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GTAP Resources: Resource Display

GTAP Resource #7591

"Reducing US biofuels requirements mitigates short-term impacts of global population and income growth on agricultural environmental outcomes"
by Johnson, David, Nathan Geldner, Jing Liu, Uris Lantz Baldos and Thomas Hertel


Abstract
Biobased energy, particularly corn starch-based ethanol and other liquid renewable fuels, is a major element of federal and state energy policies in the United States. These policies are motivated by energy security and climate change mitigation objectives, but corn ethanol does not substantially reduce greenhouse gas emissions when compared to petroleum-based fuels in all production scenarios. Corn production also imposes substantial negative externalities (e.g., nitrogen leaching, higher food prices, water scarcity, and indirect land use change). In this paper, we utilize a partial equilibrium model of corn-soy production and trade to analyze the potential of reduced US demand for corn as a biobased energy feedstock to mitigate increases in nitrogen leaching, crop production and land use associated with growing global populations and income from 2020 to 2050. We estimate that a 24% demand reduction would sustain land use and nitrogen leaching below 2020 levels through the year 2025, and a 41% reduction would do so through 2030. Outcomes are similar across major watersheds where corn and soy are intensively farmed.

Available from https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0301421523000824


Resource Details (Export Citation) GTAP Keywords
Category: Other CGE Application
Status: Published
By/In: Energy Policy
Date: 2023
Version:
Created: Batta, G. (8/4/2025)
Updated: Batta, G. (8/4/2025)
Visits: 15
No keywords have been specified.


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