Publication
Title
Greenhouse gas balance of cropland conversion to bioenergy poplar short-rotation coppice
Author
Abstract
The production of bioenergy in Europe is one of the strategies conceived to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. The suitability of the land use change from a cropland (REF site) to a short-rotation coppice plantation of hybrid poplar (SRC site) was investigated by comparing the GHG budgets of these two systems over 24 months in Viterbo, Italy. This period corresponded to a single rotation of the SRC site. The REF site was a crop rotation between grassland and winter wheat, i.e. the same management of the SRC site before the conversion to short-rotation coppice. Eddy covariance measurements were carried out to quantify the net ecosystem exchange of CO2 (FCO2), whereas chambers were used to measure N2O and CH4 emissions from soil. The measurements began 2 years after the conversion of arable land to SRC so that an older poplar plantation was used to estimate the soil organic carbon (SOC) loss due to SRC establishment and to estimate SOC recovery over time. Emissions from tractors and from production and transport of agricultural inputs (F-MAN) were modelled. A GHG emission offset, due to the substitution of natural gas with SRC biomass, was credited to the GHG budget of the SRC site. Emissions generated by the use of biomass (F-EXP) were also considered. Suitability was finally assessed by comparing the GHG budgets of the two sites. CO2 uptake was 3512 +/- 224 g CO2 m(-2) at the SRC site in 2 years, and 1838 +/- 107 g CO2 m(-2) at the REF site. F-EXP was equal to 1858 +/- 240 g CO2 m(-2) at the REF site, thus basically compensating for F-CO2, while it was 1118 +/- 521 g CO2 m(-2) at the SRC site. The SRC site could offset 379.7 +/- 175.1 g CO(2)eq m(-2) from fossil fuel displacement. Soil CH4 and N2O fluxes were negligible. F-MAN made up 2 and 4% in the GHG budgets of SRC and REF sites respectively, while the SOC loss was 455 +/- 524 g CO2 m(-2) in 2 years. Overall, the REF site was close to neutrality from a GHG perspective (156 +/- 264 g CO(2)eq m(-2)), while the SRC site was a net sink of 2202 +/- 792 g CO(2)eq m(-2). In conclusion the experiment led to a positive evaluation from a GHG viewpoint of the conversion of cropland to bioenergy SRC.
Language
English
Source (journal)
Biogeosciences
Publication
2016
ISSN
1726-4170
1726-4189
DOI
10.5194/BG-13-95-2016
Volume/pages
13 :1 (2016) , p. 95-113
ISI
000369524000007
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
Full text (open access)
UAntwerpen
Faculty/Department
Research group
Project info
System analysis of a bio-energy plantation: full greenhouse gas balance and energy accounting. (POPFULL)
Publication type
Subject
Affiliation
Publications with a UAntwerp address
External links
Web of Science
Record
Identifier
Creation 10.03.2016
Last edited 09.10.2023
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