Five-Dimensional Straw Utilization Model and Its Impact on Carbon Emission Reduction in China
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Methodology and Flowchart
2.2. Research Regions
3. Straw Utilization Methods
3.1. FDSUM and Carbon Emissions
3.1.1. Straw as Fertilizer
3.1.2. Straw as Feed
3.1.3. Straw as Fuel
3.1.4. Straw as a Base Material
3.1.5. Straw as a Raw Material
3.2. Discussions
4. Recommendations
- According to the planting structure, industrial structure and economic characteristics of various regions in China, the FDSUM should be further developed according to local conditions;
- Future development of straw utilization in China should prioritize straw-to-fertilizer, straw-to-fuel and straw-to-feed;
- After returning straw as fertilizer, the impact on soil structure and fertility and the decomposition and transformation mechanisms of straw need to be further studied;
- When straw is used as feed, it is necessary to use additives that can retain more nutrients and reduce the methane emission of livestock and poultry after overeating;
- Establishing an economic straw collection, storage and transportation system and developing straw-to-fuel utilization technology with a high production efficiency and good environmental protection is the foundation of straw power generation technology;
- Adding appropriate auxiliary agents or reducing production costs by developing new technologies can improve the utilization rate of straw-to-based and straw-to-raw materials and reduce the waste of forest resources;
- Strengthening the cooperation between the government and non-governmental organizations to establish a national unified carbon emission accounting system for straw utilization is of great significance for guiding agricultural emission reduction.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Regions | Northeast | Northwest Region | Northern Region | Southeast Region | Southwest Region | Middle and Lower Reaches of the Yangtze River |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Provinces and cities | Liaoning Jilin Heilongjiang Inner Mongolia | Shaanxi Gansu Qinghai Ningxia Xinjiang | Beijing Tianjin Hebei Shanxi Shandong Henan | Fujian Guangdong Guangxi Hainan | Chongqing Sichuan Guizhou Yunnan Tibet | Shanghai Jiangsu Zhejiang Anhui Jiangxi Hubei Hunan |
Utilization Technologies | Advantage | Shortcoming | Suitable Application Area |
---|---|---|---|
Ploughing and deep ploughing | Can process a large amount of straw with a high processing efficiency, which can break the bottom of the plough, and effectively increase the soil organic matter, fertilize soil, improve soil water retention capacity and eliminate pests and diseases. | Cost is relatively high. A certain amount of nitrogen fertilizer needs to be applied to alleviate the problem of the microbial decomposing of straw and crop growth competing for nitrogen sources. | Suitable for large-scale land with relatively flat plots, such as returning corn stalks to fields in Northeast China, returning cotton stalks to fields in Northwest China, and returning straws to fields in North China. |
Rotary tillage and mixed burial | The process is simple, and the operation is convenient. Shorter processing time; relatively low cost. | Leads to loose soil, decreased bulk density and poor soil structure; affects seed germination and rooting and leads to poor drought resistance and lodging resistance of the crops; increases the probability and degree of pests and diseases. | Suitable for the rice–wheat rotation and rice–rape rotation double cropping area in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River; the wheat–maize rotation double cropping area in North China. Not suitable for sloping dry land with serious soil erosion. |
No-tillage mulching | The process is simple, with a reduced number of times of mechanical entry. Low cost. The soil is covered with straw and solidified with stubble to reduce wind erosion, water erosion and ineffective water evaporation. It improves the utilization rate of natural rainfall. | Measures such as chemical spraying, mechanical/manual weeding and crop rotation are needed for weed and pests control. | Suitable for rainfed agricultural corn planting areas in Northeast China, Northwest China, North China, Southeast China and Southwest China. |
Rapid ripening in the field | Effectively promotes the decomposition of straw; not limited by seasons and locations; saves processing time and work; easy to apply and reduces crop diseases. | High operating costs in mountainous and hilly areas. | Suitable for double cropping areas with high amounts of straw production, such as the southeast area, southwest area, and the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River; unsuitable for the northwest area and cold areas with arid soil and poor soil entropy. |
Bioreactor | Converted into heat, organic matter and nutrients required for crop growth, which can effectively improve soil structure, soil moisture and reduce pest and disease damage | Requires high ground and reactor shed temperature which requires an enhanced ventilation system and moisture removal management. | It can be applied in places with abundant straw resources, which is more suitable for greenhouse crop cultivation. |
Technology | Advantages | Disadvantages |
---|---|---|
Green (yellow) storage technology | Less nutrient loss, high feed conversion rate, easy long-term storage, sterilization, disinfection effect, etc. | It cannot be used as a single feed for a long time, which can cause diarrhea, complicated production management and large differences in the nutrition of green (yellow) stored feed. |
Straw Alkalization/Ammonification Technology | Improve the quality of straw feed; increase the feed intake rate and digestibility; improve the nutritional level of straw; improve the return rate of feed; improve the efficiency of breeding; increase the income of farmers, etc. | It cannot be directly used as feed and needs to be treated with ammonia release. It cannot meet the growing needs of livestock when used as a single feed. Generally, it can only be used as feed for ruminant livestock such as adult cattle and sheep to prevent ammonia poisoning, etc. |
Straw briquette feed processing technology | Small size, large specific gravity; convenient transportation and not easy to deteriorate; easy for long-term storage; good palatability; high feed intake rate and convenient feeding; low-priced, etc. | Relatively higher requirements for the degree of agricultural mechanization and technicians are high, and the nutrition of the briquette straw feed is relatively insufficient, etc. |
straw cutting and kneading technology | The simplest process with the highest efficiency and the lowest cost; extend the residence time of cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin in the rumen, which is beneficial to the digestion and absorption of livestock and improves the straw feeding rate. | Straw kneading and cutting machine has the disadvantages of large feeding resistance, fast wear of the moving blade, high cost, and inability to adjust the gap between the moving and fixed knives. |
straw extruding-bulking technology | Improved content of soluble components, digestible and absorbable components and palatability; improved feeding value; improved indicators such as feed intake rate, digestibility, feed rate of return, and daily weight gain. | Environmental factors such as temperature, moisture, pressure, friction, etc., can cause the content loss of vitamins, enzymes, microbial inhibitors, proteins and amino acids in straw feed. |
Technologies | Types | Advantages | Disadvantages |
---|---|---|---|
Straw curing technology | Screw extrusion, piston stamping, circular mould compressing, roll-in stalk forming. | High thermal efficiency; wide range of applications; easy storage, transportation and use. | High power consumption, insufficient mechanical wear resistance, short life span and high production cost. |
Pyrolysis carbonization technology | Straw charcoal. | Low cost; high calorific value; wide range of uses; high efficiency. | The high technical difficulty, fast wear-out rate of parts, and high energy consumption of raw materials; require strict storage conditions against fire and moisture. |
Straw Gasification Technology | Bio-gasification, pyrolysis gasification. | High production controllability and low impact from natural conditions; significantly improves thermal efficiency; wide range of uses. | Slow development; low benefits when scaling up, low operating rate; high scrap rate. |
Straw Liquefaction Technology | Hydrolysis liquefaction, pyrolysis liquefaction. | Recycling, easy to use; low transportation cost and high added value. | Long fermentation time; low gas generation rate; high cost of raw material storage, transportation and pre-treatment. |
Straw Power Generation Technology | Direct combustion power generation | Environment-friendly distributed power generation technology. | High investment, high cost and low efficiency compared to coal-fired power plants. |
Co-fired power generation | Flammable, low-cost, low-risk renewable energy utilization. | Ash deposition affects system operation. | |
Gasification power generation | Flexibility, low cost, compact equipment with less pollution, | Slow development and low power generation rate. | |
Cogeneration | generate electricity and provide heat; high heat energy utilization efficiency. | Low heat price and no obvious economic advantage. |
Utilization Methods | Type of Straw | Calculation Baselines | Method | Calculation Boundaries | Carbon Reduction Efficiency (kg CO2e kg−1) | Data Sources |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Straw to produce fuel ethanol | Corn straw | Burning in field | LCA model; GREET (Greenhouse Gases, Regulated Emissions and Energy in Transportation) model | From crop planting to ethanol fuel used in vehicles | 0.71 | [68] |
Crop straw | Gasoline production | IPCC guidelines | Ethanol production | 0.84 | [69] | |
Straw to produce bio-oil | Corn straw | Diesel production | LCA model; GREET model | From crop planting to bio-oil production. | 0.51 | [70] |
Crop straw | Field burning and diesel production | LCAmodel; GREET model | From crop straw collection to bio-oil production. | 0.64 | [71] | |
Crop straw | Diesel production | LCA model; GREET model | From crop planting to bio-oil production. | 0.49 | [72] | |
Straw to produce aviation fuel | Corn straw | Fossil aviation fuel production | LCA model | From crop planting to aviation fuel used in airplanes (include engineering construction) | 0.34 | [73] |
Rice straw, corn straw and wheat straw | Fossil aviation fuel production | LCA model; Aspen plus model | From crop planting to aviation fuel used in airplanes (include engineering construction) | 0.10–0.15 | [74] | |
Rice straw, corn straw and wheat straw | Field burning and fossil aviation fuel production | LCA model | From crop planting to aviation fuel used in airplanes | 0.46 | [71] | |
Straw to produce briquette fuel | Corn straw | Coal production | LCA model and SPREADSHEET | From crop straw collection to the utilization of briquette fuel | 1.17 | [75] |
Corn straw, peanut shell and saw dust | Field burning and coal production | CDM(clean development mechanism) methodology | From crop straw collection to the utilization of briquette fuel | 1.14 | [76] | |
Corn straw | Coal production | Hybrid-LCA model | From crop planting to the utilization of briquette fuel | 1.09 | [77] | |
Corn straw | Coal production | LCA model | From crop straw collection to the utilization of briquette fuel | 1.10 | [78] | |
Crop straw | Field burning and coal production | IPCC guidelines | From crop straw collection to the utilization of briquette fuel | 0.97 | [8] | |
Crop straw | Straw matural decomposition | CDM methodology and IPCC guidelines | From crop straw collection to the utilization of briquette fuel | 1.56 | [79] | |
Straw direct combustion power generation | Crop straw | Field burning and coal-fired power generation | LCA model | From crop plant-ing to electric power used | 1.24 | [80] |
Straw baling direct-fired central heating | Crop straw | Straw matural decomposition | CDM methodology and IPCC guidelines | From crop straw collection to the utilization of briquette fuel | 1.58–1.67 | [81] |
Straw gasification power generation | Wheat straw | Coal-fired power generation | LCA model | From crop straw collection to electric power used (include engineering construction) | 0.71 | [82] |
Crop straw | Field burning and coal-fired power generation | IPCC guidelines | From crop straw collection to electric power used | 0.87 | [8] | |
Crop straw | Field burning and coal-fired power generation | LCA model | From crop straw collection to electric power used | 0.84 | [71] | |
Straw to biogas | Crop straw | Field burning and farmers cooking energy | CDM methodology and IPCC guidelines | From crop straw transportation to biogas used | 3.56 | [83] |
Crop straw | Straw natural decomposition | CDM methodology and IPCC guidelines | From crop straw transportation to biogas used | 0.87 | [84] | |
Crop straw | Field burning and biogas production | LCA model | From crop straw transportation to biogas used | 1.95 | [71] | |
Crop straw | Field burning and biogas production | IPCC guidelines | From crop straw collection to the utilization of biogas | 1.05 | [8] |
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Sun, N.; Gao, C.; Ding, Y.; Bi, Y.; Seglah, P.A.; Wang, Y. Five-Dimensional Straw Utilization Model and Its Impact on Carbon Emission Reduction in China. Sustainability 2022, 14, 16722. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142416722
Sun N, Gao C, Ding Y, Bi Y, Seglah PA, Wang Y. Five-Dimensional Straw Utilization Model and Its Impact on Carbon Emission Reduction in China. Sustainability. 2022; 14(24):16722. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142416722
Chicago/Turabian StyleSun, Ning, Chunyu Gao, Yahui Ding, Yuyun Bi, Patience Afi Seglah, and Yajing Wang. 2022. "Five-Dimensional Straw Utilization Model and Its Impact on Carbon Emission Reduction in China" Sustainability 14, no. 24: 16722. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142416722
APA StyleSun, N., Gao, C., Ding, Y., Bi, Y., Seglah, P. A., & Wang, Y. (2022). Five-Dimensional Straw Utilization Model and Its Impact on Carbon Emission Reduction in China. Sustainability, 14(24), 16722. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142416722