4.7 Article

Varied farm-level carbon intensities of corn feedstock help reduce corn ethanol greenhouse gas emissions

期刊

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
卷 16, 期 6, 页码 -

出版社

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ac018f

关键词

corn production; cradle-to-farm-gate GHG emissions; public-private sector collaboration; farm-level survey; biofuel

资金

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy [18/CJ000/01/01]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study presents a collaboration with U.S. private sector companies to collect and verify corn production data necessary for feedstock-specific CI calculation at the farm level. The results show that the type and rate of nitrogen fertilizer applied are key factors contributing to CI variations at the farm level, requiring better monitoring.
A reduction in the overall carbon intensity (CI) of a crop-based biofuel can be achieved by cutting down the CI of the biofuel's feedstock, which in turn correlates significantly to agricultural management practices. Proposals are being made to incentivize low-carbon biofuel feedstocks under U.S. fuel regulatory programs to promote sustainable farming practices by individual farms. For such an incentive scheme to function properly, robust data collection and verification are needed at the farm level. This study presents our collaboration with U.S. private sector companies to collect and verify the corn production data necessary for feedstock-specific CI calculation at the farm level, through a carefully designed questionnaire, to demonstrate the practicality and feasibility of data collection at scale. We surveyed 71 farms that produced 0.2 million metric tons of corn grain in 2018 in a Midwestern U.S. state to obtain information on key parameters affecting corn ethanol feedstock CI, such as grain yields, fertilizer/chemical application rates, and agronomic practices. Feedstock-specific CI was calculated in the unit of grams (g) CO2 equivalent (CO(2)e) of greenhouse gases per kilogram (kg) of corn produced. Results showed large CI variations-from 119 to 407 g CO(2)e kg(-1) of corn-due to the farm-level inventory, while the production-weighted average CI for all surveyed farms was 210 g CO(2)e kg(-1), comparable to the national average CI of 204 g CO(2)e kg(-1). The nitrogen fertilizer type applied and rate were identified as key factors contributing most to CI variations at the farm level. The estimated N2O emissions from fertilizer and biomass nitrogen inputs to soil accounted for 51% of the overall farm-level CI and therefore need to be better monitored at farm level with high resolution. We concluded that this feedstock-specific, farm-level CI evaluation has the potential to be used to incentivize low-carbon feedstock for biofuel production.

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