4.7 Article

Evaluating the sustainability of the 2017 US biofuel industry with an integrated techno-economic analysis and life cycle assessment

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 413, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2023.137364

Keywords

Biofuel; Life cycle assessment; Techno-economic analysis; Land use change; Marginal land; Renewable fuel standard

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In 2017, the United States produced over 66.2 billion Liters of biofuel, mainly corn ethanol (61 billion Liters) and soybean biodiesel (6 billion Liters), for the transportation industry. This study utilized a model framework and high-resolution input datasets to evaluate the sustainability of corn ethanol and soybean biodiesel in most counties of the United States. The results showed that these biofuels produced a total greenhouse gas emission volume of 99.5 million Mg CO2-eq in 2017, with a combined carbon intensity of 65.3 gCO2-eq/MJ. However, the production of these biofuels incurred additional economic costs and had unfavorable impacts on water, land, and nitrogen intensity compared to petroleum-based fuels.
The United States produced more than 66.2 billion Liters of biofuel, primarily in the form of corn ethanol (61 billion Liters) and soybean biodiesel (6 billion Liters), for the transportation industry in 2017. No work currently exists that evaluates both the economic and environmental outcomes of this industry with adequate geospatial resolution and national scope. In this study, a model framework is constructed to perform Techno-Economic Analysis and Life Cycle Assessment using high-resolution input datasets to provide a granular estimation of corn ethanol and soybean biodiesel sustainability performance in most counties in the United States in 2017 (the most recent year for which data is available). Results show a total life cycle, greenhouse gas emission volume of 99.5 million Mg CO2-eq produced in 2017 by these two biofuels (94.8 million Mg from corn ethanol, and 4.7 million Mg from soybean biodiesel), excluding indirect land use change emissions. This volume corresponds to a combined carbon intensity of 65.3 gCO2-eq/MJ, which is a greenhouse gas improvement compared to petroleumbased gasoline (the carbon intensity of conventional gasoline is 93.0 gCO2-eq/MJ). However, these biofuels are produced at an additional economic cost ($6.2 billion over the displaced gas/diesel). Additionally, these biofuels generate unfavorable impacts in other environmental categories when compared to petroleum-based fuels, particularly in areas of water, land, and nitrogen intensity. This work enables stakeholders to assess the specific value of biofuels as a means of emission reduction and determine if the attained improvements are worth the associated opportunity costs.

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