106266 Life Cycle Analysis of Beef Cattle Production in the Southern Great Plains.
Poster Number 1322
See more from this Division: ASA Section: Environmental Quality
See more from this Session: Beef and Dairy Systems: Economics and Environmental Footprint Poster (includes student competition)
Abstract:
N. Kannan, Saleh, A., Osei, E. Niraula, R., Cole, A., Todd, R., Waldrip, H. Aljoe, H.,
A five-year USDA-funded study titled “Resilience and vulnerability of beef cattle production in the Southern Great Plains under changing climate, land use, and markets” was initiated as a multi-institutional collaboration involving Texas Institute for Applied Environmental Research (TIAER)—Tarleton State University, United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)—Agricultural Research Service (ARS) in El Reno, Oklahoma, USDA—ARS in Bushland, Texas, Kansas State University, Oklahoma State University, University of Oklahoma, and the Samuel R. Noble Foundation in Ardmore, Oklahoma. The project goal is to safeguard and promote regional beef production while mitigating its environmental footprint. Conducting a full Life Cycle Analysis (LCA) is one of the major objectives of the study, in addition to field experiments, extension, outreach, and education. Estimation of all the resource use and greenhouse gas emissions are parts of the LCA. A computer model titled Animal Production Life Cycle Analysis Tool (APLCAT) is developed and applied to conduct the LCA on beef cattle production in the study region. The model estimates water use, energy requirements, and emissions of enteric methane, manure methane, nitrous oxide, and carbon dioxide. Also included in the LCA analysis are land-atmospheric exchanges of methane, nitrous oxide, carbon dioxide and the global warming potential. Our study is focused on the cow-calf and stocker phases of beef cattle production. The animal production system in the study region is predominantly forage based with protein and energy supplements when needed. Spring calving typical to the study region. In the cow-calf phase animals typically graze native prairie although introduced pasture grazing is also prevalent. Stockers use winter pasture as the major feed. The results of resource use and greenhouse gas emissions are summarized per kg of beef or animal. Results obtained to date will be presented.
(Key words: Beef, cattle, LCA, Life cycle analysis, global warming, methane, nitrous oxide, manure, water footprint)
See more from this Division: ASA Section: Environmental Quality
See more from this Session: Beef and Dairy Systems: Economics and Environmental Footprint Poster (includes student competition)