Title: P1254845960DhinF
1Ethanol Co-Product Utilization and its impact
on the environment -beef cattle Rick
Koelsch Galen Erickson
2Manure P vs. Crop Land P Use
3One-Way Flow of Nutrients Is Underlying Cause
4Public Policy Response
- Nutrient Management Plan
- Use manure nutrients efficiently within the land
base managed by the livestock operation. - Phosphorus Risk Assessment
- Potential for P to move from land application
site - Based upon source and transport factors
- Preference to imported commercial nutrients over
recycled manure nutrients.
5Ethanol Plants Fed Cattle Population
6DRY MILLING-WDG(S)
GRAIN
GRIND, WET, COOK
Abengoa Bioenergy, York, NE
FERMENTATION
YEAST, ENZYMES
STILL
ALCOHOL CO2
STILLAGE
DISTILLERS GRAINS WDG, DDG
DISTILLERS SOLUBLES
WDGS DDGS
7Performance for DGS
Vander Pol et al., 2006 Nebraska Beef Rep. and
2005 Midwest ASAS
8Economics for WDGS
-143.19
Corn at 3.50/bu WDGS at 95 of corn price
miles are distance from ethanol plant to feedlot
9(No Transcript)
10Beef Extension Page http//beef.unl.edu
Beef Reports
11Intake
Retained nutrients 10-15
Excretion
Intake-RetentionExcretion
Excretion in feces urine
12Impact of DGS on excretion
- Excretion numbers using ASABE std approach
- AVG MIN MAX
- Diet P, 0.31 0.25 0.50
- P Excretion 7.0 lb 4.6 lb 14.1 lb
- old std 13.9 lb
- Diet CP, 13.3 12.0 20.5
- N Excretion 64 lb 57 lb 104 lb
- 150 days fed for an "average" steer
13Impact of DGS on N challenge
N mass balance
Plt0.01
Plt0.01
Plt0.01
P0.07
14Impact of DGS on P challenge
Dietary P in Feedlot Diets
.59
.52
.35
.27
NRC
15Impact of DGS on P challenge
Dietary P in Feedlot Diets
.59
.52
.35
.27
NRC
Our data
16Impact of DGS on P challenge
Dietary P effect on manure
Relationship between P intake and manure
harvested P (kg/hd/d) for cattle lots.
Kissinger et al., 2006 NE Beef Report
171. Base Scenario (Corn Diet)
Traditional Corn Based Diet 10,000 head feedlot
13 CP and 0.29 P Diet Corn/soybeans crop
rotation 40 land availability for
spreading Manure applied at 4-year phosphorus
rate Spread with 20 ton truck spreaders
181. Base Scenario (Corn Diet)
(1) N (/yr) 1,095,000 P (/yr) 134,000 Acres
5,800 Time (hr) 910 Haul (mi) 2.0 Value 108,00
0 Cost 52,000
1940 WDGS Scenario
40 WDGS Diet 10,000 head feedlot 18.7 CP
and .49 P Diet Corn/soybeans crop rotation
40 land availability for spreading Manure
applied at 4-year phosphorus rate Spread with
20 ton truck spreaders
202. 40 WDGS Scenario
(1) (2) N (/yr) 219,000 331,000 P
(/yr) 127,000 243,000 Acres 5,800 11,100 Time
(hr) 910 1,000 1,300 Haul (mi) 2.0 2.9 Value
108,000 192,000 Cost 52,000 59,000 to
72,000
Can I afford 100 to 400 hours added labor? and
7,000 to 23,000 higher costs? Can I find
5,400 acres?
21Summary of Economic Factors0 vs. 40 Inclusion
of DGs
- Costs of DGS use
- 7,000 to 24,000 to manure application costs
- 100 to 350 hours to labor equipment
requirements - 5,700 acres to land access requirements
- Benefits of DGS use
- 83,000 in gross manure nutrient value
- 150,000 to 300,000 in reduced feed costs
- 10,000 head beef feedlot (40 land available)
22Land Requirements, 4yr P basis (acres)
Impact of DGS on P challenge
Feedlot size (hd) 2500 10,000 25,000 0 byp
0.30 P 1,320 5,300 13,200 20 byp 0.40
P 1,900 7,600 19,000 40 byp 0.50
P 2,500 10,000 25,000 Assumes 50 of land area
accessible 185 bu corn, corn-soybean rotation,
35 lb P per acre (80 lb P2O5)
Kissinger et al., 2006 NE Beef Report
23Manure P vs Fertilizer P
- 79 of corn acres fertilized in 2003
- average 35 lb/ac
- 8.1 million acres planted
- (141,750 tons P2O5)
- (54,871 tons P at 79 acres)
- 4.5 million feedlot cattle
- Excrete 12 lb 54 mil. Lb.
- (27,000 tons)
http//www.nass.usda.gov/ne/special/agchem04.pdf
24Whole Farm P Balance
No DG Inclusion
40 DG Inclusion
25Implications of Greater P Inputs
- P Inventory within farm increases at rate of
88,000 vs 180,000 lb P/year faster. - Short Term - P Risk Assessment will
- Erosion control practices will allow banking of
excess P for some period of time - Bank will be filled more quickly with DGS.
- Long Term - P Risk Assessment will
- Reduce fields receiving manure to meet N needs
- Increase fields receiving manure to meet P needs
- Increase fields ineligible for manure application
26Summary
- DGS are economical for feeding
- DGS supply is dramatically increasing
- Feeding DGS increases P excretion (manure)
- Feeding DGS increases N volatilization
- Use of DGS increases acres and cost
- But, manure value increased
- Nebraska opportunity (have acres)
- Manure distribution challenges
27Research Opportunities?
- Remove P from DGS, Remove N from DGS
- Value manure over fertilizer nutrients
- Reduce/End N volatilization
- Reduce manure nuisance issues
- Develop alternative technologies for separating
nutrients - Reduce bio-availability of P to plants
- Low P corn, but mass balance issue
28Public Policy Needs
- Value recycled manure over imported fertilizer
nutrients - Encourage export of manure
- Encourage alternative uses of manure
- Recognize environmental benefits of manure
- Cautiously apply P-Index triggers for No Manure
application. - Recognize critical differences in nutrient plans
for cattle operations based upon DGS use.