OOS 38-9 - Conversion of CRP grassland to cropping systems for bioenergy production causes large CO2 emissions

Thursday, August 5, 2010: 10:50 AM
301-302, David L Lawrence Convention Center
Ilya Gelfand1, Terenzio Zenone2, Poonam Jasrotia1, Jiquan Chen2, Stephen K. Hamilton3 and G. Philip Robertson4, (1)W.K. Kellogg Biological Station, Michigan State University, Hickory Corners, MI, (2)Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Toledo, Toledo, OH 43606, Toledo, OH, (3)Department of Integrative Biology, Michigan State University, East Lancing, MI, (4)Plant, Soil, and Microbial Sciences and W. K. Kellogg Biological Station, Michigan State University, Hickory Corners, MI
Background/Question/Methods
To analyze the greenhouse gas effect of land-use conversion from CRP grasslands to a biofuel cropping systems, we conducted a full carbon accounting of land conversion of three such systems. The systems were converted to no-till soybean management. Additional CRP grassland served as control. The analysis included measured fluxes of greenhouse gases (N2O, CH4), net ecosystem productivity measured by eddy-covariance technique, and agricultural chemical and fuel use during the year of conversion.

Results/Conclusions
Conversion of CRP grasslands caused net emission of 1.4 ± 0.1 kg CO2eq m-2 y-1 including 95.6 ± 3.6 g CO2eq m-2 y-1 fossil fuel offset credit. An additional 4 to 93 years of biofuel cultivation would be required to offset this initial debt. The CRP reference site had a negative GWP impact of -282.5 ± 102.9 g CO2eq m-2 y-1. Were the CRP grasslands biomass used for cellulosic ethanol production, an additional mitigation of 322.0 ± 10.9 g CO2eq m-2 y-1 would be provided by fossil fuel offset, together with as much as 45.2 ± 1.5 GJ ha-1y-1 of energy in liquid fuels worth. Using established grasslands as cellulosic feedstock production systems rather than converting to grain-based biofuel systems will avoid the carbon cost and resulting debt of land conversion.

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