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Sustainability of sunflower cultivation for biodiesel production in central Italy according to the Renewable Energy Directive methodology
Author(s) -
Daniele Duca,
Giuseppe Toscano,
Ester Foppa Pedretti,
Giovanni Riva
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of agricultural engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.3
H-Index - 18
eISSN - 2239-6268
pISSN - 1974-7071
DOI - 10.4081/jae.2013.222
Subject(s) - sustainability , biofuel , renewable energy , biodiesel , greenhouse gas , directive , sunflower , environmental science , biodiesel production , bioenergy , production (economics) , fossil fuel , agricultural engineering , agricultural science , natural resource economics , business , agricultural economics , agronomy , economics , engineering , waste management , computer science , ecology , biology , biochemistry , macroeconomics , programming language , catalysis
The use of renewable energies as alternative to fossil fuels has value from different points of view and has effects at environmental, social and economic level. These aspects are often connected to each other and together define the overall sustainability of bioenergy. At European level, the Directive 2009/28/EC gives the basic criteria for the estimation of sustainability of biofuels and indicates a minimum threshold of 35% of greenhouse gas saving for a biofuel in order to be considered sustainable. The Directive gives the possibility to identify standard regional values for the cultivation steps that could be utilized for the certification. This paper aims to give a contribution to the definition of these values considering the RED methodology applied to the sunflower cropped in central Italy which is characterized by a hilly landscape and not-irrigated crops. To determine input and output of sunflower cultivation in the central Italy, the results of PROBIO project, carried out by the Authors, were used. The sustainability of biodiesel produced from sunflower grown in central Italy is variable and depends on the nitrogen input and seasonal climatic conditions that affect the yields. The greenhouse gases savings of the Italian chain is 40% in average, greater than the required 35% and would be possible to assign this value as standard to the biofuel chain biodiesel from sunflower cultivated in central Italy. Using an averaged regional standard value guards against the possibility of considering unsustainable harvesting in unfavourable years and seeing it overestimated in the favourable ones

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