Focus groups were used to identify opportunities, barriers, and strategies for increased utilization of forest biomass in the Southern United States. The groups were based on the seven critical components in the bioenergy and bio-based products value chain, as identified by the International Energy
The development of short-rotation willow in the northeastern United States for bioenergy and bioproducts, agroforestry and phytoremediation
β Scribed by T.A. Volk; L.P. Abrahamson; C.A. Nowak; L.B. Smart; P.J. Tharakan; E.H. White
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 339 KB
- Volume
- 30
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0961-9534
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Research on willow (Salix spp.) as a locally produced, renewable feedstock for bioenergy and bioproducts began in New York in the mid-1980s in response to growing concerns about environmental impacts associated with fossil fuels and declining rural economies. Simultaneous and integrated activities-including research, large-scale demonstrations, outreach and education, and market development-were initiated in the mid-1990s to facilitate the commercialization of willow biomass crops. Despite technological viability and associated environmental and local economic benefits, the high price of willow biomass relative to coal has been a barrier to wide-scale deployment of this system. The cost of willow biomass is currently $3:00 GJ Γ1 Γ°$57:30 odt Γ1 Γ compared to $1:4021:90 GJ Γ1 for coal. Yield improvements from traditional breeding efforts and increases in harvesting efficiency that are currently being realized promise to reduce the price differential. Recent policy changes at the federal level, including the provision to harvest bioenergy crops from Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) land and a closed-loop biomass tax credit, and state-level initiatives such as Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS) will help to further reduce the difference and foster markets for willow biomass. Years of work on willow biomass crop research and demonstration projects have increased our understanding of the biology, ecophysiology and management of willow biomass crops. Using an adaptive management model, this information has led to the deployment of willow for other applications such as phytoremediation, living snowfences, and riparian buffers across the northeastern US.
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