Abstract

Societal Impact StatementBioenergy is a major component of the global transition to renewable energy technologies. The plant and fungal kingdoms offer great potential but remain mostly untapped. Their increased use could contribute to the renewable energy transition and addressing the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 7 “Ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all.” Current research focuses on species cultivated at scale in temperate regions, overlooking the wealth of potential new sources of small‐scale energy where they are most urgently needed. A shift towards diversified, accessible bioenergy technologies will help to mitigate and adapt to the threats of climate change, decrease energy poverty, improve human health by reducing indoor pollution, increase energy resilience of communities, and decrease greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuels.SummaryBioenergy derived from plants and fungi is a major component of the global transition to renewable energy technologies. There is rich untapped diversity in the plant and fungal kingdoms that offers potential to contribute to the shift away from fossil fuels and to address the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 7 (SDG7) “Ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all.” Energy poverty—the lack of access to modern energy services—is most acute in the Global South where biodiversity is greatest and least investigated. Our systematic review of the literature over the last 5 years (2015–2020) indicates that research efforts have targeted a very small number of plant species cultivated at scale, mostly in temperate regions. The wealth of potential new sources of bioenergy in biodiverse regions, where the implementation of SDG7 is most urgently needed, has been largely overlooked. We recommend next steps for bioenergy stakeholders—research, industry, and government—to seize opportunities for innovation to alleviate energy poverty while protecting biodiversity. Small‐scale energy production using native plant species in bioenergy landscapes overcomes many pitfalls associated with bioenergy crop monocultures, such as biodiversity loss and conflict with food production. Targeted trait‐based screening of plant species and biological screening of fungi are required to characterize the potential of this resource. The benefits of diversified, accessible bioenergy go beyond the immediate urgency of energy poverty as more diverse agricultural landscapes are more resilient, store more carbon, and could also reduce the drivers of the climate and environmental emergencies.

Highlights

  • Almost every aspect of contemporary human activity depends on the availability of energy

  • Bioenergy derived from plants, fungi, and algae has potential to play an important role in alleviating energy poverty while supporting and protecting biodiversity

  • Demands for biofuel have driven the conversion of agricultural land to maize in North America and sugarcane in South America, creating tensions with food production, deforestation and exposing plant-derived bioenergy as not necessarily “clean” nor “green.” Bioethanol derived from maize has a high carbon footprint due to the fossil fuel-derived fertilizers required for its cultivation (Fairley, 2011; Mekonnen et al, 2018; Stehfest, Ross, & Bouwman, 2010), whereas the sugarcane industry has a lower carbon footprint because the bagasse waste product from the initial energy recovery is used to cogenerate heat and electricity displacing energy required for bioethanol production (Mekonnen et al, 2018), even taking into consideration carbon emissions from crops burned prior to harvest

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Summary

Introduction

Almost every aspect of contemporary human activity depends on the availability of energy. It combines the cultivation of predominantly indigenous fuel plants on marginal or degraded land with the management of community forests, clearing invasive species, and use of agricultural and household waste to supply biomass for accessible energy processing technologies.

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