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      The future of bioenergy

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          Abstract

          Energy from biomass plays a large and growing role in the global energy system. Energy from biomass can make significant contributions to reducing carbon emissions, especially from difficult‐to‐decarbonize sectors like aviation, heavy transport, and manufacturing. But land‐intensive bioenergy often entails substantial carbon emissions from land‐use change as well as production, harvesting, and transportation. In addition, land‐intensive bioenergy scales only with the utilization of vast amounts of land, a resource that is fundamentally limited in supply. Because of the land constraint, the intrinsically low yields of energy per unit of land area, and rapid technological progress in competing technologies, land intensive bioenergy makes the most sense as a transitional element of the global energy mix, playing an important role over the next few decades and then fading, probably after mid‐century. Managing an effective trajectory for land‐intensive bioenergy will require an unusual mix of policies and incentives that encourage appropriate utilization in the short term but minimize lock‐in in the longer term.

          Abstract

          Energy from biomass plays a large and growing role in the global energy system. But because of the land constraint, the intrinsically low yields of energy per unit of land area, and rapid technological progress in competing technologies, land intensive bioenergy makes the most sense as a transitional element of the global energy mix, playing an important role over the next few decades and then fading, probably after mid‐century.

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          Most cited references41

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          Artificial photosynthesis for solar water-splitting

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            Carbon-negative biofuels from low-input high-diversity grassland biomass.

            Biofuels derived from low-input high-diversity (LIHD) mixtures of native grassland perennials can provide more usable energy, greater greenhouse gas reductions, and less agrichemical pollution per hectare than can corn grain ethanol or soybean biodiesel. High-diversity grasslands had increasingly higher bioenergy yields that were 238% greater than monoculture yields after a decade. LIHD biofuels are carbon negative because net ecosystem carbon dioxide sequestration (4.4 megagram hectare(-1) year(-1) of carbon dioxide in soil and roots) exceeds fossil carbon dioxide release during biofuel production (0.32 megagram hectare(-1) year(-1)). Moreover, LIHD biofuels can be produced on agriculturally degraded lands and thus need to neither displace food production nor cause loss of biodiversity via habitat destruction.
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              Carbon Lock-In: Types, Causes, and Policy Implications

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                wreid@packard.org
                Journal
                Glob Chang Biol
                Glob Chang Biol
                10.1111/(ISSN)1365-2486
                GCB
                Global Change Biology
                John Wiley and Sons Inc. (Hoboken )
                1354-1013
                1365-2486
                05 December 2019
                January 2020
                : 26
                : 1 ( doiID: 10.1111/gcb.v26.1 )
                : 274-286
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] David and Lucile Packard Foundation Los Altos CA USA
                [ 2 ] Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment Stanford University Stanford CA USA
                Author notes
                [*] [* ] Correspondence

                Walter V. Reid, David and Lucile Packard Foundation, Los Altos, CA 94022, USA.

                Email: wreid@ 123456packard.org

                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2995-8450
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1684-8247
                Article
                GCB14883
                10.1111/gcb.14883
                6973137
                31642554
                b0102b3b-61ba-4c25-bd3b-d82453716a4f
                © 2019 The Authors. Global Change Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

                This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 19 August 2019
                : 07 October 2019
                Page count
                Figures: 3, Tables: 0, Pages: 13, Words: 11049
                Categories
                Invited Opinion
                Invited Opinion
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                January 2020
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_JATSPMC version:5.7.5 mode:remove_FC converted:21.01.2020

                bioenergy,bioenergy with ccs,biofuels,biomass,climate change,land scarcity,lock‐in,path dependency

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