Sustainable Agriculture and the Production of Biomass for Energy Use
Abstract
Modern bioenergy is seen as a promising option to curb greenhouse
gas emissions. There is, however, a potential competition for land
and water between bioenergy and food crops. Another question is whether
biomass for energy use can be produced in a sustainable manner given the
current conventional agricultural production practises. Other than the land
and water competition, this question is often neglected in scenarios to meet
a significant part of global energy demand with bioenergy. In the following,
I address this question.
There are sustainable alternatives, for example organic agriculture, to
avoid the negative environmental effects of conventional agriculture. Yet,
meeting a significant part of global energy demand with biomass grown sustainably
may not be possible, as burning significant quantities of organic
matter - inherent in bioenergy use - is likely to be incompatible with the
principles of such alternatives, which often rely on biomass input for nutrient
balance. There may therefore be a trade-off between policies and practices
to increase bioenergy and those to increase sustainability in agriculture via
practices such as organic farming.
This is not a general critique of bioenergy but it points to additional
potential dangers of modern bioenergy as a strategy to meet significant parts
of world energy demand.
University
Göteborg University. School of Business, Economics and Law
Other description
forthcoming in Climatic Change
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2006Author
Muller, Adrian
Keywords
bioenergy; sustainable energy; organic agriculture; land scarcity;water scarcity
Publication type
Report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics, nr 216
Language
en