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Life Cycle Greenhouse Gas Emissions of Biodiesel and Renewable Diesel Production in the United States

Xu Hui, Longwen Ou, Yuan Li, Troy R. Hawkins, Michael Wang

2022Environmental Science & Technology196 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This study presents a life-cycle analysis of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions of biodiesel (fatty acid methyl ester) and renewable diesel (RD, or hydroprocessed easters and fatty acids) production from oilseed crops, distillers corn oil, used cooking oil, and tallow. Updated data for biofuel production and waste fat rendering were collected through industry surveys. Life-cycle GHG emissions reductions for producing biodiesel and RD from soybean, canola, and carinata oils range from 40% to 69% after considering land-use change estimations, compared with petroleum diesel. Converting tallow, used cooking oil, and distillers corn oil to biodiesel and RD could achieve higher GHG reductions of 79% to 86% lower than petroleum diesel. The biodiesel route has lower GHG emissions for oilseed-based pathways than the RD route because transesterification is less energy-intensive than hydro-processing. In contrast, processing feedstocks with high free fatty acid such as tallow via the biodiesel route results in slightly higher GHG emissions than the RD route, mainly due to higher energy use for pretreatment. Besides land-use change and allocation methods, key factors driving biodiesel and RD life-cycle GHG emissions include fertilizer use and nitrous oxide emissions for crop farming, energy use for grease rendering, and energy and chemicals input for biofuel conversion.

Topics & Concepts

BiodieselDiesel fuelEnvironmental scienceBiofuelGreenhouse gasBiodiesel productionLife-cycle assessmentRenewable energyWaste managementChemistryEngineeringProduction (economics)EcologyMacroeconomicsElectrical engineeringBiochemistryCatalysisBiologyEconomicsBiodiesel Production and ApplicationsBiofuel production and bioconversionAnaerobic Digestion and Biogas Production
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