Balancing
Water Sustainability and Productivity Objectives
in Microalgae Cultivation: Siting Open Ponds by Considering Seasonal
Water-Stress Impact Using AWARE-US
Posted on 2020-02-07 - 19:22
Microalgae have great potential as
an energy and feed resource.
Here we evaluate the water use associated with freshwater algae cultivation
and find it is possible to scale U.S. algae biofuel production to
20.8 billion liters of renewable diesel annually without significant
water-stress impact. Among potential sites, water-stress is significantly
more variable than algae productivity across location and season.
Thus, it is possible to reduce water-stress impact, quantified as
water scarcity footprint, through the choice of algae site location.
We test three site-selection criteria based on (1) biomass productivity,
(2) water-use efficiency, and (3) water-stress impact and find that
adding water-stress constraints to productivity-based ranking of suitable
sites reduces water-stress impact by 97% and water consumption by
half, compared with biomass-productivity ranking alone, with little
productivity impact (<1.7% per-site on average). With 20.8 billion
liters, algae could meet 19.7% of U.S. jet fuel demand with a freshwater
demand of less than 1.4% of U.S. irrigation consumption. Evaluating
water-stress impact is important because the impact of unit water
consumption on water stress varies significantly across regions and
seasons. Considering seasonal water balances allows producers to understand
the combined seasonal effects of hydrologic flows and productivity,
thereby avoiding potential short-term water stress.
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Xu, Hui; Lee, Uisung; Coleman, André M.; Wigmosta, Mark S.; Sun, Ning; Hawkins, Troy; et al. (2020). Balancing
Water Sustainability and Productivity Objectives
in Microalgae Cultivation: Siting Open Ponds by Considering Seasonal
Water-Stress Impact Using AWARE-US. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.9b05347