 ha if all the wood harvested is used for energy purposes, but this is in competition with all other types of timber use. Fuelwood from thinning alone cannot meet the domestic demand. However, a sustainable supply of woody biomass is possible if residues mainly from forestry and the wood processing industry are used, causing a land demand of 2.69 ha per house, possibly in combination with smaller shares of the above-mentioned types of use. Thus, the shares of pellets and wood chips for heating purposes should be expanded, which would also bring ecological advantages. The qualitative consideration of forest ecosystem services shows that changing the forest composition or management may increase the fuelwood supply but does not necessarily decrease forest ecological services.

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