Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7480374 | Journal of Environmental Management | 2016 | 15 Pages |
Abstract
Solid Biofuels, i.e. wood, play an important role in present and future national and global climate change mitigation policies. Wood energy, while displaying favorable properties for the mitigation of climate change also exhibits several drawbacks, such as potentially high emission of particulate matter. To assess the environmental effects of shifts in the heating mix, emission factors of the comprising energy carriers and the Bavarian heating mix were determined. Through the application of regionalized substitution percentiles the environmental effects caused by shifts in the amount of final energy provided by solid biofuels could be identified. For this purpose, four scenarios, based on political and scientific specifications were assessed. In 2011 a total amount of 663.715Â TJ of final energy was used for the provision of heat in Bavaria, with solid biofuels exhibiting the third largest share of 12.6% (83% of renewable heat). Environmental effects were evaluated through life cycle assessments assessing the impact categories of Global Warming (GW), Particulate Matter emissions (PM), Freshwater Eutrophication (ET) and Acidification (AC). Additionally, the non-renewable primary energy consumption (PE) was analyzed. The heating mix in Bavaria (Baseline) causes emissions of 49.6Â Mt CO2-eq. * yrâ1(GW), 14.555Â t of PM2.5-eq. * yrâ1 (PM), 873.4Â t P-eq. * yrâ1 (ET), and 82.299Â kmol H+ eq. * yrâ1 (AC), for which 721,745Â TJ of primary energy were expended. Current policies entail a GHG reduction potential of approximately 1Â Mt CO2-eq. * yrâ1 while increasing the amount of energy wood by 15%. The maximum, hypothetical share of solid biofuels of the heating mix cannot surpass 25%, while the climate change mitigation performance of the current use of solid biofuels is approximately 6.4Â Mt CO2-eq. * yrâ1. GHG-emissions would be 13% higher and PM emissions 77% lower without this energetic use of wood. Furthermore, our calculations allow for new specified displacement factors through energy substitution, based on the current wood energy mix for regionalized conditions.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Authors
Christian Wolf, Daniel Klein, Klaus Richter, Gabriele Weber-Blaschke,