Indonesian Journal of Life Cycle Assessment and Sustainability
Vol 3, No 1 (2019)

Life Cycle Assessment of electricity generation from Jatropha oil in a short chain in Mali

Leticia MENEGHEL FONSECA (CIRAD, UPR AIDA, F-34398 Montpellier, France Univ Montpellier, CIRAD, Montpellier, France)
Nawelle CHAOUKI (Université de Toulouse, INP-ENSIACET, LCA (Laboratoire de Chimie Agro industrielle), F 31030 Toulouse, France CIRAD, UPR AIDA, F-34398 Montpellier, France Univ Montpellier, CIRAD, Montpellier, France)
Anthony BENOIST (CIRAD, UPR BioWooEB, F-34398 Montpellier, France Univ Montpellier, CIRAD, Montpellier, France)
Guillaume BUSSET (Université de Toulouse, INP-ENSIACET, LCA (Laboratoire de Chimie Agro industrielle), F 31030 Toulouse, France INRA, UMR 1010 CAI, F 31030 Toulouse, France)
Roland PIROT (CIRAD, UPR AIDA, F-34398 Montpellier, France Univ Montpellier, CIRAD, Montpellier, France)
Mireille MONTRÉJAUD-VIGNOLES (Université de Toulouse, INP-ENSIACET, LCA (Laboratoire de Chimie Agro industrielle), F 31030 Toulouse, France INRA, UMR 1010 CAI, F 31030 Toulouse, France)
Caroline SABLAYROLLES (Université de Toulouse, INP-ENSIACET, LCA (Laboratoire de Chimie Agro industrielle), F 31030 Toulouse, France INRA, UMR 1010 CAI, F 31030 Toulouse, France)



Article Info

Publish Date
25 Nov 2019

Abstract

Jatropha curcas is an inedible oil crop which can grow under semiarid climatic conditions. Its oil can be used straight as fuel to provide energy in remote areas to improve living conditions. The aim of this study is to assess the environmental impacts of the electricity generation from Jatropha oil under West African conditions, by means of a Life Cycle Assessment (LCA). These potential impacts are calculated for four crop managements and compared to the ones of a reference electricity generation from conventional diesel. Data used in this work are from Jatropha plantations set up in Mali since 2006.LCA results show that the potential benefits of the Jatropha systems are highly dependent on the crop management, especially for the fertilization strategy and the promotion of the oilcake. However, in all cases, the Jatropha systems have lower impacts than the reference diesel system by 75% to 96% for abiotic depletion, and by 80% to 97% for ozone layer depletion, and higher impacts by 260% to 1000% for eutrophication, and by 26% to 160% for acidification. In the best case, the Jatropha system can also have lower impacts than the reference system by 76% for climate change, and by 88% for photochemical oxidation.A methodological originality of this work is the inclusion of animal and human labour into the LCA framework. A first model is proposed for the accounting of energy consumption and GreenHouse Gases (GHG) emissions due to labour. Concerning energy consumption, labour is not negligible with a share from 14% to 50% of the total impact of the Jatropha systems; however the highest share of 50% corresponds to the scenarios with the lowest energy demand. CH4 emissions from livestock are also not negligible but second-order in this study since they account for 2% to 13% of total GHG emissions.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

IJoLCAS

Publisher

Subject

Other

Description

IJoLCAS accepts scientific contributions on the following topics: life cycle assessment, life cycle inventory, life cycle impact assessment, life cycle sustainability assessment, social life cycle assessment, life cycle costing, environmental footprint, carbon footprint, water footprint, land ...