Farm Progress

Potential for sweet sorghum ethanol in western Nebraska?

With its high sugar content and drought-tolerance, sweet sorghum could become an ethanol feedstock crop for dryland agriculture.

February 6, 2018

2 Min Read
WESTERN NEBRASKA POTENTIAL: Researchers have identified sweet sorghum as a potential ethanol feedstock crop on dryland acres western Nebraska. However, for sweet sorghum to compete with corn, it must be more lucrative and more economical.Craig Chandler, University Communication

A University of Nebraska-Lincoln research team is exploring the potential of sweet sorghum ethanol as an income source for agricultural producers in western Nebraska.

Sweet sorghum is a cultivar of sorghum primarily grown for its juice. Due to its high sugar content and stability during drought, researchers have identified it as a potential ethanol feedstock crop for nonirrigated farmland. The sugar syrup from the stalks would be fermented to make ethanol.

For sweet sorghum to compete with corn — the leading feedstock for ethanol production in the United States — it must be more lucrative and more economical. Considering factors such as yield and the cost of processing, researchers estimate that the current sweet sorghum-ethanol pathway is a barely breakeven prospect in western Nebraska.

"Under the typical conditions considered, there are insufficient benefits to farmers and ethanol plants to make the sweet sorghum-ethanol pathway an attractive economic opportunity," says Richard Perrin, Jim Roberts Professor of Agricultural Economics at UNL. However, the researchers found that there are a few circumstances that would improve the crop's viability.

Currently, the U.S. Renewable Fuel Standard mandates consumption of specific levels of renewable fuels made from various feedstock categories. Under the markets created by the program, ethanol plants would be almost certain to obtain a premium for sweet sorghum ethanol compared to corn ethanol, making the former more economical. However, according to the researchers, the volatility of the premium and political opposition to the program make this benefit risky.

Another consideration that could enhance the crop's viability is an increase in yields. A $13.5 million, multi-institutional research project led by the university may provide the necessary yield increases. That effort aims to improve sorghum as a sustainable source for biofuel production.

"If the research efforts raise biomass yields by 20% to 30%, or show that yields are actually 20% to 30% higher than our estimate, the benefits to both the producer and the ethanol plant would be sufficient to make adoption of sweet sorghum for ethanol a sustainable possibility," Perrin says.

Joining Perrin in the research effort were Lilyan Fulginiti, professor of agricultural economics at Nebraska; Ismail Dweikat, professor of agronomy and horticulture at Nebraska; and Subir Bairagi, postdoctoral fellow at the International Rice Research Institute.

Details of the research were reported in the January issue of the Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics.

Source: IANR News Service

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