好的、坏的和未来:系统审查确定了生物质的最佳利用,以满足加利福尼亚州的空气质量和气候政策

IF 5.9 3区 工程技术 Q1 AGRONOMY Global Change Biology Bioenergy Pub Date : 2023-09-23 DOI:10.1111/gcbb.13101
Peter Freer-Smith, Jack H. Bailey-Bale, Caspar L. Donnison, Gail Taylor
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引用次数: 0

摘要

加利福尼亚州拥有大量多样的生物质资源,并提供了一个相关的例子,说明在气候缓解政策面前,生物质的使用是如何变化的,需要改变。与世界其他地区一样,加州需要优化生物质和废物的利用,以实现环境和社会经济目标。我们使用了一项系统综述来评估加利福尼亚州的生物量使用途径及其对气候和空气质量的相关影响。生物质的用途包括生产可再生燃料、电力、生物炭、堆肥和其他有市场的产品。对于最近开发的生物量使用途径,可以获得关于对温室气体排放的影响(通常是有益的)的信息,关于对标准污染物的影响,也有一些但较少的公开信息。我们的综述确定了34种对温室气体或污染物排放或两者都有有益影响的生物质使用途径——“好”。其中包括燃烧森林生物质发电,以及通过厌氧消化将牲畜相关生物质转化为沼气。该审查确定了13条对温室气体排放、标准污染物排放或两者都有不利影响的生物质使用途径——“坏”。野火是八条途径中有一条对气候和空气质量都不利的一个例子,而相对于已确定的反事实但对空气质量有不利影响,只有两条生物质使用途径减少了温室气体排放。“未来”备受关注的问题包括降低火灾风险的土地管理、乳制品行业的未来政策以及生物质生产和使用的全生命周期分析。
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The good, the bad, and the future: Systematic review identifies best use of biomass to meet air quality and climate policies in California

California has large and diverse biomass resources and provides a pertinent example of how biomass use is changing and needs to change, in the face of climate mitigation policies. As in other areas of the world, California needs to optimize its use of biomass and waste to meet environmental and socioeconomic objectives. We used a systematic review to assess biomass use pathways in California and the associated impacts on climate and air quality. Biomass uses included the production of renewable fuels, electricity, biochar, compost, and other marketable products. For those biomass use pathways recently developed, information is available on the effects—usually beneficial—on greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, and there is some, but less, published information on the effects on criteria pollutants. Our review identifies 34 biomass use pathways with beneficial impacts on either GHG or pollutant emissions, or both—the “good.” These included combustion of forest biomass for power and conversion of livestock-associated biomass to biogas by anaerobic digestion. The review identified 13 biomass use pathways with adverse impacts on GHG emissions, criteria pollutant emissions, or both—the “bad.” Wildfires are an example of one out of eight pathways which were found to be bad for both climate and air quality, while only two biomass use pathways reduced GHG emissions relative to an identified counterfactual but had adverse air quality impacts. Issues of high interest for the “future” included land management to reduce fire risk, future policies for the dairy industries, and full life-cycle analysis of biomass production and use.

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来源期刊
Global Change Biology Bioenergy
Global Change Biology Bioenergy AGRONOMY-ENERGY & FUELS
CiteScore
10.30
自引率
7.10%
发文量
96
审稿时长
1.5 months
期刊介绍: GCB Bioenergy is an international journal publishing original research papers, review articles and commentaries that promote understanding of the interface between biological and environmental sciences and the production of fuels directly from plants, algae and waste. The scope of the journal extends to areas outside of biology to policy forum, socioeconomic analyses, technoeconomic analyses and systems analysis. Papers do not need a global change component for consideration for publication, it is viewed as implicit that most bioenergy will be beneficial in avoiding at least a part of the fossil fuel energy that would otherwise be used. Key areas covered by the journal: Bioenergy feedstock and bio-oil production: energy crops and algae their management,, genomics, genetic improvements, planting, harvesting, storage, transportation, integrated logistics, production modeling, composition and its modification, pests, diseases and weeds of feedstocks. Manuscripts concerning alternative energy based on biological mimicry are also encouraged (e.g. artificial photosynthesis). Biological Residues/Co-products: from agricultural production, forestry and plantations (stover, sugar, bio-plastics, etc.), algae processing industries, and municipal sources (MSW). Bioenergy and the Environment: ecosystem services, carbon mitigation, land use change, life cycle assessment, energy and greenhouse gas balances, water use, water quality, assessment of sustainability, and biodiversity issues. Bioenergy Socioeconomics: examining the economic viability or social acceptability of crops, crops systems and their processing, including genetically modified organisms [GMOs], health impacts of bioenergy systems. Bioenergy Policy: legislative developments affecting biofuels and bioenergy. Bioenergy Systems Analysis: examining biological developments in a whole systems context.
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