Methane and nitrous oxide emissions affect the life-cycle analysis of algal biofuels

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Abstract

Researchers around the world are developing sustainable plant-based liquid transportation fuels (biofuels) to reduce petroleum consumption and greenhouse gas emissions. Algae are attractive because they promise large yields per acre compared to grasses, grains and trees, and because they produce oils that might be converted to diesel and gasoline equivalents. It takes considerable energy to produce algal biofuels with current technology; thus, the potential benefits of algal biofuels compared to petroleum fuels must be quantified. To this end, we identified key parameters for algal biofuel production using GREET, a tool for the life-cycle analysis of energy use and emissions in transportation systems. The baseline scenario produced 55400 g CO2 equivalent per million BTU of biodiesel compared to 101000g for low-sulfur petroleum diesel. The analysis considered the potential for greenhouse gas emissions from anaerobic digestion processes commonly used in algal biofuel models. The work also studied alternative scenarios, e.g., catalytic hydrothermal gasification, that may reduce these emissions. The analysis of the nitrogen recovery step from lipid-extracted algae (residues) highlighted the importance of considering the fate of the unrecovered nitrogen fraction, especially that which produces N 2O, a potent greenhouse gas with global warming potential 298 times that of CO2. © 2012 IOP Publishing Ltd.

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Frank, E. D., Han, J., Palou-Rivera, I., Elgowainy, A., & Wang, M. Q. (2012). Methane and nitrous oxide emissions affect the life-cycle analysis of algal biofuels. Environmental Research Letters, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/7/1/014030

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