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Synergy and competition of water in Food-Energy-Water Nexus: Insights for sustainability النص الكامل
2022
Hua, En | Engel, Bernie A. | Guan, Jiajie | Yin, Jieling | Wu, Nan | Han, Xinxueqi | Sun, Shikun | He, Jianqiang | Wang, Yubao
Studies on the Food-Energy-Water Nexus can help researchers, policy makers, practitioners, and stakeholders identify opportunities to maintain the nexus’ synergies and trade-offs. Water, the most sensitive element in the Food-Energy-Water Nexus, readily influences the stability, cooperativity, and safety of the nexus. The key initiative to ensure water security in the Food-Energy-Water Nexus is properly handling water for food and energy production, but the existed conceptual framework and evaluation system are incomplete. This paper uses the Driver-Pressure-State-Impact-Response model and the water footprint theory to construct an optimization approach to evaluate the synergy and competition for water between food and energy at five levels. This optimization approach was tested and implemented based on a case study of 31 provinces in the Chinese Mainland from 1997 to 2016. The results showed that the blue water footprint of 31 provinces was 263.48 Gm³ in 2016, and the gray water footprint was 1518.57 Gm³, which led to inter-industry competitive water use and water unsustainability. In 2016, the 31 provinces had developed into Industry Synergy Sustainability scenario (1 province), Industry Synergy Unsustainability scenario (9 provinces), Industry Competition Unsustainability scenario (16 provinces), and Industry Competition Sustainability scenario (5 provinces), presenting a spatially clustered distribution pattern. Except for Xinjiang and Jilin, the remaining 29 provinces gradually developed into sustainable or synergistic scenarios. The total production water footprint in the Industry Competition Unsustainability scenario reached 4.08 m³/kg in 2016, while the Industry Synergy Sustainability scenario was only 3.67 m³/kg. This paper proposes two response paths, based on market allocation and administrative means, to facilitate the gradual evolution of the Industry Competition Unsustainability scenario into the Industry Synergy Sustainability scenario. These paths contribute to the efficient and sustainable integrated management of food, energy, and water globally.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Halimione portulacoides biomass - a sustainable feedstock for bioenergy production from an integrated water-energy-food system النص الكامل
2022
Coimbra, Ricardo N. | Custódio, Marco | Cuerda-Correa, Eduardo M. | Ali Khan, Moonis | Calado, Ricardo | Lillebø, Ana I. | Otero, Marta
In view of a water-energy-food (WEF) nexus strategy, the present work assessed the bioenergy production potential of Halimione portulacoides used for the phytoremediation of nutrient-rich simulated wastewater from saltwater-based integrated multi-trophic aquaculture (IMTA). Specimens of this halophyte plant were grown in hydroponics under four different nutrient treatments with distinct nitrogen (N) and phosphorous (P) concentrations. Ultimate and proximate analysis, calorific value and thermogravimetric analysis coupled to mass spectrometry were used to assess the bioenergy potential of the non-edible biomass of the plants, namely the canes (C) and roots (R), and of commercial pellets (CP), which were used as benchmark. R and, especially, CP had higher carbon but lower oxygen content and larger volatiles but lower ashes than C. The higher heating values (HHV) of C (16–17 MJ kg⁻¹) and R (17–18 MJ kg⁻¹) were the same order as those of conventional energy crops and CP (20 MJ kg⁻¹). Although mass loss and associated gaseous emissions during temperature programmed pyrolysis occurred mainly between 250 and 650 °C for all biomasses, they took place at slightly higher temperatures for C > CP > R. In any case, the integrated gaseous emissions during the pyrolysis of C, R, and CP were very similar and included H₂, CH₄, CO, and CO₂ (syngas main constituents). Biomass production of C was affected by the nutrients load of the applied treatments, but this was not the case for R. Also, the nutrients treatments had no detectable effects on the biomasses’ ultimate or proximate analysis, HHV, thermal decomposition or resultant gaseous emissions. Thermal properties and behaviour of C and R were very similar to those of CP, showing their potential for bioenergy production and revealing that a WEF nexus strategy can be implemented in IMTA by energetic valorization of non-edible biomass of H. portulacoides used for water phytoremediation.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Optimization of agricultural resources in water-energy-food nexus in complex environment: A perspective on multienergy coordination النص الكامل
2022
Li, Mo | Zhao, Li | Zhang, Chenglong | Liu, Yangdachuan | Fu, Qiang
Synergistic regulation of various agricultural resources in agricultural water-energy-food nexus systems is important for understanding the key regulatory processes and related synergistic relationships. However, regulation with the goal of multienergy interaction and coordination to adapt to environmental changes is extremely challenging. As a solution to the problem, an uncertainty-based modeling approach is proposed for the optimal regulation of water, soil and energy resources from a multienergy synergy perspective by integrating multiobjective nonlinear programming, left–right type fuzzy numbers and credibility programming into a framework. The approach aims to assess the interactions and synergistic relationships among biomass electrical energy, light energy, and hydroelectric energy, clarify the dynamic characteristics of resource allocation and socioeconomic and environmental effects, and capture the high uncertainty in the nexus area. This study contributes to the efficient and sustainable management of agricultural water, energy and land resources. The approach was tested and implemented based on a case study of Jinxi Irrigation District in China. The results reveal that there are trade-offs and games among the light use efficiency, hydroelectric energy and biomass energy, and their coordination enhances the system synergy among resources, the economy and the environment by 12.22%, with a 2.67% increase in the irrigation water use efficiency and a 4.92% increase in the energy use efficiency. Uncertainties significantly affect the synergy among multiple energies. More water will promote collaborative energy management, with the coordination development degree will increase by 2.20% when the water quantity increases by 4.16%, however, it accompanied higher water scarcity risks.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Optimization of water replacement during leachate recirculation for two-phase food waste anaerobic digestion system with off-gas diversion النص الكامل
2021
Luo, Liwen | Kaur, Guneet | Zhao, Jun | Zhou, Jun | Xu, Suyun | Varjani, Sunita | Wong, Jonathan W.C.
An integrated two-phase AD with acidogenic off-gas diversion from a leach bed reactor to an upflow anaerobic sludge blanket was developed for improving methane production. However, this system had its own technical limitation such as mass transfer efficiency for solid-state treatment. In order to optimize the mass transfer in this two phase AD system, leachate recirculation with various water replacement rates regulating the total solids contents (TS) at 12.5%, 15%, and 17.5% was aim to investigate its effect on methane generation. The solubilization of food waste was increased with decreasing TS content, while the enzymatic hydrolysis showed the opposite trend. A TS contents of 15% presented the best acidogenic performance with the highest hydrogen yield of 30.3 L H₂/kg VSₐddₑd, which subsequently resulted in the highest methane production. The present study provides an easy approach to enhance food waste degradation in acidogenic phase and energy conversion in methanogenic phase simultaneously.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]CO2 utilisation in agricultural greenhouses: A novel ‘plant to plant’ approach driven by bioenergy with carbon capture systems within the energy, water and food Nexus النص الكامل
2021
Ghiat, Ikhlas | Mahmood, Farhat | Govindan, Rajesh | Al-Ansari, Tareq
Securing the growing populations' demand for food energy and water whilst adapting to climate change is extremely challenging. In this regard, bioenergy coupled with carbon capture and storage or utilisation (BECCS/U) is an attractive solution for meeting both the population demand, and offsetting CO₂ emissions. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of BECCS/U pathways utilising CO₂ for agricultural enrichment in enhancing food systems and reducing GHG emissions within the energy, water and food nexus concept. The study bridges negative emissions with CO₂ fertilisation within an integrated system. It consists of a source of CO₂ represented by a biomass-based integrated gasification combined cycle with carbon capture, a CO₂ network for a sustainable CO₂ supply, and a CO₂ sink characterised by agricultural greenhouses. A techno-economic and environmental analysis of each of these subsystems is conducted, feeding to an overall performance analysis of the integrated BECCS/U pathway. Results reveal synergetic opportunities between the energy, water and food subsectors, whereby CO₂ is captured from an energy sub-system and is efficiently utilised to enhance food sub-systems by improving productivity and reducing crop water requirements. Thus, the proposed integrated BECCS/U system is able to improve food availability by enhancing the food system, increasing the yield by 13.8%, whilst reducing crop water requirements by 28%. System outputs resulted in a levelised cost of 0.35 $/kg of agricultural produce when the system is scaled-up, and an abatement of the related environmental burdens throughout the supply chain by achieving negative CO₂ emissions of 24.6 kg/m².year of cultivated land.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Socio-economic and environmental analysis on solar thermal energy-based polygeneration system for rural livelihoods applications on an Island through interventions in the energy-water-food nexus النص الكامل
2022
Thomas, Sanju | Sahoo, Sudhansu S. | Ajithkumar, G | Thomas, Sheffy | Rout, Auroshis | Mahapatra, Swarup K.
Rural electrification is constrained by grid extension infrastructural cost, isolated low rural populations, lack of anchor loads, and repayment potential of villagers while decentralized renewable energy power is constrained by high capital cost, low reliability, and non-workable business models. Solar thermal energy can produce electricity, heating, cooling, water, and fuel and has the potential for storage for livelihood applications. Hence solar thermal energy-based cogeneration and polygeneration systems have the potential for intervention in rural livelihoods with a focus on the energy-land–water-food nexus. However, standalone solar thermal systems are capital intensive and shadowed by photovoltaics. In the current work, an island in the Indian Ocean is considered for the study, and a solar thermal energy-based hybrid polygeneration system is designed with end products such as electricity, heating, cooling for food storage, and desalinating to get pure water. The turbine, VAM, pasteurization unit, and membrane distillation unit are the considered components in the present analysis. The thermodynamic properties of the key components of the polygeneration system are identified and the energy and entropy balance of the system is done. The levelised cost of production of polygeneration outputs for 25-year operational life with an accelerated depreciation of 30% of the capital cost, over 8 years is carried out. It is found that the electricity and water pricing are INR 14.71 and INR 14.01 per unit which are not attractive. Normalization is done by adjusting the price of other polygeneration outputs namely refrigeration, hot water, and pasteurizing to make the electricity and water pricing feasible to achieve an IRR of 12.99% and payback of 9 years at a 5% annual escalation. The social cost saved with the benefit of polygeneration outputs is cumulated considering value addition in the supply chain to save agricultural produce and milk, which otherwise would have spoiled. The annual carbon emissions that are curtailed with solar thermal polygeneration outputs are cumulated and found to be 434 tonnes of carbon. The social cost and environmental cost due to carbon are considered as an incentive in the cost economic economics of polygeneration system and it is found that the IRR and payback can be improved to 17.98% and 6.2 years respectively. The work recommends policy interventions to promote decentralized solar thermal polygeneration systems for impact on rural livelihoods with a focus on the energy-water-food nexus.
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