1 research outputs found
Regional Allocation of Biomass to U.S. Energy Demands under a Portfolio of Policy Scenarios
The potential for widespread use
of domestically available energy
resources, in conjunction with climate change concerns, suggest that
biomass may be an essential component of U.S. energy systems in the
near future. Cellulosic biomass in particular is anticipated to be
used in increasing quantities because of policy efforts, such as federal
renewable fuel standards and state renewable portfolio standards.
Unfortunately, these independently designed biomass policies do not
account for the fact that cellulosic biomass can equally be used for
different, competing energy demands. An integrated assessment of multiple
feedstocks, energy demands, and system costs is critical for making
optimal decisions about a unified biomass energy strategy. This study
develops a spatially explicit, best-use framework to optimally allocate
cellulosic biomass feedstocks to energy demands in transportation,
electricity, and residential heating sectors, while minimizing total
system costs and tracking greenhouse gas emissions. Comparing biomass
usage across three climate policy scenarios suggests that biomass
used for space heating is a low cost emissions reduction option, while
biomass for liquid fuel or for electricity becomes attractive only
as emissions reduction targets or carbon prices increase. Regardless
of the policy approach, study results make a strong case for national
and regional coordination in policy design and compliance pathways