Walter V. Reid, David and Lucile Packard Foundation, Los Altos, CA 94022, USA.
Abstract
Energy from biomass plays a large and growing role in the global energy system. Energy from biomass can make significant contributions to reducing carbon emissions, especially from difficultâ€toâ€decarbonize sectors like aviation, heavy transport, and manufacturing. But landâ€intensive bioenergy often entails substantial carbon emissions from landâ€use change as well as production, harvesting, and transportation. In addition, landâ€intensive bioenergy scales only with the utilization of vast amounts of land, a resource that is fundamentally limited in supply. Because of the land constraint, the intrinsically low yields of energy per unit of land area, and rapid technological progress in competing technologies, land intensive bioenergy makes the most sense as a transitional element of the global energy mix, playing an important role over the next few decades and then fading, probably after midâ€century. Managing an effective trajectory for landâ€intensive bioenergy will require an unusual mix of policies and incentives that encourage appropriate utilization in the short term but minimize lockâ€in in the longer term.