Study: Biofuel Crops Replacing Grasslands, Contributing to CO2 Emissions

- April 4, 2015, Grand Island Independent

A new study from Uni­ver­si­ty of Wis­con­sin-Madi­son researchers show that crops, includ­ing the corn and soy­beans used for bio­fu­els, expand­ed onto 7 mil­lion acres of new land in the U.S. over a recent four-year peri­od, replac­ing mil­lions of acres of grasslands.

The study — from UW-Madi­son grad­u­ate stu­dent Tyler Lark, geog­ra­phy pro­fes­sor Hol­ly Gibbs and post­doc­tor­al researcher Meghan Salmon — address­es the debate over whether the recent boom in demand for com­mon bio­fu­el crops has led to the car­bon-emit­ting con­ver­sion of nat­ur­al areas. It also reveals loop­holes in U.S. poli­cies that may con­tribute to these unin­tend­ed consequences.

 “We real­ized there was remark­ably lim­it­ed infor­ma­tion about how crop­lands have expand­ed across the Unit­ed States in recent years,” said Lark, the lead author of the study. “Our results are sur­pris­ing because they show large-scale con­ver­sion of new land­scapes, which most peo­ple didn’t expect.”

The con­ver­sion to corn and soy­beans alone, the researchers say, could have emit­ted as much car­bon diox­ide into the atmos­phere as 34 coal-fired pow­er plants oper­at­ing for one year — the equiv­a­lent of 28 mil­lion more cars on the road.

The study is the first com­pre­hen­sive analy­sis of land-use change across the U.S. between 2008 and 2012, in the “crit­i­cal time peri­od” fol­low­ing pas­sage of the fed­er­al Renew­able Fuel Stan­dard (RFS), and dur­ing a “new era” of agri­cul­ture and bio­fu­el demand, said Lark and Gibbs. The researchers said the results may aid pol­i­cy­mak­ers as Con­gress debates whether to reform or repeal parts of the RFS, which requires blend­ing of gaso­line with bio­fu­els that are sup­posed to be grown only on pre-exist­ing crop­land, in order to min­i­mize land-use change and its asso­ci­at­ed green­house gas emissions.

Lark recent­ly vis­it­ed Wash­ing­ton, D.C., to present the find­ings to the Envi­ron­men­tal Pro­tec­tion Agency and the White House Office of Man­age­ment and Bud­get, which share respon­si­bil­i­ty for rule-mak­ing and review of the RFS.

For instance, the study found that 3.5 mil­lion acres of corn and soy­beans grown dur­ing this time peri­od was pro­duced on new, rather than pre-exist­ing, crop­land, ren­der­ing it poten­tial­ly inel­i­gi­ble for renew­able fuel pro­duc­tion under the RFS. How­ev­er, this went unde­tect­ed due to lim­i­ta­tions in cur­rent fed­er­al mon­i­tor­ing, which cap­tures only nation­al-lev­el, aggre­gate land-use change rather than the high-res­o­lu­tion changes found in the study.

The study also showed that expand­ing the geo­graph­ic scope of anoth­er pol­i­cy, the Sod­saver pro­vi­sion of the 2014 Farm Bill, could bet­ter pre­vent wide­spread till­ing of new soils. This pol­i­cy reduces fed­er­al sub­si­dies to farm­ers who grow on pre­vi­ous­ly uncul­ti­vat­ed land, but it applies in only six North­ern Plains states.

The researchers say the find­ings sug­gest a nation­wide Sod­saver is need­ed to pro­tect remain­ing native ecosys­tems, since rough­ly two-thirds of new crop­land con­ver­sion occurred out­side of these states.

Using high-res­o­lu­tion satel­lite imagery data col­lect­ed over the last 40 years by the U.S. Depart­ment of Agri­cul­ture and the U.S. Geo­log­i­cal Sur­vey, the researchers iden­ti­fied where land had been con­vert­ed to crop­land, to what extent con­ver­sion had occurred, and the nature of the con­ver­sion — for instance, whether wet­lands were con­vert­ed for soy, or grass­lands were turned into cornfields.

Grass­lands are home to a diver­si­ty of species and store an abun­dance of car­bon in their soils. Yet the researchers found near­ly 80 per­cent of crop­land expan­sion replaced grass­lands, among them 1.6 mil­lion acres of undis­turbed nat­ur­al grass­land — equiv­a­lent in area to the state of Delaware.

Though not includ­ed in the study, the researchers esti­mate this con­ver­sion emit­ted as much car­bon diox­ide as 23 coal-fired pow­er plants run­ning for a year.

In fact, near­ly a quar­ter of all land con­vert­ed for crop pro­duc­tion came from these long-stand­ing prairies and ranges, much of it with­in the Cen­tral Plains from North Dako­ta to Texas.

“It mim­ics the extreme land-use change that led up to the Dust Bowl in the 1930s,” Lark said.

Because most new crop­land was plant­ed to corn for ethanol pro­duc­tion, he added, “we could be, in a sense, plow­ing up prairies with each mile we drive.”

The researchers also found that most new crop­lands were on mar­gin­al lands not well suit­ed for agri­cul­ture and often prone to height­ened risks of ero­sion, flood­ing and drought.

“There could be severe envi­ron­men­tal con­se­quences for bring­ing this land into crop pro­duc­tion,” Lark said.

Gibbs, also a pro­fes­sor in the UW-Madi­son Nel­son Insti­tute Cen­ter for Sus­tain­abil­i­ty and the Glob­al Envi­ron­ment, believes the find­ings present an oppor­tu­ni­ty to address the short­com­ings in exist­ing U.S. poli­cies while also facil­i­tat­ing a more cli­mate-friend­ly approach to biofuels.

“The good news is that our exist­ing poli­cies could be refined to help improve con­ser­va­tion,” she said. “By clos­ing the gaps in the exist­ing Sod­saver and RFS, we could bet­ter pro­tect our nation’s grass­lands and prairies.”


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