Highlighting Regional Energy-Economic-Environmental Benefits of Agricultural Bioresources Utilization: An Integrated Model from Life Cycle Perspective
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Model Formulation
2.1. Energy Benefits of Agricultural Bioresources Utilization
2.2. Economic Benefits of Agricultural Bioresources Utilization
2.2.1. Total Cost of ABs Utilization
2.2.2. Total Profit Contributed by ABs Utilization
2.3. Environmental Benefits of Agricultural Bioresources Utilization
2.3.1. Benchmark Emissions
2.3.2. Emissions during Procurement of ABs
2.3.3. Emissions during Project Operation
2.3.4. Reduced Emissions Due to Substitution of Fossil Fuels
2.3.5. Emissions during Utilization of Energy Products
2.3.6. Mitigated Emissions Attributed to ABs Utilization
3. Data Presentation
3.1. Conversion Coefficients of ABs
3.2. Environmental and Economic Coefficients of Energy Conversion Modes
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Regional Energy Benefits of ABs Utilization
4.2. Regional Economic Benefits of ABs Utilization
4.3. Regional Environmental Benefits of ABs Utilization
4.4. Uncertainty Analysis
4.5. Summative Discussion
5. Conclusions
- (1)
- Henan, Heilongjiang, Shandong, Xinjiang and Jilin are the top-five regions with larger ABs potentials, with that in Henan amounting to larger than 60 Mt.
- (2)
- Larger collectible quantity of ABs and larger energy utilization proportion jointly contribute to larger energy benefits in the five regions above. M3 contributes to 67.2% of total energy benefits among four modes.
- (3)
- The regions with larger energy benefits also have more economic benefits. Total net profits created in Henan by four modes could reach 1.08 billion USD, followed by that in Heilongjiang, Shandong and Xinjiang. M4 contributes to the highest proportion of economic benefits among four modes (48.1%).
- (4)
- The regions with larger energy benefits are also more environmentally advantageous. Total mitigations of CO2, SO2 and NOx emissions in China amount to 229.23 Mt, 1.53 Mt and 2.48 Mt, respectively.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature
Abbreviation | |
ABs | agricultural bioresources; |
3E | energy-economic-environmental; |
Mtce | million tons of coal equivalent; |
Mt | million ton; |
kt | thousand ton; |
USD | United States dollar; |
M1 | direct combustion power generation; |
M2 | gasification power generation; |
M3 | briquette fuel; |
M4 | bioethanol. |
Subscript | |
i | type of crop; |
j | type of energy conversion mode; |
m | bioenergy project under mode j. |
Variables: | |
theoretical reserve of ABs (t); | |
collectible quantity of ABs (t); | |
Qa | utilizable quantity of ABs for bioenergy production (t); |
Yi | grain yield (t); |
ηi | straw-grain ratio; |
λi | collection coefficient of ABs (%); |
ξ | energy utilization proportion (%); |
μj | allocation proportion of ABs for mode j (%); |
ςj | energy conversion coefficient of ABs for mode j (tce/t-ABs); |
ENj | total energy benefits of ABs utilization through mode j (tce); |
Cm | life cycle cost of project m (USD); |
procurement cost of ABs (USD); | |
operation cost of energy conversion (USD); | |
acquisition cost (buying ABs from farmers) (USD); | |
process cost (binding and compression of ABs) (USD); | |
transport cost (transport of ABs to the bioenergy projects) (USD); | |
other cost (loading, storage, etc.) (USD); | |
radius of island k (km); | |
ABs density of island k (t/km2); | |
distance between island k and project m (km); | |
transport cost within island k (USD); | |
transport cost outside island k (USD); | |
quantity of ABs collected within island k (t); | |
ρp-t | price rate of ABs transport (USD/t*km); |
f | tortuosity factor of road; |
Qm | ABs demanded by project m (t); |
total transport cost (USD); | |
ρp-a, ρp-p, ρp-o | price rate of acquisition cost, process cost and other cost of ABs (USD/t); |
unit operation cost of energy conversion (USD/tce); | |
Sm | total bioenergy production of project m (tce); |
ECm | net profit of project m (USD); |
ρj | price of unit bioenergy product produced by mode j (USD/tce); |
ECj | total economic benefits of ABs utilization through mode j (USD); |
emissions of project m in the benchmark scenario (t); | |
eAB | emission factor of open burning of ABs (t/t-ABs); |
emissions of project m generated during ABs process (t); | |
φp-p | diesel consumption factor of ABs process (L/t-ABs); |
eD | emission factor of diesel burning (t/L); |
emissions of project m generated during ABs transport (t); | |
φp-t | diesel consumption factor of ABs transport (L/t-ABs); |
emissions of project m during project operation process (t); | |
consumption amount of fossil fuels or thermal power of project m during project operation process (tce); | |
eF | emission factor corresponding to fossil fuels or thermal power (t/tce); |
emission reduction of project m due to substitution of fossil fuels (t); | |
emissions of project m from consumption of the bioenergy products (t); | |
δj | emission factor of the bioenergy product corresponding to mode j (t/tce); |
EVm | total mitigated emissions contributed by project m (t); |
EVj | total environmental benefits of ABs utilization through mode j (t). |
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Region | Suitability Rank | Energy Utilization Proportion (ξ) | Region | Suitability Rank | Energy Utilization Proportion (ξ) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Henan | I | 0.75 | Guangdong | III | 0.65 |
Shandong | I | 0.75 | Guangxi | III | 0.65 |
Xinjiang | I | 0.75 | Guizhou | III | 0.65 |
Heilongjiang | II | 0.70 | Yunnan | III | 0.65 |
Jilin | II | 0.70 | Shaanxi | III | 0.65 |
Inner Mongolia | II | 0.70 | Beijing | IV | 0.60 |
Hebei | II | 0.70 | Shanghai | IV | 0.60 |
Jiangsu | II | 0.70 | Tianjin | IV | 0.60 |
Anhui | II | 0.70 | Fujian | IV | 0.60 |
Hubei | II | 0.70 | Hainan | IV | 0.60 |
Sichuan | II | 0.70 | Chongqing | IV | 0.60 |
Liaoning | III | 0.65 | Ningxia | IV | 0.60 |
Shanxi | III | 0.65 | Gansu | IV | 0.60 |
Zhejiang | III | 0.65 | Qinghai | V | 0.55 |
Jiangxi | III | 0.65 | Tibet | V | 0.55 |
Hunan | III | 0.65 |
M1 | M2 | M3 | M4 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Energy conversion coefficient (tce/t-ABs) | 0.0886 | 0.0774 | 0.5430 | 0.1548 |
Net profit coefficient (USD/tce) | 138.78 | 123.48 | 37.26 | 442.21 |
CO2 mitigation coefficient (t/tce) | 2.3344 | 2.3196 | 2.3465 | 1.7847 |
SO2 mitigation coefficient (t/tce) | 0.0209 | 0.0216 | 0.0155 | 0.0020 |
NOx mitigation coefficient (t/tce) | 0.0614 | 0.0687 | 0.0122 | 0.0269 |
M1 | M2 | M3 | M4 | Energy Benefits Compared with the Original Value | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Allocation proportion of ABs | 100% | 0 | 0 | 0 | 36.5% |
0 | 100% | 0 | 0 | 31.9% | |
0 | 0 | 100% | 0 | 223.9% | |
0 | 0 | 0 | 100% | 113.9% |
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Song, J.; Pu, Y.; Yang, W.; Ren, J. Highlighting Regional Energy-Economic-Environmental Benefits of Agricultural Bioresources Utilization: An Integrated Model from Life Cycle Perspective. Sustainability 2019, 11, 3743. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11133743
Song J, Pu Y, Yang W, Ren J. Highlighting Regional Energy-Economic-Environmental Benefits of Agricultural Bioresources Utilization: An Integrated Model from Life Cycle Perspective. Sustainability. 2019; 11(13):3743. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11133743
Chicago/Turabian StyleSong, Junnian, Yang Pu, Wei Yang, and Jingzheng Ren. 2019. "Highlighting Regional Energy-Economic-Environmental Benefits of Agricultural Bioresources Utilization: An Integrated Model from Life Cycle Perspective" Sustainability 11, no. 13: 3743. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11133743
APA StyleSong, J., Pu, Y., Yang, W., & Ren, J. (2019). Highlighting Regional Energy-Economic-Environmental Benefits of Agricultural Bioresources Utilization: An Integrated Model from Life Cycle Perspective. Sustainability, 11(13), 3743. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11133743