Abstract

Abstract. An expansion of bioenergy has been proposed to help reduce fossil-fuel greenhouse gas emissions, and short-rotation forestry (SRF) can contribute to this expansion. However, SRF plantations could also be sources of biogenic volatile organic compound (BVOC) emissions, which can impact atmospheric air quality. In this study, emissions of isoprene and 11 monoterpenes from the branches and forest floor of hybrid aspen, Italian alder and Sitka spruce stands in an SRF field trial in central Scotland were measured during two years (2018–2019) and used to derive emission potentials for different seasons. Sitka spruce was included as a comparison as it is the most extensive plantation species in the UK. Winter and spring emissions of isoprene and monoterpenes were small compared to those in summer. Sitka spruce had a standardised mean emission rate of 15 µgCg-1h-1 for isoprene in the dry and warm summer of 2018 – more than double the emissions in 2019. However, standardised mean isoprene emissions from hybrid aspen were similar across both years, approximately 23 µgCg-1h-1, and standardised mean isoprene emissions from Italian alder were very low. Mean standardised total monoterpene emissions for these species followed a similar pattern of higher standardised emissions in the warmer year: Sitka spruce emitting 4.5 and 2.3 µgCg-1h-1 for 2018 and 2019, aspen emitting 0.3 and 0.09 µgCg-1h-1, and Italian alder emitting 1.5 and 0.2 µgCg-1h-1, respectively. In contrast to these foliage emissions, the forest floor was only a small source of monoterpenes, typically 1 or 2 orders of magnitude lower than foliage emissions on a unit of ground area basis. Estimates of total annual emissions from each plantation type per hectare were derived using the MEGAN 2.1 model. The modelled total BVOC (isoprene and monoterpenes) emissions of SRF hybrid aspen plantations were approximately half those of Sitka spruce for plantations of the same age. Italian alder SRF emissions were 20 times smaller than from Sitka spruce. The expansion of bioenergy plantations to 0.7 Mha has been suggested for the UK to help achieve net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. The model estimates show that, with such an expansion, total UK BVOC emissions would increase between <1 % and 35 %, depending on the tree species planted. Whereas increases might be small on a national scale, regional increases might have a larger impact on local air quality.

Highlights

  • The UK has committed to reducing its carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions to meet net-zero greenhouse gas emissions targets by 2050, and increasing bioenergy use is seen as a substantial pathway to this

  • In this study we focus on determining the contribution of the biogenic volatile organic compound (BVOC) emissions from the two species with the largest growth in short-rotation forestry (SRF) trials in the UK: hybrid aspen and Italian alder (McEvoy, 2016; McKay, 2011; Parratt, 2018)

  • The measured BVOC emissions were assigned to seasons as follows: winter (21 December–19 March), spring (20 March–7 June), summer (8 June–22 September) and autumn (23 September–20 December)

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Summary

Introduction

The UK has committed to reducing its carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions to meet net-zero greenhouse gas emissions targets by 2050, and increasing bioenergy use is seen as a substantial pathway to this. In the form of wood pellets, chips, and agricultural and forestry residues, is the primary type of biomass used to generate heat and electricity, accounting for 60 % of bioenergy in 2016 (IEA Bioenergy, 2018). The majority of the 7.2 million metric tonnes of wood pellets burned in the UK in 2018 came from imports from North America (Renewable Energy Association, 2019). G. Purser et al.: Isoprene and monoterpene emissions from SRF plantations biomass contributes higher carbon emissions than biomass grown in the UK (Ricardo, 2020), so a larger contribution from domestic supply of bioenergy in the UK is required if the UK is to achieve net-zero emissions

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