Abstract

Access to energy services is a priority for sustainable economic development, especially in rural areas, where small- and medium-sized enterprises have many difficulties in accessing reliable and affordable electricity. Western African countries are highly dependent on biomass resources; therefore, understanding the potential of bioenergy from crop residues is crucial to designing effective land-management practices. The assessment of the capability to use crop residues for electricity production is particularly important in those regions where agriculture is the dominant productive sector and where electrification through grid extension might be challenging. The objective of this work was to guide the development of sustainable strategies for rural areas that support energy development by simultaneously favouring food self-sufficiency capacity and environmental benefits. These complex interlinkages have been jointly assessed in the Senegal river basin by an integrated optimization system using a cropland–energy–water-environment nexus approach. The use of the nexus approach, which integrates various environmental factors, is instrumental to identify optimal land-energy strategies and provide decision makers with greater knowledge of the potential multiple benefits while minimizing trade-offs of the new solutions such as those connected to farmers’ needs, local energy demand, and food and land aspects. By a context-specific analysis, we estimated that, in 2016, 7 million tons of crop residues were generated, resulting in an electricity potential of 4.4 million MWh/year. Several sustainable land-energy management strategies were explored and compared with the current management strategy. Our results indicate that bioenergy production from crop residues can increase with significant variability from 5% to +50% depending on the strategy constraints considered. An example analysis of alternative irrigation in the Guinea region clearly illustrates the existing conflict between water, energy, and food: strategies optimizing bioenergy achieved increases both for energy and food production (+6%) but at the expense of increasing water demand by a factor of nine. The same water demand increase can be used to boost food production (+10%) if a modest decrease in bioenergy production is accepted (−13%).

Highlights

  • We present key findings related to the assessment of bioenergy potential production resulting from crop residue valorisation and its optimization taking into account WEFE-nexus indicators associated with cropland allocation and availability, water demands and availability, and the food self-sufficiency potential

  • There are ongoing and controversial discussions about the impacts the production of energy from agricultural biomass may have on land use, because of the competition between energy and food production, farm income, energy requirements, and greenhouse gas emissions [60]

  • Based on the methodology proposed in this work we focused on the valorisation of crop residues with no, or very limited, impact on the food system and on the requirement of land to produce food

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Summary

Introduction

Sustainability 2021, 13, 11065 out in the Sustainable Development Goals [1], while ensuring sustainability and environmentally protective solutions This challenge requires even more effort in transboundary river basins, where solutions should be balanced across competing sectors and scales and taking into account the specific and eventually the different and competing development objectives of the riparian countries [2]. By 2030, about one-third of the population in sub-Saharan Africa will still lack access to electricity [4] This figure represents an improvement vis-à-vis the current situation (today, the corresponding figure is 55 percent [4]), support actions are needed to meet the United Nations’ goal of achieving universal access to affordable, reliable, and modern energy services for all by 2030 [5]

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