Sustainability analysis of carbon dioxide emissions on combustion of biomass for electricity
Abstract
The transition towards renewable, low-carbon energy is a fundamental element of climate
change mitigation. Many countries around the world have set their decarbonization strategies to
reduce emissions. The European Union has already declared bioenergy to be carbon-neutral,
which has prompted other countries to expand their production. Bioenergy can only reduce
atmospheric CO2 over time through post-harvest increases in net primary production (NPP),
defined as the rate at which all the autotrophs in an ecosystem produce net useful chemical
energy using inorganic substances, such as CO2. Therefore, the climate impact of bioenergy
depends on CO2 emissions from the combustion of biomass, the fate of the harvested land, and
the dynamics of NPP. This study uses the dynamic bioenergy lifecycle analysis model, which
tracks the carbon stocks and fluxes in the atmosphere, biomass, soils, and oceans. The model is
used to simulate the substitution of coal for wood in electric power generation, estimating the
parameters governing NPP and other fluxes using data for the Canadian boreal forest. Our
dynamic analysis revealed that the first impact of displacing coal with wood is an immediate
increase in the CO2 concentration in the atmosphere. [...]