Sustainable Agriculture and the Production of Biomass for Energy Use
Sammanfattning
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.
Universitet
Göteborg University. School of Business, Economics and Law
Övrig beskrivning
forthcoming in Climatic Change
Samlingar
Datum
2006Författare
Muller, Adrian
Nyckelord
bioenergy; sustainable energy; organic agriculture; land scarcity;water scarcity
Publikationstyp
Report
ISSN
1403-2465
Serie/rapportnr.
Working Papers in Economics, nr 216
Språk
en