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Energy Consumption, Carbon Emissions and Global Warming Potential of Wolfberry Production in Jingtai Oasis, Gansu Province, China

During the last decade, China's agro-food production has increased rapidly and been accompanied by the challenge of increasing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and other environmental pollutants from fertilizers, pesticides, and intensive energy use. Understanding the energy use and environmental...

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Autores principales: Wang, Yaolin, Ma, Quanlin, Li, Yingke, Sun, Tao, Jin, Hujia, Zhao, Chuanyan, Milne, Eleanor, Easter, Mark, Paustian, Keith, Yong, Hoi Wen Au, McDonagh, John
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer US 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6875514/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31748948
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00267-019-01225-z
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author Wang, Yaolin
Ma, Quanlin
Li, Yingke
Sun, Tao
Jin, Hujia
Zhao, Chuanyan
Milne, Eleanor
Easter, Mark
Paustian, Keith
Yong, Hoi Wen Au
McDonagh, John
author_facet Wang, Yaolin
Ma, Quanlin
Li, Yingke
Sun, Tao
Jin, Hujia
Zhao, Chuanyan
Milne, Eleanor
Easter, Mark
Paustian, Keith
Yong, Hoi Wen Au
McDonagh, John
author_sort Wang, Yaolin
collection PubMed
description During the last decade, China's agro-food production has increased rapidly and been accompanied by the challenge of increasing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and other environmental pollutants from fertilizers, pesticides, and intensive energy use. Understanding the energy use and environmental impacts of crop production will help identify environmentally damaging hotspots of agro-production, allowing environmental impacts to be assessed and crop management strategies optimized. Conventional farming has been widely employed in wolfberry (Lycium barbarum) cultivation in China, which is an important cash tree crop not only for the rural economy but also from an ecological standpoint. Energy use and global warming potential (GWP) were investigated in a wolfberry production system in the Yellow River irrigated Jingtai region of Gansu. In total, 52 household farms were randomly selected to conduct the investigation using questionnaires. Total energy input and output were 321,800.73 and 166,888.80 MJ ha(−1), respectively, in the production system. The highest share of energy inputs was found to be electricity consumption for lifting irrigation water, accounting for 68.52%, followed by chemical fertilizer application (11.37%). Energy use efficiency was 0.52 when considering both fruit and pruned wood. Nonrenewable energy use (88.52%) was far larger than the renewable energy input. The share of GWP of different inputs were 64.52% electricity, 27.72% nitrogen (N) fertilizer, 5.07% phosphate, 2.32% diesel, and 0.37% potassium, respectively. The highest share was related to electricity consumption for irrigation, followed by N fertilizer use. Total GWP in the wolfberry planting system was 26,018.64 kg CO(2) eq ha(−1) and the share of CO(2), N(2)O, and CH(4) were 99.47%, 0.48%, and negligible respectively with CO(2) being dominant. Pathways for reducing energy use and GHG emission mitigation include: conversion to low carbon farming to establish a sustainable and cleaner production system with options of raising water use efficiency by adopting a seasonal gradient water pricing system and advanced irrigation techniques; reducing synthetic fertilizer use; and policy support: smallholder farmland transfer (concentration) for scale production, credit (small- and low-interest credit) and tax breaks.
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spelling pubmed-68755142019-12-06 Energy Consumption, Carbon Emissions and Global Warming Potential of Wolfberry Production in Jingtai Oasis, Gansu Province, China Wang, Yaolin Ma, Quanlin Li, Yingke Sun, Tao Jin, Hujia Zhao, Chuanyan Milne, Eleanor Easter, Mark Paustian, Keith Yong, Hoi Wen Au McDonagh, John Environ Manage Article During the last decade, China's agro-food production has increased rapidly and been accompanied by the challenge of increasing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and other environmental pollutants from fertilizers, pesticides, and intensive energy use. Understanding the energy use and environmental impacts of crop production will help identify environmentally damaging hotspots of agro-production, allowing environmental impacts to be assessed and crop management strategies optimized. Conventional farming has been widely employed in wolfberry (Lycium barbarum) cultivation in China, which is an important cash tree crop not only for the rural economy but also from an ecological standpoint. Energy use and global warming potential (GWP) were investigated in a wolfberry production system in the Yellow River irrigated Jingtai region of Gansu. In total, 52 household farms were randomly selected to conduct the investigation using questionnaires. Total energy input and output were 321,800.73 and 166,888.80 MJ ha(−1), respectively, in the production system. The highest share of energy inputs was found to be electricity consumption for lifting irrigation water, accounting for 68.52%, followed by chemical fertilizer application (11.37%). Energy use efficiency was 0.52 when considering both fruit and pruned wood. Nonrenewable energy use (88.52%) was far larger than the renewable energy input. The share of GWP of different inputs were 64.52% electricity, 27.72% nitrogen (N) fertilizer, 5.07% phosphate, 2.32% diesel, and 0.37% potassium, respectively. The highest share was related to electricity consumption for irrigation, followed by N fertilizer use. Total GWP in the wolfberry planting system was 26,018.64 kg CO(2) eq ha(−1) and the share of CO(2), N(2)O, and CH(4) were 99.47%, 0.48%, and negligible respectively with CO(2) being dominant. Pathways for reducing energy use and GHG emission mitigation include: conversion to low carbon farming to establish a sustainable and cleaner production system with options of raising water use efficiency by adopting a seasonal gradient water pricing system and advanced irrigation techniques; reducing synthetic fertilizer use; and policy support: smallholder farmland transfer (concentration) for scale production, credit (small- and low-interest credit) and tax breaks. Springer US 2019-11-20 2019 /pmc/articles/PMC6875514/ /pubmed/31748948 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00267-019-01225-z Text en © The Author(s) 2019 Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
spellingShingle Article
Wang, Yaolin
Ma, Quanlin
Li, Yingke
Sun, Tao
Jin, Hujia
Zhao, Chuanyan
Milne, Eleanor
Easter, Mark
Paustian, Keith
Yong, Hoi Wen Au
McDonagh, John
Energy Consumption, Carbon Emissions and Global Warming Potential of Wolfberry Production in Jingtai Oasis, Gansu Province, China
title Energy Consumption, Carbon Emissions and Global Warming Potential of Wolfberry Production in Jingtai Oasis, Gansu Province, China
title_full Energy Consumption, Carbon Emissions and Global Warming Potential of Wolfberry Production in Jingtai Oasis, Gansu Province, China
title_fullStr Energy Consumption, Carbon Emissions and Global Warming Potential of Wolfberry Production in Jingtai Oasis, Gansu Province, China
title_full_unstemmed Energy Consumption, Carbon Emissions and Global Warming Potential of Wolfberry Production in Jingtai Oasis, Gansu Province, China
title_short Energy Consumption, Carbon Emissions and Global Warming Potential of Wolfberry Production in Jingtai Oasis, Gansu Province, China
title_sort energy consumption, carbon emissions and global warming potential of wolfberry production in jingtai oasis, gansu province, china
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6875514/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31748948
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00267-019-01225-z
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