Soil greenhouse gas fluxes from vinasse application in Brazilian sugarcane areas
2013
de Oliveira, Bruna Gonçalves | Carvalho, João Luís Nunes | Cerri, Carlos Eduardo Pellegrino | Cerri, Carlos Clemente | Feigl, Brigitte Josefine
Sugarcane ethanol is the main liquid biofuel used in Brazil as a substitute for fossil fuels for the mitigation of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. However, ethanol production also produces GHG emissions during the agricultural phase through the disposal of its residues. Vinasse, as the main residue from ethanol production, may contribute to GHG emission during its storage, transportation and application to soil as ferti-irrigation. The objective of this study was to quantify the fluxes of CO2, CH4 and N2O resulting from vinasse application in sugarcane fields under different straw managements and to determine the N2O emission factor derived from this practice. This study was performed at the Boa Vista Farm, in São Paulo State, Brazil. The application of 200m3ha−1 of vinasse tripled the CO2 emissions in areas with burnt or unburnt harvest systems. The consumption of CH4 was observed, supporting the hypothesis that this usually applied amount of vinasse to the soil does not necessarily result in CH4 emissions. The 46kg of N contained in this dose of vinasse increased the release of N2O by the soil and resulted in emission factors of 0.68% and 0.44% for the burnt and unburnt areas, respectively. The fluxes of N2O and CH4, converted into CO2 eq, indicate that each m3ha−1 of vinasse applied to the soil emits 0.491 and 0.314kg of CO2 eq. in the burnt and unburnt sugarcane areas, respectively.
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