Water and radiation use efficiency of sugarcane for bioethanol production in South Africa, benchmarked against other selected crops
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Date
Authors
Olivier, Francois C.
Singels, Abraham
Eksteen, Alana B.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
Abstract
There are indications that high-fibre sugarcane genotypes may produce more biomass and use resources more
efficiently than conventional sugarcane cultivars. The objective of this research was to gather quantitative
information on resource use for selected conventional and high-fibre sugarcane genotypes and benchmark
it against other bioethanol crops. Although conventional sugarcane initially grew slower than sorghum and
Napier grass, it produced very high biomass (about 70 t ha−1) and theoretical ethanol (first- and secondgenerations)
yields (about 27 kL ha−1) at 12 months, and used water relatively efficiently (about 5 kg m−3 and
2 kL m−3), out-performing all other crops except sorghum. The contribution of cellulosic ethanol to total ethanol
yield varied hugely, from 89% for the high-fibre sugarcane hybrid to about 48% for conventional sugarcane,
to as low as 14% for sugar beet. The high-fibre sugarcane hybrid grew faster initially and produced more
biomass at eight months (56 t ha−1 vs 45 t ha−1) than the conventional types, but then flowered, reducing its
growth rates markedly thereafter. It was also less sensitive to mild drought conditions. The results suggest
that cellulosic ethanol production may be a feasible option that could be incorporated into conventional or
biomass sugarcane production systems.
Description
Keywords
Bioethanol crops, Biomass, High-fibre sugarcane, Stalk fibre composition, Theoretical ethanol yield
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Francois C Olivier, Abraham Singels & Alana B Eksteen (2016) Water and
radiation use efficiency of sugarcane for bioethanol production in South Africa, benchmarked
against other selected crops, South African Journal of Plant and Soil, 33:1, 1-11, DOI:
10.1080/02571862.2015.1075231.