Title: BIOFUELS, INDIRECT LAND USE CHANGE,
1BIOFUELS, INDIRECT LAND USE CHANGE, LIFE CYCLE
ANALYSIS DO WE NOW KNOW ENOUGH TO KNOW THAT WE
DONT KNOW?
- Bruce E. Dale
- University Distinguished Professor of Chemical
Engineering - Michigan State University
- Presented at
- Low Carbon Fuels Webinar
- July 25, 2008
2My Assumptions/Points of Departure
- Inexpensive plant raw materials will catalyze the
growth of new and existing biofuel industries
this is absolutely going to happen - We have a unique opportunity to design these
industries for better environmental performance - One important tool life cycle analysis (LCA)
- LCA has significant value if used properly, but
it is a limited tool - LCA exists to make comparisonsLCA should not be
done in the ideal or the abstract
3Life Cycle Assessment Framework
Goal and Scope Definition
Interpretation Stakeholder Participation
Direct applications - Product development -
Marketing and improvement - Strategic planning -
Public policy formation - Other
Inventory Analysis
No stakeholder involvement in either Science
paper
Impact Assessment
4EISA 2007 renewable fuels must meet
certain lifecycle greenhouse gas emission
reductions
It aint a life cycle analysis just
because someone says it is. An LCA study must
meet certain standards
5Some Life Cycle Analysis Standards In Plain
English
- Use the most recent/most accurate data possible
- If models are used to generate data, have the
models been sufficiently tested verified? - Select the reference system/functional unit what
exactly are we comparing? - Make it easy for others to check your data and
methods transparency (difficult for complex
models) - Set clear system boundaries (physical
temporal)must be equal or comparable for
reference system and/or reference product of
interest - Multi-product systems must allocate environmental
costs among all products - Perform sensitivity analysis how much do results
vary if assumptions or data change?
6The Policy Related Tasks Are
- Use life cycle analysis to
- Determine the greenhouse gas impacts of...
- Direct land use changesand
- Indirect land use changes (ILUC)
- Do the two ILUC studies (February 2008 Science
papers) meet commonly accepted LCA standards and
thereby satisfy the policy requirements or do
they not meet these standards?
7Lets Examine the Recent Papers in Science using
these Criteria
- Use the most recent/most accurate data possible
- If models are used to generate data, have the
models been sufficiently tested verified? - Select the reference system/functional unit what
exactly are we comparing? - Make it easy for others to check your data and
methods transparency (difficult for complex
models) - Set clear system boundaries (physical
temporal)must be equal or comparable for
reference system and/or reference product of
interest - Multi-product systems must allocate environmental
costs among all products - Perform sensitivity analysis how much do results
vary if assumptions or data change?
8Use the most recent most accurate data
possible
- Land clearing from the 1990snot checked by
either modeling or more recent data - Ignores literature on causes of land use change
- Four linked submodelsno empirical data at all
- Ethanol demand to corn price
- Corn price to corn or soybean supply
- Corn or soybean supply to land use change
- Land use change to greenhouse gas consequences
- Land management post land use change not
considered-apparently only plow tillage used - Sensitivity analyses were generally incomplete or
lacking (Monte Carlo simulation is the standard) - No confirmation of model predictions by 1)
empirical data, 2) other models, or 3) back
testing. - An unverified, untested model is simply a guess.
9Select the reference system or functional unit
what exactly are we comparing?
- Ethanol vs. Gasoline?
- Corn ethanol vs. cellulosic ethanol vs. tar sands
oil to gasoline? - Gasoline produced how, when and from what? (oil
shale, tar sands, heavy crude???) - Backwards looking or forward looking (temporal
boundaries)? - Corn for ethanol vs. corn for animal feed?
- Allocation would help resolve feed vs. fuel uses
of landthis was apparently not done in either
analysis
10Set clear system boundaries (physical
temporal)must be comparable for reference
product of interest
- Ethanol temporal future (forward looking)
- Ethanol physical entire world land (indirect
effects on GHG considered) - Petroleum fuels (or other alternatives) temporal
past (GREET model) - Petroleum fuels physical restricted (indirect
effects on GHG not considered)
11Multi-product systems must allocate environmental
costs among all products
- System is land use in the entire world
- Land produces
- Animal feed (roughly 10x direct human food use)
- Human food
- Biofuels
- Pulp, paper, lumberand lots more
- Searchinger, et al, paper apparently allocated
the entire incremental land use change cost of
biofuel production to the biofuel - Ignores the fact that the replaced agricultural
production went to provide animal feed - Without allocation, these analyses advantage
animal feed from land vs. biofuels production. - Could have/should have dealt with this allocation
issue in the sensitivity analysis
12Perform sensitivity analysis how much do results
vary if assumptions or data change?
- Productive use of existing forest make furniture
or flooring from the tropical hardwoods or were
the trees just burned? - Decreased land clearing rates and/or different
ecosystems converted. What if most land converted
is pasture? - Historical rates of corn yield increase in the
U.S. abroad - Carbon debt compared with Athabasca oil
sands/Colorado oil shale/Venezuelan heavy crude
GHG in 2015 vs. GREET in 1999 - Increasing efficiency of future ethanol plants
- Uncertainties in global equilibrium modelstest
through Monte Carlo simulation? Tested with
data? Other models? - Allocation of environmental burdens among feed
and fuel uses of corn(livestock are responsible
for 18 of worldwide GHG emissions) - How is land managed after conversion?
- These other factors were not adequately
addressed during sensitivity analysis
13Do the 2008 Science Papers Meet LCA Criteria?
- Data quality. Use the most recent/most accurate
data possible? No. Models may be valid but that
was not proven. Literature on causes of land use
change ignored? - Select the reference system/functional unit what
exactly are we comparing? Marginal. - Make it easy for others to check your data and
methods transparency Acceptable
14Do the 2008 Science Papers Meet LCA Criteria?
- Set clear system boundariesmust be equal or
comparable for reference system and/or reference
product of interest No. Temporal boundaries
physical boundaries are not comparable for
ethanol gasoline - Multi-product systems must allocate environmental
costs among all products No. No apparent or
stated allocation of these costs among animal
feed and biofuels - Perform sensitivity analysis how much do results
vary if assumptions or data change? No.
Sensitivity analysis lacked appropriate range of
variables, especially for allocation - No apparent stakeholder involvement
15So What is My Bottom Line?
- GHG effects of direct land use change for
biofuels (supply chain oriented) can and have
been studied by LCA. Robust conclusions by LCA
standards (/- 30) - GHG effects of indirect land use change (market
oriented) have not yet been successfully studied
by LCA. Science papers are not (and probably were
not intended to be) LCA studies. - Existing ILUC papers do not meet the standards
for life cycle studies. It is simply incorrect
to use them as such. - The system is so complex that it may never be
possible to apply recognized LCA standards to
ILUC (but that shouldnt stop us from trying)
16Land Management Post Land Use Change Some
Insights
- Ethanol demand to corn price
- Corn price to corn or soybean supply
- Corn or soybean supply to land use change
- Land use change to greenhouse gas consequences
- Land management post land use change
- Land doesnt cease to be managed once the land
use change is executed. - What are the GHG consequences of post land change
management options?
17Land Management Post Land Use Change Tillage
Practices Cover Crops
Scenario Description
A Convert grassland to cornfield dedicated to ethanol production
B Divert cornfield to ethanol production, Convert grassland to cornfield dedicated to animal feed production
C Convert corn-soybean rotation to cornfield dedicated to ethanol production Convert grassland to corn-soybean rotation
D Convert forest to cornfield dedicated to ethanol production
E Divert cornfield to ethanol production, Convert forest to cornfield dedicated to animal feed production
F Convert corn-soybean rotation to cornfield dedicated to ethanol production Convert forest to corn-soybean rotation
Data for DAYCENT from 8 U. S. corn producing
counties, different climates, etc.
18Current tillage
Plowing tillage
No tillage
Cover crop
19A Path Forward for LCA and ILUC?
- GTAP deals only with land for which rents are
established cropland, pasture commercial
forest (not Amazon rainforest). Abandoned and
CRP lands are not in the model - Expand GTAP (or related models) to include
abandoned land (1 billion acres world wide) CRP
lands here - Pasture (grassland) conversions do not seem to
incur much carbon debt they may in fact get
quickly to carbon credit - Focus carbon debt analysis on forests (
savannah?) - Use common tool (DAYCENT?) to model forest
conversion and post conversion management
(standing biomass?) - Three forest issues are 1) commercial forest, 2)
non-commercial forests reduced reforestation
rates - If U.S. commercial forests, we can track
discourage conversion using specific policy
instruments-not ILUC blunt force trauma - Carbon sequestration lost by reduced
reforestation occurs over time can be estimated
if reliable reforestation rates are known - For non commercial forests, an academic land use
literature exists but apparently has not been
used in analysis to date agricultural expansion
is only one of several driving factors.
Allocation?
20One Tree (Study) Doth Not a Forest (Conclusion)
Make
- In science, one or two studies are never enough
to establish the facts. SF papers began an
important conversation - Some key results of further (other) studies thus
far - Forests matter in carbon debt, grasslands may
give carbon credit - Forest conversions driven by combined forces
agricultural expansion timber utilization
road access explain 96 of observed cases but any
single factor explains less than 20 - Land management post land change really affects
GHG results - One billion acres of unused/abandoned land
worldwide, not considered in SF (nor were CRP
lands) - Models relatively untested do not validate each
other well. - Searchinger predicts land conversion in Latin
America, China, U.S., etc - Purdue (GTAP) predicts most conversion in U.S.
(2/3 commercial forest) - GTAP predicts ethanol expansion to date should
have caused conversion of 2 million acres of
forest. Did that happen? - Duke (FASOMGHG) predicts mostly CRP pasture
conversion in U.S. - If FASOM is more correct, then ILUC may produce a
carbon credit - I believe we now know enough to know that we
dont know the sign (positive or negative) of
ILUC, let alone its magnitude.
21Questions ??