Assessment and quantification of marginal lands for biomass production in Europe using soil-quality indicators
The cultivation of bioenergy plants in fertile, arable lands increasingly results in new land use conflicts with food production and cannot be considered as sustainable. Marginal lands have been frequently considered as potential alternatives for producing bioenergy from biomass. However, clear defi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Soil 2018-12, Vol.4 (4), p.267-290 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The cultivation of bioenergy plants in fertile, arable lands
increasingly results in new land use conflicts with food production and cannot be
considered as sustainable. Marginal lands have been frequently considered as potential
alternatives for producing bioenergy from biomass. However, clear definitions and
assessment methods for selecting marginal lands and for calculating potentials are still
widely missing. The project “SEEMLA” aims at triggering the exploitation of currently underused
marginal lands for biomass production for energy purposes. Study sites have been selected
in different European countries: Germany, Greece, and Ukraine. The selected sites
represent a wide variety of different types of marginal lands. Based on a soil assessment
set given by the Muencheberg Soil Quality Rating (SQR) system potentially “marginal”
sites have been investigated. The SQR system allows for clearly distinguishing between
soils of higher and lower quality. Soils with SQR scores below 40 are regarded as
“marginal”. They can be classified into different groups with regard to the importance
of soil hazard indicators as evaluated by the SQR approach. The calculated SQR scores
correlate significantly with biomass yields of bioenergy plants. Further, the SQR method was adapted for use in a GIS study on marginal-land potentials in
Europe. Thus, 46 % of the investigated European area could be classified as
“marginal” with SQR scores below 40. From that area 22.6 % can be considered as
potentially suitable for producing renewable resources after eliminating protected sites
or other places not suitable for any kind of land use. Taking the ecological demands of
selected bioenergy plants into account it is possible to give first preliminary
recommendations for regional crop cultivation. It can be concluded that Europe offers a large potential for renewable resources from
marginal sites. However, the implementation into practice is often impeded by missing or
varying policies and regulations. A proper implementation needs clear regulations and
also incentives for farmers at the European level. |
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ISSN: | 2199-398X 2199-3971 2199-398X 2199-3971 |
DOI: | 10.5194/soil-4-267-2018 |