264-4 Direct Hydro-Climatic Impacts of Renewable Energy Expansion.
See more from this Division: S01 Soil PhysicsSee more from this Session: Symposium--Impacts of Bioenergy Crops on Water Quantity and Quality: I
The Advanced Research version of the Weather and Research Forecasting [WRF] climate modeling tool coupled to a land surface model that allows for two-way interaction and feedback between the overlying atmosphere and surface/sub-surface was used in all numerical simulations.
Utility of observationally-based bioenergy crop parameterizations within WRF reveals that conversion of annual (e.g., maize) to perennial (e.g., miscanthus) bioenergy cropping systems, over the U.S., imparts considerable cooling of order 1-2ºC (averaged over the growing season). A similar methodological approach over Brazil indicates that sugar cane expansion over the cerrado leads to significant cooling (order of 1-2ºC) during the growing season, but is largely offset post-harvest.
See more from this Session: Symposium--Impacts of Bioenergy Crops on Water Quantity and Quality: I