articleScienceDec 7, 2006Closed access

Carbon-Negative Biofuels from Low-Input High-Diversity Grassland Biomass

University of Minnesota

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Biofuels derived from low-input high-diversity (LIHD) mixtures of native grassland perennials can provide more usable energy, greater greenhouse gas reductions, and less agrichemical pollution per hectare than can corn grain ethanol or soybean biodiesel. High-diversity grasslands had increasingly higher bioenergy yields that were 238% greater than monoculture yields after a decade. LIHD biofuels are carbon negative because net ecosystem carbon dioxide sequestration (4.4 megagram hectare(-1) year(-1) of carbon dioxide in soil and roots) exceeds fossil carbon dioxide release during biofuel production (0.32 megagram hectare(-1) year(-1)). Moreover, LIHD biofuels can be produced on agriculturally degraded lands…

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1,812
total citations
FWCI
176.90
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100%
References
37
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Biofuel
  • Environmental science
  • Biomass (ecology)
  • Monoculture
  • Agronomy
  • Carbon sequestration
  • Hectare
  • Bioenergy
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Zero hunger
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