Adoption Subsidies and Environmental Impacts of Alternative Energy Crops, March 2007


Autoria(s): Desconhecido
Data(s)

2007

Resumo

We provide estimates of the costs associated with inducing substantial conversion of land from production of traditional crops to switchgrass. Higher traditional crop prices due to increased demand for corn from the ethanol industry has increased the relative advantage that row crops have over switchgrass. Results indicate that farmers will convert to switchgrass production only with significant conversion subsidies. To examine potential environmental consequences of conversion, we investigate three stylized landscape usage scenarios, one with an entire conversion of a watershed to switchgrass production, a second with the entire watershed planted to continuous corn under a 50% removal rate of the biomass, and a third scenario that places switchgrass on the most erodible land in the watershed and places continuous corn on the least erodible. For each of these illustrative scenarios, the watershed-scale Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) hydrological model (Arnold et al., 1998; Arnold and Forher, 2005) is used to evaluate the effect of these landscape uses on sediment and nutrient loadings in the Maquoketa Watershed in eastern Iowa.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://publications.iowa.gov/5090/1/07bp50.pdf

(2007) Adoption Subsidies and Environmental Impacts of Alternative Energy Crops, March 2007. Iowa State University

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

http://publications.iowa.gov/5090/

Palavras-Chave #Energy resources #Economic development #Economic forecasts #Alternative energy resources
Tipo

Departmental Report

NonPeerReviewed