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Lifecycle GHG emissions for bioethanol production from lignocellulosic biomass: potential of jute and kenaf feedstock from an Indian perspective


Affiliations
1 Crop Production Division, ICAR-Central Research Institute for Jute and Allied Fibres, Kolkata 700 121, India

Energy security and the transition to a thriving low-carbon economy are essential for a developing nation like India. We examined the life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) and environmental impact of bioetha­nol production from jute and kenaf feedstock. It was observed that net GHG emissions from crop production and bio-refinery from jute and kenaf ethanol were 3.45 and 5.88 g MJ–1 respectively. This result is much lower than any other feedstock like sugarcane bagasse, corn stover, rice straw and wheat straw. Life cycle assess­ment revealed that ethanol produced from jute and kenaf biomass can reduce GHG emissions by 78–81% when compared with petrol. Bioethanol has the least negative effects (rice straw > sugarcane bagasse > wheat straw > corn stover > jute, kenaf) on the environment and resource depletion. It might deliver 60% of the ethanol requirement annually and may prove to be a workable technology for meeting ethanol-to-petrol blend targets.

Keywords

Biofuels, carbon footprint, environmental indicators, fibre crop feedstock, life cycle assessment.
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  • Lifecycle GHG emissions for bioethanol production from lignocellulosic biomass: potential of jute and kenaf feedstock from an Indian perspective

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Authors

Arvind Kumar Singh
Crop Production Division, ICAR-Central Research Institute for Jute and Allied Fibres, Kolkata 700 121, India
Laxmi Sharma
Crop Production Division, ICAR-Central Research Institute for Jute and Allied Fibres, Kolkata 700 121, India
Tinku Goswami
Crop Production Division, ICAR-Central Research Institute for Jute and Allied Fibres, Kolkata 700 121, India
Pratik Satya
Crop Production Division, ICAR-Central Research Institute for Jute and Allied Fibres, Kolkata 700 121, India
Gouranga Kar
Crop Production Division, ICAR-Central Research Institute for Jute and Allied Fibres, Kolkata 700 121, India

Abstract


Energy security and the transition to a thriving low-carbon economy are essential for a developing nation like India. We examined the life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) and environmental impact of bioetha­nol production from jute and kenaf feedstock. It was observed that net GHG emissions from crop production and bio-refinery from jute and kenaf ethanol were 3.45 and 5.88 g MJ–1 respectively. This result is much lower than any other feedstock like sugarcane bagasse, corn stover, rice straw and wheat straw. Life cycle assess­ment revealed that ethanol produced from jute and kenaf biomass can reduce GHG emissions by 78–81% when compared with petrol. Bioethanol has the least negative effects (rice straw > sugarcane bagasse > wheat straw > corn stover > jute, kenaf) on the environment and resource depletion. It might deliver 60% of the ethanol requirement annually and may prove to be a workable technology for meeting ethanol-to-petrol blend targets.

Keywords


Biofuels, carbon footprint, environmental indicators, fibre crop feedstock, life cycle assessment.



DOI: https://doi.org/10.18520/cs%2Fv127%2Fi9%2F1076-1082