Assessing Environmental Impacts of Short Rotation Coppice (SRC) Expansion: Model Definition and Preliminary Results
Journal article, 2012

Short rotation coppice (SRC) systems can play a role as feedstock for bioenergy supply contributing to EU energy and climate policy targets. A scenario depicting intensive arable crop cultivation in a homogeneous landscape (lacking habitat structures) was compared to a scenario including SRC cultivation on 20 % of arable land. A range of indicators was selected to assess the consequences of SRC on soil, water and biodiversity, using data from the Rating-SRC project (Sweden and Germany). The results of the assessment were presented using spider diagrams. Establishment and use of SRC for bioenergy has both positive and negative effects. The former include increased carbon sequestration and reduced GHG emissions as well as reduced soil erosion, groundwater nitrate and surface runoff. SRC can be used in phytoremediation and improves plant and breeding bird biodiversity (exceptions: grassland and arable land species) but should not be applied in dry areas or on soils high in toxic trace elements (exception: cadmium). The scenario-based analysis was found useful for studying the consequences of SRC cultivation at larger scales. Limitations of the approach are related to data requirements and compatibility and its restricted ability to cover spatial diversity and dynamic processes. The findings should not be generalised beyond the representativeness of the data used.

Bioenergy

cultivated land

Soil quality

biofuel production potentials

united-states

agricultural intensification

hybrid poplar plantations

Water quality

cadmium-accumulation

europe

breeding

sustainable use

birds

soil carbon

Biodiversity

contaminated soils

Short rotation coppice

Sustainability indicators

Author

H. Langeveld

Biomass Research

F. Quist-Wessel

Biomass Research

Ioannis Dimitriou

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU)

P. Aronsson

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU)

C. Baum

University of Rostock

U. Schulz

University of Applied Sciences Eberswalde (HNEE)

A. Bolte

University of Göttingen

Johann Heinrich von Thünen Institute Federal Research Institute for Rural Areas, Forestry and Fisheries

S. Baum

University of Göttingen

Johann Heinrich von Thünen Institute Federal Research Institute for Rural Areas, Forestry and Fisheries

J. Kohn

Beckmann-Institute for Bio-Based Product Lines (BIOP)

M. Weih

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU)

H. Gruss

University of Applied Sciences Eberswalde (HNEE)

P. Leinweber

University of Rostock

N. Lamersdorf

University of Göttingen

P. Schmidt-Walter

University of Göttingen

Göran Berndes

Chalmers, Energy and Environment, Physical Resource Theory

Bioenergy Research

1939-1234 (ISSN)

Vol. 5 3 621-635

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Subject Categories

Environmental Engineering

Areas of Advance

Energy

DOI

10.1007/s12155-012-9235-x

More information

Latest update

9/6/2018 1