EDITOR'S NOTE:
Robert Anex and Matt Liebman presented this
information at three sessions at the Leopold
Center's 20th anniversary conference. Read materials
from their sessions:
This spring farmers
responded to the ethanol industry's demand for grain by
increasing their corn acreage by 19 percent over last
year, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture
estimates.
What if that happens again next year?
What if farmers decide against crop rotations and plant
corn on the same fields, year after year? Or, what if
farmers begin growing biomass crops such as switchgrass
for the production of ethanol from plant fiber?
 |
|
Anex examines sorghum-sudangrass,
a high-yielding biomass crop that's being studied
for production of cellulosic ethanol. [Photo by ISU
News Service] |
Will soil lose fertility?
Will erosion increase? Will the amount of energy needed
to produce biofuels go up or down? Will farm income
increase or decrease?
Will the bioeconomy be sustainable?
Robert Anex, an Iowa State associate professor of
agricultural and biosystems engineering and associate
director of Iowa State's Office of Biorenewables
Programs, is working to answer those and other questions
about the transition to an agriculture that produces
biomass as well as food and fiber.
One answer is that American agriculture is likely to
change.
"It may well be that the development of biomass-based
crops production systems can have as profound an impact
on agriculture and its environmental footprint as it
does on energy security and the global climate," Anex
and co-authors Andrew Heggenstaller and Matt Liebman of
Iowa State's agronomy department and Lee Lynd and Mark
Laser of Dartmouth College wrote in a recent paper.
"Whether this is a positive impact or a negative impact
will depend largely on how biomass feedstocks are
produced and converted, and the extent to which these
two activities are integrated."
Their paper, "Potential for Enhanced Nutrient Cycling
through Coupling of Agricultural and Bioenergy Systems,"
was recently published online by Crop Science,
the official publication of the Crop Science Society of
America.
The paper reports that as much as 78 percent of the
nitrogen fertilizer needed for crops could be recovered
from an integrated biological and thermochemical process
that converts switchgrass to ethanol. The study says
such nutrient recovery and recycling could significantly
improve the sustainability of biomass production and the
amount of energy required to produce ethanol from plant
fiber.
The researchers say the nutrient recovery could happen
this way: Plant fiber would be converted to liquid fuels
by pre-treatments and fermentation. The co-products of
fermentation would be dried and heated to turn the
solids into gases. The gasification would leave plant
nutrients in the resulting ash and ammonia. The
nutrients in both streams could be recovered and
returned to the fields that produced the biomass.
And that potential for nutrient recycling means there's
potential for a new kind of agriculture feeding a
sustainable bioeconomy.
"By creating a large, new domestic demand for
agricultural products, the advent of commercial-scale
conversion of biomass into ethanol and other industrial
chemicals is likely to have a strong influence on the
design of agricultural systems," the researchers wrote.
"The possibility of recycling nutrients from the
biorefinery to the agricultural system that produces the
feedstock may allow substantial improvements in both
sustainability and production efficiency."
But, sustaining biomass production is a complex system
that depends on many variables such as soil type and
slope, soil organic matter and the amount of biomass
actually harvested.
To help farmers begin to understand how collecting
biomass from their fields may affect soil fertility,
erosion, energy needs, labor and the bottom line, Anex
and a team of Iowa State researchers have added
bioeconomy elements to I-FARM, a Web tool that helps
farmers simulate and plan various changes to their
operations. The free tool focuses on the upper Midwest
but weather and soils data from 28 states are accessible
from its database. [on the web:
http://i-farmtools.org]
In one simulation, the I-FARM research team (see Winter
2006-07 newsletter, "Web-based
tool expands use for biomass crops") studied the
effects of harvesting corn stalks and leaves on three
farms in northwest Iowa's Palo Alto County. One grain
farm harvested no stover, one harvested 1,809 dry tons
of stover a year and the other harvested 3,077 dry tons
a year.
The simulations found the farm that harvested the most
stover also needed the most fertilizer, had the most
erosion and barely returned sustainable levels of
organic matter to the soil. That farm also recorded the
highest net farm income before taxes.
Anex's study of the sustainability of the bioeconomy is
being supported, in part, by grants from the U.S.
Department of Agriculture, the U.S. Department of Energy
and the National Science Foundation. The Leopold Center
is supporting crop systems work by Heggenstaller and
Liebman, as well as continuation of the team that
directs development of the I-FARM tool.
The studies are helping researchers answer some
questions about the sustainability of agriculture in a
bioeconomy, Anex said. But there are still lots of
questions about how everything in a new agricultural
system would fit together.
"Despite the promise of alternative crops and cropping
systems as well as the nutrient recovery and recycling
concepts examined here, there are still many questions
that remain about their practical implementation," Anex
and the other researchers wrote in their paper. "The
issues that have been addressed here and the questions
that have been raised are only a small subset of those
that must be addressed if we are to usher in a new and
beneficial agricultural revolution."