posted on 2021-03-16, 20:46authored byShruti K. Mishra, Sagar Gautam, Umakant Mishra, Corinne D. Scown
Incentivizing
bioenergy
crop production in locations with marginal soils, where low-input
perennial crops can provide net carbon sequestration and economic
benefits, will be crucial to building a successful bioeconomy. We
developed an integrated assessment framework to compare switchgrass
cultivation with corn-soybean rotations on the basis of production
costs, revenues, and soil organic carbon (SOC) sequestration at a
100 m spatial resolution. We calculated profits (or losses) when marginal
lands are converted from a corn-soy rotation to switchgrass across
a range of farm gate biomass prices and payments for SOC sequestration
in the State of Illinois, United States. The annual net SOC sequestration
and switchgrass yields are estimated to range from 0.1 to 0.4 Mg ha–1 and 7.3 to 15.5 Mg dry matter ha–1, respectively, across the state. Without payments for SOC sequestration,
only a small fraction of marginal corn-soybean land would achieve
a 20% profit margin if converted to switchgrass, but $40–80
Mg–1 CO2e compensation could increase
the economically viable area by 140–414%. With the compensation,
switchgrass cultivation for 10 years on 1.6 million ha of marginal
land in Illinois will produce biomass worth $1.6–2.9 billion
(0.95–1.8 million Mg dry biomass) and mitigate 5–22
million Mg CO2e.