Agricultural Production of Biomass for Green Biorefining Can Positively Affect Environment and Climate

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportKonferencebidrag i proceedingsForskning

Standard

Agricultural Production of Biomass for Green Biorefining Can Positively Affect Environment and Climate. / Olsen, Jakob Vesterlund; Ugilt Larsen, Søren; Jørgensen, Uffe.

24th Congress of the International Farm Management Association: Resilience through Innovation: Conference Proceedings - Academic. 2024. s. 295-309.

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportKonferencebidrag i proceedingsForskning

Harvard

Olsen, JV, Ugilt Larsen, S & Jørgensen, U 2024, Agricultural Production of Biomass for Green Biorefining Can Positively Affect Environment and Climate. i 24th Congress of the International Farm Management Association: Resilience through Innovation: Conference Proceedings - Academic. s. 295-309, International Farm Management Association Congress, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada, 07/07/2024.

APA

Olsen, J. V., Ugilt Larsen, S., & Jørgensen, U. (2024). Agricultural Production of Biomass for Green Biorefining Can Positively Affect Environment and Climate. I 24th Congress of the International Farm Management Association: Resilience through Innovation: Conference Proceedings - Academic (s. 295-309)

Vancouver

Olsen JV, Ugilt Larsen S, Jørgensen U. Agricultural Production of Biomass for Green Biorefining Can Positively Affect Environment and Climate. I 24th Congress of the International Farm Management Association: Resilience through Innovation: Conference Proceedings - Academic. 2024. s. 295-309

Author

Olsen, Jakob Vesterlund ; Ugilt Larsen, Søren ; Jørgensen, Uffe. / Agricultural Production of Biomass for Green Biorefining Can Positively Affect Environment and Climate. 24th Congress of the International Farm Management Association: Resilience through Innovation: Conference Proceedings - Academic. 2024. s. 295-309

Bibtex

@inproceedings{dbb472d081ad48bc992507da747b8ab3,
title = "Agricultural Production of Biomass for Green Biorefining Can Positively Affect Environment and Climate",
abstract = "The purpose of the analysis is to map the biomass production potentials and effects of conversion to cultivation of crops for green biorefining. The report provides concrete bids for hectares of agricultural land converted to grass for biorefining, tons of dry matter (DM) produced in biomass and the geographical location of the production of grass for biorefining for four selected coastal water catchments. Moreover, the effect in reduced nitrate emissions and greenhouse gas emissions measured as CO2-equivalents (CO2e) is calculated. Three arbitrary price levels for crop rotation grass for biorefining have been selected. Both the grassland area and the quantity of grass for biomass will naturally increase with rising grass prices. It is noteworthy that the expansion of grass used for biorefining is highest in coastal water catchment areas, where a lot of grass for roughage is already grown, which is otherwise kept unchanged. A switch to a larger proportion of grass cultivation results in a significant reduction in the climate impact from crop production due to a build-up of carbon in the soil. The greatest effect is achieved with the least possible N fertilization, i.e. by using grass-clover rather than pure grass.",
author = "Olsen, {Jakob Vesterlund} and {Ugilt Larsen}, S{\o}ren and Uffe J{\o}rgensen",
year = "2024",
month = jul,
language = "English",
pages = "295--309",
booktitle = "24th Congress of the International Farm Management Association: Resilience through Innovation",
note = "International Farm Management Association Congress : Resilience through Innovation, IFMA 24 ; Conference date: 07-07-2024 Through 12-07-2024",
url = "https://www.ifma2024.org/",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Agricultural Production of Biomass for Green Biorefining Can Positively Affect Environment and Climate

AU - Olsen, Jakob Vesterlund

AU - Ugilt Larsen, Søren

AU - Jørgensen, Uffe

N1 - Conference code: 24

PY - 2024/7

Y1 - 2024/7

N2 - The purpose of the analysis is to map the biomass production potentials and effects of conversion to cultivation of crops for green biorefining. The report provides concrete bids for hectares of agricultural land converted to grass for biorefining, tons of dry matter (DM) produced in biomass and the geographical location of the production of grass for biorefining for four selected coastal water catchments. Moreover, the effect in reduced nitrate emissions and greenhouse gas emissions measured as CO2-equivalents (CO2e) is calculated. Three arbitrary price levels for crop rotation grass for biorefining have been selected. Both the grassland area and the quantity of grass for biomass will naturally increase with rising grass prices. It is noteworthy that the expansion of grass used for biorefining is highest in coastal water catchment areas, where a lot of grass for roughage is already grown, which is otherwise kept unchanged. A switch to a larger proportion of grass cultivation results in a significant reduction in the climate impact from crop production due to a build-up of carbon in the soil. The greatest effect is achieved with the least possible N fertilization, i.e. by using grass-clover rather than pure grass.

AB - The purpose of the analysis is to map the biomass production potentials and effects of conversion to cultivation of crops for green biorefining. The report provides concrete bids for hectares of agricultural land converted to grass for biorefining, tons of dry matter (DM) produced in biomass and the geographical location of the production of grass for biorefining for four selected coastal water catchments. Moreover, the effect in reduced nitrate emissions and greenhouse gas emissions measured as CO2-equivalents (CO2e) is calculated. Three arbitrary price levels for crop rotation grass for biorefining have been selected. Both the grassland area and the quantity of grass for biomass will naturally increase with rising grass prices. It is noteworthy that the expansion of grass used for biorefining is highest in coastal water catchment areas, where a lot of grass for roughage is already grown, which is otherwise kept unchanged. A switch to a larger proportion of grass cultivation results in a significant reduction in the climate impact from crop production due to a build-up of carbon in the soil. The greatest effect is achieved with the least possible N fertilization, i.e. by using grass-clover rather than pure grass.

M3 - Article in proceedings

SP - 295

EP - 309

BT - 24th Congress of the International Farm Management Association: Resilience through Innovation

T2 - International Farm Management Association Congress

Y2 - 7 July 2024 through 12 July 2024

ER -

ID: 402957187