David Archer, Research Agricultural Scientist
Transcript of David Archer, Research Agricultural Scientist
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Agricultural Research Service
Corn Stover Cost, Availability, and
Sustainability
David Archer, Research Agricultural ScientistUSDA Agricultural Research Service
Northern Great Plains Research LaboratoryMandan, ND
Agricultural Research Service
Agricultural Research Service
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Points Favoring Harvest of Crop Residues
• Renewable• Doesn’t require use of additional land• Vast quantities produced• May facilitate adoption of less-intensive
tillage
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Source: USDA-NASS Cropland Data Layer
2007 Corn
Midwest (13 States) Totals:73.6 million acres11.4 billion bushels
U.S. Totals:86.5 million acres13.1 billion bushels
~300-350 million tons of stover grown in U.S.
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Agricultural Research Service
Sustainability Concerns with Harvesting Crop Residues
• Soil quality (tilth), organic matter (carbon) sustainability
• Soil structure, microbial activity• Erosion protection• Plant nutrients• Evaporation• Harvest damage (soil compaction, etc)
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Biomass Gasification Demonstration and Research Facility
• University of Minnesota, Morris– Plant-scale project provide
up to 80 percent of campus heating and cooling
– Allow research of alternative feedstocks (e.g. wood chips, grasses, wheat straw, corn cobs, corn stover)
– Require around 10,000 tons of biomass per yearPhoto credit: University of Minnesota
*
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Scale-up
* *
UMM plant: ~10,000 tons/yr
Chippewa Valley Ethanol Company,
Benson, MN: ~100,000 tons/yr
(replace natural gas)
100 million gallon/year cellulosic plant would require ~1 million tons/yr
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1st Step: Corn CobsAdvantages• One-pass harvest,
require little change in current production practices
• Relatively high volumetric energy density
• Low nutrient content
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10-mile Radius Around University of Minnesota, Morris
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Analysis
• EPIC simulation model – calibrated to USDA-ARS field research plots
at Morris, MN– Simulation conducted for each SSURGO soil
map unit within a 10-mile radius of UMM• Biomass farm gate cost includes:
– Biomass harvest and in-field transportation– Nutrient replacement (N,P,K)– Short-term crop yield impacts
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Average 45,558 tons available within10-mile radius
Note: based on $20/acre cob harvest cost
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0
10
20
30
40
50
0 10,000 20,000 30,000 40,000 50,000
Biomass Supply (ton)
Farm
gate
Bio
mas
s Pr
ice
($/to
n)
$33.37
Would require harvesting corn cobs from 14,000 acres per year.
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Could meet 10,000 ton demand at a price of $26.37/ton harvesting 7,100 ac/year.
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0
10
20
30
40
50
60
0 25,000 50,000 75,000 100,000
Biomass Supply (ton)
Farm
gate
Bio
mas
s Pr
ice
($/to
n)
CP C-S CobCP C-S StoverST C-S Stover
Production Alternatives10,000 ton at: $35.22/ton ST C-S Stover $33.37/ton CP C-S Cob $26.37/ton CP C-S Stover
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Breakeven Price Components ($/ton)
Breakeven Price = Harvest
Cost + Nutrient Replacement -
Grain Production
ChangeCP C-S Cob 35.66 29.31 7.32 0.97
(31.87-46.13) (27.00-38.12) (5.91-9.42) (-0.51-7.13)
CP C-S Stover 29.39 23.43 7.01 1.06(24.83-37.33) (22.31-27.74) (5.22-8.84) (-1.66-7.95)
ST C-S Stover 37.76 31.32 7.44 1.00(32.24-50.68) (29.60-37.99) (3.05-12.16) (-10.77-4.80)
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-8,000-7,000-6,000-5,000-4,000-3,000-2,000-1,000
01,0002,000
0 25,000 50,000 75,000 100,000
Biomass Supply (ton)
Soi
l Org
anic
Car
bon
Cha
nge
from
No
Bio
mas
s H
arve
st (t
on/y
ear)
CP C-S CobCP C-S StoverST C-S Stover
Soil Organic Carbon
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-1,000,000-800,000-600,000-400,000-200,000
0200,000400,000600,000
0 25,000 50,000 75,000 100,000
Biomass Supply (ton)
Soi
l Nitr
ogen
Cha
nge
from
N
o B
iom
ass
Har
vest
(lb
/yea
r)
CP C-S CobCP C-S StoverST C-S Stover
Soil Nitrogen
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-50,000
-40,000
-30,000
-20,000
-10,000
0
10,000
20,000
0 25,000 50,000 75,000 100,000
Biomass Supply (ton)
Wat
er E
rosi
on C
hang
e fro
m
No
Bio
mas
s H
arve
st
(ton/
year
)
CP C-S CobCP C-S StoverST C-S Stover
Water Erosion
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-10,000-8,000-6,000-4,000-2,000
02,0004,0006,0008,000
10,000
0 25,000 50,000 75,000 100,000
Biomass Supply (ton)
P L
oss
with
Sed
imen
t C
hang
e fro
m N
o Bi
omas
s H
arve
st (l
b/ye
ar)
CP C-S CobCP C-S StoverST C-S Stover
Phosphorus Loss
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Value of Environmental Impacts relative to CP C-S with no biomass harvest
-3.00
-2.00
-1.00
0.00
1.00
2.00
3.00
CP C-S Cob CP C-SStover
ST C-SStover
Valu
e of
Env
ironm
enta
l Ben
efits
($/to
n bi
omas
s)
Erosion ReductionC BenefitN Benefit
Sources: N Benefit: replacement cost of soil N depletion ($0.47/lb).C Benefit: 2009 CCX carbon credit value ($6.97/ton C)Erosion Reduction: Hansen and Ribaudo, USDA-ERS 2008 ($5.09/ton)
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Summary• In the short-term, production of corn stover could
meet UMM biomass needs at farmgate breakeven prices as low as $26/ton
• Without changes in tillage/cropping practices, corn stover harvest can have negative resource impacts which may threaten long-term sustainability
• Adoption of minimum tillage practices can mitigate many of these resource impacts, allowing sustainable corn stover harvest
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Acknowledgements
Thank you to collaborators:• Don Reicosky, USDA-ARS Morris, MN• Jane Johnson, USDA-ARS Morris, MN• Mike Reese, University of Minnesota,
West Central Research and Outreach Center