Producing Bioenergy in a Local Biosphere: Integrating Food and Energy Systems

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Running, S.W. (2016). Producing Bioenergy in a Local Biosphere: Integrating Food and Energy Systems. Solutions 7(3): 38–41. https://thesolutionsjournal.com/article/producing-bioenergy-in-a-local-biosphere-integrating-food-and-energy-systems/

Perspectives Producing Bioenergy in a Local Biosphere: Integrating Food and Energy Systems by Steven W. Running

Kurt Stepnitz, Michigan State University Office of Biobased Technologies

A bioenergy crop production research field at Michigan State University’s W.K. Kellogg Biological Station.

T

he global scientific community first began to consider, in earnest, the Earth’s capacity to sustain humanity in the classic 1972 study Limits to Growth.1 The primitive model put forward by Meadows and colleagues used the best projected population and economic growth trajectories of the time to produce a model showing that, by the early 21st century, humanity would have begun bumping up against serious global limits, including energy and food. More recently, planetary boundary thinking has refreshed the original

conceptual basis of Limits to Growth,2 but the essential message is the same: we must learn to live more sustainably within the bounds of the global biosphere. In the last few decades, as climate change has become a more urgent problem, renewable energy generated from biological materials, or bioenergy, has been touted as a low- or zero-carbon alternative to fossil fuels. However, this solution has set up a clash between the natural resources of an expanding bioenergy sector and those of global food security.

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Energy economists looking for pathways to a low-carbon world have assumed a massive acceleration in bioenergy production. Meanwhile, global food security experts search desperately for ways to feed more than nine billion people by mid-century.3-6 Can the biosphere accommodate both? Or, do we now face limits to continued growth in bioenergy? Will some sort of global land prioritization become necessary? Understanding the global potential for bioenergy means putting a figure on net primary production, that is, the


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