4.7 Article

Assessment of advanced bioethanol potential under water and land resource constraints in China

Journal

RENEWABLE ENERGY
Volume 212, Issue -, Pages 359-371

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.renene.2023.05.001

Keywords

Bioethanol; Crop residues; Energy crop; Marginal land; Water footprint; Water scarcity

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Crop residues and energy crops grown on marginal lands in China can be sources of bioethanol to replace traditional fuels, with the potential for up to 68.5 Mt of ethanol from crop residues and varying potentials from sweet sorghum and cassava. The study highlights the importance of considering water resources and identifies Northeast China as more suitable for bioethanol development, while South and Southwest China have potential for growing energy crops on marginal lands.
Crop residues and energy crops grown on marginal lands can be sources of advanced bioethanol without interfering with agricultural land for food, and can replace traditional fuels with a neutral carbon cycle, but demand additional water for crop growth and energy production. However, existing bioethanol potential assessments ignore the constraints of limited water resources. Here we quantify the bioethanol potential from twelve crops' residues and two energy crops (sweet sorghum and cassava) grown on marginal lands under both water and land constraints in China, based on bioethanol water footprint accounting, local water scarcity degree and marginal land identification. Results show that the bioethanol potential from crop residues is up to 68.5 Mt (similar to 1.8 EJ calorific value), approximately 49% lower than the theoretical potential without considering water limits. The suitable bioethanol potentials from sweet sorghum and cassava are in ranges 18.7-32.7 Mt (similar to 0.5-0.9 EJ) and 14.0-52.4 Mt (similar to 0.4-1.4 EJ), respectively. Northeast China are more suitable for the development of bioethanol due to their greater productive potential and lower water scarcity, whereas South and Southwest China have advantages in terms of growing energy crops on marginal lands and should be the focus of additional attention.

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