Botany Department, School of Natural Sciences, Trinity College Dublin, University of Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland.
Institute of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK.
Glob Chang Biol. 2020 Oct;26(10):5358-5364. doi: 10.1111/gcb.15296. Epub 2020 Aug 20.
To reach the reduced carbon emission targets proposed by the Paris agreement, one of the widely proposed decarbonizing strategies, referred to as negative emissions technologies (NETs), is the production and combustion of bioenergy crops in conjunction with carbon capture and storage (BECCS). However, concerns have been increasingly raised that relying on the potential of BECCS to achieve negative emissions could result in delayed reductions in gross CO emissions, with consequent high risk of overshooting global temperature targets. We focus on two particular issues: the carbon efficiency and payback time of bioenergy use in BECCS and the potential constraints on the supply of bioenergy. The simplistic vision of BECCS is that 1 tonne of CO captured in the growth of biomass equates to 1 tonne of CO sequestered geologically, but this cannot be the case as CO is emitted by variable amounts during the lifecycle from crop establishment to sequestration below ground in geological formations. The deployment of BECCS is ultimately reliant on the availability of sufficient, sustainably sourced, biomass. The two most important factors determining this supply are land availability and land productivity. The upper bounds of the area estimates required correspond to more than the world's harvested land for cereal production. To achieve these estimates of biomass availability requires the rapid evolution of a multitude of technological, social, political and economic factors. Here, we question whether, because of the limited sustainable supply of biomass, BECCS should continue to be considered the dominant NET in IPCC and other scenarios achieving the Paris targets, or should it be deemed no longer fit for purpose?
为了实现《巴黎协定》提出的减排目标,一种广泛提出的脱碳策略是负排放技术(NETs),即将生物能源作物的生产和燃烧与碳捕获和封存(BECCS)结合起来。然而,人们越来越担心,依赖 BECCS 的潜力来实现负排放可能会导致总 CO 排放量的减少延迟,从而导致全球温度目标超标风险增加。我们关注两个特别的问题:BECCS 中生物能源利用的碳效率和回报时间,以及生物能源供应的潜在限制。BECCS 的简单愿景是,生物质生长过程中捕获的 1 吨 CO 相当于地质封存的 1 吨 CO,但事实并非如此,因为在从作物种植到地下地质构造封存的生命周期中,CO 会以不同的量排放。BECCS 的部署最终取决于充足的、可持续供应的生物质的可用性。决定这一供应的两个最重要因素是土地可用性和土地生产力。所需面积估计的上限对应于世界上用于谷物生产的已耕地面积以上。要实现这些生物质可用性的估计值,需要快速发展众多技术、社会、政治和经济因素。在这里,我们质疑由于生物质的可持续供应有限,BECCS 是否应该继续被视为 IPCC 和其他实现巴黎目标的情景中的主要 NET,或者它是否不再适用?