Energy Costs of Sugar Production: in The Philippine Context
Energy Costs of Sugar Production: in The Philippine Context
Energy Costs of Sugar Production: in The Philippine Context
The total energy use to produce and mill one t of cane was estimated at 61.68 L diesel oil
energy (2.38 GJ/TC). The share of cane production was 11.26 LDOE/ TC (0.43 GJ/TC)
which is about 18.25% of the total energy use while cane milling used about 50.42
LDOE/TC (1.95 GJ/TC) or about 81.74% of the total energy use. But cane milling sources
87.0% of its energy bill from bagasse and only 5.9% from bunker oil. Re-estimating the
fossil fuel energy (FFE) costs of cane milling shows that it only uses 2.97 LDOE/TC or
23% of the total FFE use. Thus, the FFE/ kg raw sugar is only 0.15 LDOE (0.00569 GJ/ kg)
and not 0.65 LDOE/ kg raw sugar (0.025 GJ/ kg). Chemical fertilizer utilized the largest
amount of FFE at about 60% (31.5 GJ/ha) in plant cane and 64.7% (21.8 GJ/ ha) in the
ratoon crop. N consumed the largest amount of energy. Of the national average FFE
equivalent for NPK fertilizer at 9.10 GJ/ ha (238 LDOE/TC), 92.2% (8.39 GJ/ ha was N.
This is because N fertilizer was applied the most at 106.14 kg/ha, with P only 31.45
kg/ha and K only 42.46 kg/ha. Furthermore, N consumed the largest FFE during
manufacture. Luzon farmers were applying more N fertilizer than Visayas and Mindanao
farmers. Thus, their FFE equivalent for fertilizer was highest. The FFE equivalent for
fertilizer through the years doubled from 9.28 GJ/ ha (0.158 GJ/TC) in 1983-84 to 20.5
GJ/ ha (0.315 GJ/ TC) in 2000-2001. Correlation analysis showed that tonnage (TC/ ha)
was highly correlated with energy use (r=0.90) and with the FFE equivalent of N fertilizer
(r=0.996). Since N consumed the largest quantity of FFE, its reduction would have the
greatest impact on the fuel economy of cane production. To reduce FFE-based fertilizer
use in cane production, sugarcane trash farming is suggested. To reduce costs, the use of
renewable biomass fuel as 'green power' alternative for cane milling is forwarded.
Keywords biomass fuel, costs of production, fertilizer use, fossil fuel energy use, fuel
economy, green power, N fertilizer, NPK, sugarcane, trash farming
INTRODUCTION
While
sugarcane,
a high-yielding,
perennial C4 crop species, remains to be the
cheapest source of caloric energy food, it also
requires huge amounts of energy to grow in
the farm (Mendoza et al 2003) and process
the cane in the mill (Corpuz & Aguilar 1992).
This is because, unlike many other tropical
upland crops grown in the Philippines,
of sugarcane
farms derive from production inputs like
chemical fertilizers that historically have been
consuming tremendous amounts of energy in
their manufacture (Soriano 1982, Pimentel et
al 1983, Mudahar & Hignett 1985).
Necessarily therefore, increasing productivity
or
achieve
higher
efficiency
in
{(G * E) * M}
where
Y = yield, G = genotype (variety), E = environ-
decisively influence Y.
the two
aspects of sugarcane
delineated
into
bagasse,
supplementary fuel (fuel oil, wood, others)
energy
METHODOLOGY
(Table
1).
The
share
of
cane
Table 1.
Stage
GJ/TC
LDOE/T
Cane
production 1
Cane milling 2
Total
0.43
11.26
791
0.11
2.97
14.23
29
100
0.54
of
energy
use
by
operation
was
harvesting/ hauling, at 23.26% (11.5 GJ/ ha)
in plant cane and 31.12% (10.5 GJ/ha) in the
energy-using
N= 0.07 GJ/kg
P = 0.012 GJ/kg
K= 0.0079 GJ/kg
Table 2.
Stage
GJ/TC
Cane
Production 1
Cane Milling 2
Total
0.43
1.95
2.38
LDOE/TC
11.26
50.42
61.68
18.25
81.74
100
1 Data was based on 2 case studies (Table 3).
2 Data based on Corpuz & Aguilar (1992).
GJTC-1 = LDOE/TC * GJ L-1-oil, GJ/TC = Giga Joule
per tonne cane
1 L-oil = 0.086 GJ,LDOE/TC = L Diesel Oil Equivalent
per tonne cane
Energy use/ kg sugar
= GJ/TC kg - Sugar/TC
= 2.38 GJ/TC 94.877 kg-sugar/TC
= 0.0251 GJ/ kg - sugar (raw)
= LDOE/TC kg-sugar/TC
= 61.68 94.877
= 0.65 LDOE/ kg - sugar (raw)
equivalents.
Fossil fuel energy consumed based on various operations in sugarcane production (2 sites)
(Samson 2000)
Operation/Crop Type
Energy use in
Batangas
(GM
(GM
A. Plant Crop
1. Land Preparation
2. Planting
3. Cultivation
4. Fertilizer
4.9
0.96
1.7
41.7
5. Harvesting/hauling
11.5
LDOE/ha
60.76
591.06
0.36
Energy use in
Negros Occidental
8.06
1.57
2.79
68.63
18.96
100
(GM
4.9
2.3
11.75
5.51
1.7
4.07
51.08
27.58
21.3
11.5
41.7
1091.9
80
0.52
120
Average
energy use
4.9
1.6
1.7
31.5
11.5
51.2
1340.8
100
0.43
9.90
7.08
3.43
60.00
23.2
100.00
1)
B. Ratoon Crop
1. Cultivation
2. Fertilizer
3. Harvesting/Hauling
1.72
23.9
11.4
4.56
63.39
30.23
100.0
0.57
19.8
9.6
30
437.7
LDOE/ha
987.3
785.7
120
0.31
65
0.46
45.49
1191.34
0.38
9.95
36.85
938.88
0.49
2.00
66.00
32.00
100.00
1.1
21.8
10.5
33.4
3.28
64.70
31.12
100.00
870.2
92.5
0.36
1)
Average (A + B)
Total GJ/ha
LDOE/ha
Energy as per tonne
LDOE/TC
12.83
40.67
1064.98
0.43
11.26
Table 5.
Nutrient*
Kg/ha
GJ/ ha
208.8
55.3
74.0
16.50
0.66
0.58
17.74
Total
93.0
4.0
3.0
Energy equivalent (GJ/ha) of NPK fertilizer applied in Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao, and average
for the Philippines*
Nutrient
Luzon
GJ/ ha
kg/ha
kg/ha
Average
GJ/ ha
kg/ha
N
K
Total
116.05
9.88
13.14
9.70
0.12
0.10
9.92
97.8
1.2
1.0
102.65
41.89
48.90
100.0
8.11
0.50
0.40
9.01
90.1
5.5
4.4
100.0
106.14
31.45
42.46
8.39
0.38
0.33
9.10
92.2
4.2
3.6
100.00
* Data summarized from Covar (1989), average from 6 cropping years; 1982-83 to 1997-88.
* GJ values for NPK adopted from Soriano (1982)
N = 0.079 GJ/ kg; P = 0.012 GJ/ kg; K = 0.0079 GJ/ kg
increase in
(6.08%). It
Table 6.
Kg/ ha
GJ /ha
225
120
240
17.9
1.4
1.9
Plant Cane
21.2
Total
(GJ/ha)
Per tonne
LDOE/TC
Ratoon Cane
N
84.2
6.8
9.0
0.265
6.86
17.9
90.4
240
1.9
9.6
19.8
(GJ/ha)
Per tonne
0.304
(GJ/TC)
LDOE/TC
7.88
Tonnage Yield; Plant Cane = 80 TC/ha; Ratoon = 65
TC/ha
LDOE/TC = L-diesel oil equivalent per tonne cane
1 L-oil = 0.0386 GJ
2'
the soil
Trash
farming also helps conserve organic matter
kg
N/ ha).
225
Total
of N in
P
K
considerable amount
(approximately 30-35
150-300 kg N/ha are used in most caneproducing countries such as Cuba, Peru,
required.
Hodge
(1998)
points
to
the
ie,
Year
TC/ha
GJ/ha
Energy Use
(GJTC-1)
LDOE/ha
0.158
240.41
0.179
269.69
.0.304
459.58
0.315
531.08
1983-84 58.66
9.28
1987-88 57.98
10.41
1995-96 61.51
17.74
2000-01
65.0
20.5
LDOE/ha = GJ/ha GJ Li-oil; L-diesel oil equivalent per ha
LDOE/TC =
GJ/TC
1 L-oil = 0.0386 GJ
LDOE/TC
4.09
4.64
7.88
8.16
growing
approximately
of
could be bulk-purchased at
Sugar
refineries
the
economic,
social
and
environmental
appears
promising.
It
bioenergy
Table 8.
Year/Nutrient
GJ/TC
Amount
Applied
( kg/ha)
Energy
value
(GJ/ha)
109.2
30.8
40.9
8.62
0.37
0.29
9.28
92.88
3.98
3.12
100
0.147
0.006
0.005
0.158
122.70
32.70
43.40
9.69
0.38
0.34
93.09
3.65
3.26
0.167
0.006
0.006
208.8
55.3
74
16.50
0.66
0.58
0.288
93.00
4.00
3.00
0.260
0.010
0.009
17.9
1.9
87.30
3.40
9.30
20.5
100
0.275
0.010
0.029
0.315
1983-84
N
P
K
P
K
1995-96
N
P
K
0.7
GJha -1 = Giga Joule per ha, GJTC -1 = Giga Joule per tonne cane
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