Biomass Industry Needs to Prepare for Water Constraints

- by Phil Cicio­ra, March 5, 2014. Source: Uni­ver­si­ty of Illi­nois News Office

Debates sur­round­ing the sus­tain­abil­i­ty of bioen­er­gy have emerged in recent years relat­ing to water qual­i­ty and quan­ti­ty, and those debates will only grow loud­er as big urban areas in the U.S. start run­ning out of water and envi­ron­men­tal groups and the Envi­ron­men­tal Pro­tec­tion Agency push for more strin­gent poli­cies to address nutri­ent pol­lu­tion, said Jody Endres, a pro­fes­sor of bioen­er­gy, envi­ron­men­tal and nat­ur­al resources law at Illinois.

“From a bioen­er­gy stand­point, that’s when we’re going to have to fig­ure out how we pri­or­i­tize grow­ing crops for bioen­er­gy,” said Endres, who also is an affil­i­ate of the Ener­gy Bio­sciences Insti­tute, a col­lab­o­ra­tion involv­ing the U. of I., the Uni­ver­si­ty of Cal­i­for­nia at Berke­ley, the Lawrence Berke­ley Nation­al Lab­o­ra­to­ry and BP, an ener­gy company.

“With regard to water short­ages, agri­cul­ture might lose that bat­tle against more pow­er­ful urban inter­ests, although cer­tain states – Texas, in par­tic­u­lar – have been favor­able to agri­cul­tur­al inter­ests,” she said. “But no mat­ter how this plays out, we as a soci­ety are going to have to think about how can we meet the water demands of our cit­i­zens, as well as improv­ing the qual­i­ty of the water itself, and how much of it we decide to devote to bio­fu­els crops, par­tic­u­lar­ly in areas of water stress.”

Accord­ing to Endres, increased reg­u­la­to­ry pres­sure on agriculture’s con­tri­bu­tion to nutri­ent pol­lu­tion is almost cer­tain, as demon­strat­ed by the EPA’s actions in the Chesa­peake Bay and in Florida.

“Pres­sure is also mount­ing from envi­ron­men­tal­ists for the EPA to take action to com­bat hypox­ia in the Gulf of Mex­i­co, which has already led to a loss of fish­ing and tourism jobs that rely on a func­tion­ing ecosys­tem,” she said. “What all of this means is that bio­mass pro­duc­ers in the U.S. need to be ahead of the curve and put in place met­rics that can demon­strate their poten­tial to ben­e­fit water qual­i­ty. These would help pro­duc­ers to par­tic­i­pate in emerg­ing ecosys­tem ser­vices mar­kets such as nutri­ent cred­it trad­ing pro­grams like those already in place in Virginia.”

As both water qual­i­ty and quan­ti­ty are reduced, com­pe­ti­tion for remain­ing use­able water resources inevitably goes up among agri­cul­tur­al, eco­log­i­cal and urban uses, Endres said.

“In light of severe drought across much of the U.S., water quan­ti­ty can no longer be tak­en for grant­ed by agri­cul­tur­al pro­duc­ers, who may be more accus­tomed to abun­dant water sup­plies char­ac­ter­is­tic of rain-fed agri­cul­ture,” she said. “So water use will like­ly be cur­tailed, par­tic­u­lar­ly in areas already under stress from drought, and where irri­ga­tion with­drawals are tak­en from deplet­ed under­ground aquifers. There also will be increased nation­al pres­sure to do a nutri­ent-man­age­ment strat­e­gy in the states, if not at the nation­al level.”

In the U.S., the areas of great­est con­cern for the bio­mass indus­try lie pri­mar­i­ly in the Great Plains, where agri­cul­ture is more depen­dent on irri­ga­tion. Com­plex state laws, exem­pli­fied by the tan­gle of laws in Texas, will com­pli­cate future dis­putes over water.

“U.S. law basi­cal­ly address­es water quan­ti­ty and qual­i­ty in dif­fer­ent ways,” Endres said. “At the fed­er­al lev­el, we have the Clean Water Act that deals with qual­i­ty. But then we have 50 dif­fer­ent state rules on water quan­ti­ty – the two are some­times relat­ed to one another.”

Accord­ing to the paper, sus­tain­abil­i­ty stan­dards for ener­gy bio­mass in Europe are dri­ving efforts to gauge the effects of bio­mass prac­tices in the U.S.

“Much of Euro­pean bioen­er­gy is going to come from the U.S. and Brazil, so they’re very inter­est­ed in how we han­dle sus­tain­abil­i­ty issues,” Endres said. “Europe is real­ly a leader in think­ing about bioen­er­gy from a sus­tain­abil­i­ty stand­point. They’ve been deal­ing a lot with the green­house gas aspect of it, but the next ques­tion, and I think the big­ger and more impor­tant ques­tion, is how bioen­er­gy and the def­i­n­i­tion of its sus­tain­abil­i­ty fits with com­pet­ing water uses.”

Efforts to reduce the envi­ron­men­tal foot­print of bio­mass pro­duc­tion, cou­pled with the ben­e­fits of peren­ni­al crops over annu­al crops, coin­cide with fed­er­al efforts to reduce nutri­ent and sed­i­ment pol­lu­tion, Endres said.

“We have a lot of research col­lab­o­ra­tion with the Euro­peans on how we han­dle the green­house gas aspect of it, but with water, Euro­peans must begin to under­stand how 50 states, each with dif­fer­ent laws, han­dle quan­ti­ty issues,” she said

Accord­ing to Endres, the aggres­sive mea­sures by the EPA to clean up nutri­ent-pol­lut­ed water­ways present valu­able incen­tives for peren­ni­al bio­mass crops to play a major role in reduc­ing pol­lu­tion run-off.

“The bio­mass sec­tor is still in its infan­cy, so we want to make sure that it can stand on its own two feet, from a finan­cial stand­point,” Endres said. “But you have to bal­ance that with the oppor­tu­ni­ty aspect of it, espe­cial­ly for peren­ni­al crops, which mesh nice­ly with nutri­ent-reduc­tion strate­gies. So there’s real oppor­tu­ni­ty here in the U.S.”

The paper was pub­lished as a chap­ter in the report “Bioen­er­gy and Water” by the Joint Research Cen­tre of the Euro­pean Commission’s Insti­tute for Ener­gy & Transport.


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