Land-Use Implications to Energy Balances and Greenhouse Gas Emissions on Biodiesel from Palm Oil Production in Indonesia

The objectives of this study are to identify the energy balance of Indonesian palm oil biodiesel production, including the stages of land use change, transport and milling and biodiesel processing, and to estimate the amount of greenhouse gas emissions from different production systems, including la...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Central European agriculture 2013-06, Vol.14 (2), p.35-46
Hauptverfasser: Harsono, Soni Sisbudi, Subronto, Bronto
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The objectives of this study are to identify the energy balance of Indonesian palm oil biodiesel production, including the stages of land use change, transport and milling and biodiesel processing, and to estimate the amount of greenhouse gas emissions from different production systems, including large and small holder plantations either dependent or independent, located in Kalimantan and in Sumatra. Results show that the accompanied implications of palm oil biodiesel produced in Kalimantan and Sumatra are different: energy input in Sumatra is higher than in Kalimantan, except for transport processes; the input/output ratios are positive in both regions and all production systems. The findings demonstrate that there are considerable differences between the farming systems and the locations in net energy yields (43.6 to 49.2 GJ [t.sup.-1] biodiesel [yr.sup.-1]) as well as greenhouse gas emissions (1969.6 to 5626.4 kg [CO.sub.2eq] [t.sup.-1] biodiesel y[r.sup.-1]). The output to input ratios are positive in all cases. The largest greenhouse gas emissions result from land use change effects, followed by the transesterification, fertilizer production, agricultural production processes, milling and transportation. Ecosystem carbon payback times range from 11 to 42 years.
ISSN:1332-9049
1332-9049
DOI:10.5513/JCEA01/14.2.1231