Abstract

This paper presents a spatially explicit method for making regional estimates of the potential for biogas production from crop residues and manure, accounting for key technical, biochemical, environmental and economic constraints. Methods for making such estimates are important as biofuels from agricultural residues are receiving increasing policy support from the EU and major biogas producers, such as Germany and Italy, in response to concerns over unintended negative environmental and social impacts of conventional biofuels. This analysis comprises a spatially explicit estimate of crop residue and manure production for the EU at 250 m resolution, and a biogas production model accounting for local constraints such as the sustainable removal of residues, transportation of substrates, and the substrates’ biochemical suitability for anaerobic digestion. In our base scenario, the EU biogas production potential from crop residues and manure is about 0.7 EJ/year, nearly double the current EU production of biogas from agricultural substrates, most of which does not come from residues or manure. An extensive sensitivity analysis of the model shows that the potential could easily be 50% higher or lower, depending on the stringency of economic, technical and biochemical constraints. We find that the potential is particularly sensitive to constraints on the substrate mixtures’ carbon-to-nitrogen ratio and dry matter concentration. Hence, the potential to produce biogas from crop residues and manure in the EU depends to large extent on the possibility to overcome the challenges associated with these substrates, either by complementing them with suitable co-substrates (e.g. household waste and energy crops), or through further development of biogas technology (e.g. pretreatment of substrates and recirculation of effluent).

Highlights

  • In order to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases and limit its contribution to global climate change, the Renewable Energy Directive (RED) of the European Union (EU) requires member states to source at least 10% of transport fuels from renewable sources by 2020

  • We have shown that these two constraints are interrelated: Allowing a higher dry matter (DM) concentration always increases the biogas potential, but the relative effect is large under stricter constraints on the minimum C:N ratio

  • We have presented a new approach to estimation of the EU-wide potential for sustainable biogas production from crop residues, manure, and, given relevant data, from other substrates

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Summary

Introduction

In order to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases and limit its contribution to global climate change, the Renewable Energy Directive (RED) of the European Union (EU) requires member states to source at least 10% of transport fuels from renewable sources by 2020. Achieving this target sustainably, without unintended negative consequences, is a challenge. Direct links to raster files are here: à http://www.fao.org/geonetwork/srv/en/resources. Direct links: à http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/estat-navtree-portletprod/BulkDownloadListing?sort=1&file=data% 2Fagr_r_crops.tsv.gz à http://ec.europa.eu/ eurostat/estat-navtree-portlet-prod/ BulkDownloadListing?sort=1&file=data%2Fagr_r_ animal.tsv.gz à http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/estatnavtree-portlet-prod/BulkDownloadListing?sort= 1&file=data%2Fef_olsaareg.tsv.gz à http://ec. Europa.eu/eurostat/estat-navtree-portlet-prod/ BulkDownloadListing?sort=1&file=data%2Fef_ olsaareg.tsv.gz à http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/estatnavtree-portlet-prod/BulkDownloadListing?sort= 1&file=data%2Fapro_cpp_crop.tsv.gz National Inventory Reports. Download the 2014 NIR submissions for years 2009-2011 (CRF zip files) for all EU28 countries here: http://unfccc.int/ national_reports/annex_i_ghg_inventories/ national_inventories_submissions/items/8108.php

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