1.5° PATHWAYS

Page 274

WORLD ENERGY TRANSITIONS OUTLOOK

6.4 AVAILABILITY OF SUSTAINABLE BIOMASS FEEDSTOCKS Factors influencing estimates of availability The amount of biomass feedstock needed to supply more bioenergy and biochemicals rises sharply in the 1.5°C Scenario, and in many other scenarios compatible with the 1.5°C climate goal. This raises the question of whether these quantities are realistic and can be produced in ways that respect sustainability requirements. Biomass use must lead to genuine and substantial GHG reductions, taking the entire carbon lifecycle into account, including the release of any carbon stocks caused by land-use change or impacts on soil carbon. At the same time, biomass use must respect other environmental, social and economic sustainability factors, including biodiversity. With ecosystems under serious threat, as highlighted by the IPCC’s recent Working Group II report, bioenergy scaleup must weight its impacts. As the IPCC has pointed out, there is good potential for synergies but also for conflict if objectives are pursued in isolation (IPCC, 2022b). Biomass sustainability is examined in more detail in Section 6.5. Estimates of the global, regional and national availability of biomass range widely – as much as two orders of magnitude – making judgment difficult and adding to uncertainty about the future of bioenergy. Other factors to consider include the potential competition between energy and other uses and the need to include appropriate sustainability constraints – in particular, the extent to which land can be used to grow energy crops while preserving food security and biodiversity. Increased demand for bioenergy, as well as biomass as a chemical feedstock, will also influence supply. Some economic thresholds may also need to be applied.

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Articles inside

References

36min
pages 334-349

7.6 Case study: The European Union

2min
pages 332-333

Annex

3min
pages 350-352

7.5 Risk mitigation of supply shortages

9min
pages 325-331

7.2 What are critical materials?

1min
page 295

6.4 Availability of sustainable biomass feedstocks

12min
pages 274-281

6.5 Biomass sustainability

14min
pages 282-289

7.1 The role of critical materials in the energy transition

4min
pages 293-294

6.1 Introduction

1min
page 245

6.3 Scaling up bioenergy use in key applications: Opportunities, barriers and policies

29min
pages 258-273

5.3 Special focus: International trade of hydrogen and derivatives

14min
pages 234-241

5.1 Power system flexibility 5.2 Electrification of end-use

16min
pages 196-206

CHALLENGE

2min
pages 30-31

4.2 Priority action areas to scale up progress

41min
pages 165-189

Introduction

4min
pages 28-29

3.2 Policy baskets for a sensitivity analysis

16min
pages 121-129

3.1 Introduction

8min
pages 114-120

2.9 Policies for a just energy transition

8min
pages 108-111

Acknowledgements

1min
page 3

1.1 Introduction

1min
page 32
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