Bibliography - L. A. Solarzano
- Schneider, L. C., A. P. Kinzig, Eric Larson, and L. A. Solarzano, 2001: Method for Spatially-Explicit Calculations of Potential Biomass Yields and Assessment of Land Availability for Biomass Energy Production in Northeastern Brazil. Agriculture, Ecosystems, and Environment, 84(3), doi:10.1016/S0167-8809(00)00242-5 207-226
[ Abstract ]The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has suggested that large-scale use of carbon-neutral or low-carbon
biomass-derived energy will be essential in order to limit carbon emissions from the world’s energy sector in the future. The
IPCC envisions as much as 400 million ha being devoted to biomass energy plantations by 2050. To realize production of
biomass energy at such levels—in a manner that would be both biogeophysically sustainable and socially beneficial—will
require planning and policy development at sub-national levels, taking into account biogeophysical, social, cultural, economic,
institutional, and other factors. This paper presents amethod for spatially explicit calculations for estimating potential biomass
yields over relatively large geographic regions. The calculations use geo-referenced data inputs that include rainfall, insolation,
temperature, soil quality, and soil depth. The methodology is applied to the Northeast region of Brazil, which accounts for 10%
of the area of South America. Northeast Brazil is an interesting site for illustrative purposes in part because it is biologically,
geologically, and socio-economically diverse and in part because the main electric utility serving the region is exploring the
development of biomass-based electricity generation to meet future increases in electricity demand. Results from a spatially
explicit, biogeophysical model like that presented here could be combined with other spatially explicit information such as
road layouts, existing land uses, population densities and growth rates, distributions of endangered species, archeologically
significant areas, etc. to inform planning and policy development related to biomass energy at a regional or national level.
One illustration of such an analysis is included here. For on-the-ground implementation of biomass production systems,
finer-resolution analysis and intimate local participation is essential.
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