A realistic meteorological assessment of perennial biofuel crop deployment: a Southern Great Plains perspective
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Abstract
Utility of perennial bioenergy crops (e.g., switchgrass and miscanthus) offers unique opportunities to transition
toward a more sustainable energy pathway due to their reduced carbon footprint, averted competition with food
crops, and ability to grow on abandoned and degraded farmlands. Studies that have examined biogeophysical
impacts of these crops noted a positive feedback between near-surface cooling and enhanced evapotranspiration
(ET), but also potential unintended consequences of soil moisture and groundwater depletion. To better understand
hydrometeorological effects of perennial bioenergy crop expansion, this study conducted high-resolution
(2-km grid spacing) simulations with a state-of-the-art atmospheric model (Weather Research and Forecasting
system) dynamically coupled to a land surface model. We applied the modeling system over the Southern Plains
of the United States during a normal precipitation year (2007) and a drought year (2011). By focusing the
deployment of bioenergy cropping systems on marginal and abandoned farmland areas (to reduce the potential
conflict with food systems), the research presented here is the first realistic examination of hydrometeorological
impacts associated with perennial bioenergy crop expansion. Our results illustrate that the deployment of perennial
bioenergy crops leads to widespread cooling (1–2 °C) that is largely driven by an enhanced reflection of
shortwave radiation and, secondarily, due to an enhanced ET. Bioenergy crop deployment was shown to reduce
the impacts of drought through simultaneous moistening and cooling of the near-surface environment. However,
simulated impacts on near-surface cooling and ET were reduced during the drought relative to a normal
precipitation year, revealing differential effects based on background environmental conditions. This study
serves as a key step toward the assessment of hydroclimatic sustainability associated with perennial bioenergy
crop expansion under diverse hydrometeorological conditions by highlighting the driving mechanisms and processes
associated with this energy pathway.
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Wagner, M., Wang, M., Miguez‐Macho, G., Miller, J., VanLoocke, A., Bagley, J.E., Bernacchi, C.J. and Georgescu, M. (2017), A realistic meteorological assessment of perennial biofuel crop deployment: a Southern Great Plains perspective. GCB Bioenergy, 9: 1024-1041. doi:10.1111/gcbb.12403
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https://doi.org/10.1111/gcbb.12403Sponsors
This work was funded by NSF Grant EAR-1204774
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© 2016 The Authors. Global Change Biology Bioenergy published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited








