Sweet sorghum

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Sweet sorghum
Average yield: 110 tons per hectare for two cropping seasons in 8 months[1]
biofuel yield: {{{biofuel yield}}}
Content  ???
Water requirements:  ???
Soil preference:  ???
Harvesting:  ???
Harvesting season:  ???
Advantages:  ???
Disadvantages:  ???
Other issues:  ???

Contents

History

Sweet sorghum is an African native plant. It is known as one of the world oldest crops and it is likely that African slaves introduced the crop to the United States in the 17th century.

Nutrient Value

Sorghum Grain: http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=food+value+sorghum

Sorghum Syrup: http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=food+value+sorghum&a=*DPClash.ExpandedFoodE.sorghum-_*SorghumSyrup-

Sustainability

Environmental Sustainability

Greenhouse Gases

Biodiversity

Sweet sorghum is a highly competitive crop and can dominate over many weeds and other plants.

Pollution

In general fertilisers inputs are: 30-60 kg/ha of P, 60-120 kg/ha of K, 150 kg/ha of N. Even though sweet sorghum is a very competitive crop, several herbicides are available to compliment cultural and mechanical practices.

Land Degradation

Nutrient needs of sorghum are similar of the ones of corn. Sorghum uses relatively large amounts of nitrogen and moderate amounts of phosphorus and potassium. The grain in a 100-bushel per acre grain sorghum crop removes about 100 lbs. of nitrogen, 14 lbs. of phosphorous, and 14 lbs. of potassium.

Social Sustainability

Ethanol is produced from the sweet juice available in the stalk of the crop plant. The grains can still be used for food and feed purposes. Sweet sorghum has a higher vitamin and protein content than honey and can be used for the production of syrup, flour, and a popcorn-like product called pop sorghum kernels.

Sweet sorghum is cheaper to produce than other comparable grains. In India for example, its cost of cultivation is about one-third that of sugarcane.

Projects Using Sweet Sorghum as a Renewable Energy Input Feedstock

http://agrifuels.com.au/OtherSweetSorghumBiofuelProjects.htm

Technology/Science

Properties

Sweet sorghum is a drought resistant plant that needs only about 175 cubic meters of water per crop. This is not even one quarter of the average water requirement of sugarcane crop. Tillers and heads are produced over a longer time period and therefore short periods of drought do not seriously harm pollination and fertilization. In a longer drought, sweet sorghum produces fewer and smaller heads.

The waxy coating of sorgum foliage makes them resist drying and they lose a smaller percentage of their water content than, for instance, corn leaves. The planting season of sweet sorghum, at 100-115 days, is relativley short. The average yield for this period of time is varying between 95-125 tons.

Sweet sorghum has a very high sugar content, varying from 15 to over 20 percent. Maximum yields are achived at average temperatures of at least 80°F. Photosynthesis is best at day-time temperatures higher than 90°F. During planting time the sorghum seed needs soil temperatures of 60-65°F.

Economics/Policy

Publications

News

2010

2007

  • Can Sorghum Solve the Biofuels Dilemma?, 13 May 2007 from WBCSD: A new crop that provides food, animal feed and fuel at the same time promises to help developing countries redirect money spent on oil imports to benefit their own farmers. Is sweet sorghum biofuel's "holy grail"?

Countries

Sweet sorghum is grown worldwide on about 44 million hectares in almost one hundred different countries. It is therefore the fifth most important cereal crop in the world. The major producers are the United States, India, Nigeria, China, Mexico, Sudan and Argentina.

External Resources

  • [3] - Sweet Sorghum Ethanol Association.

Events

2008

Notes

  1. http://biopact.com/2007/02/sweet-super-sorghum-yield-data-for.html


Tropical feedstocks for bioenergy edit
Bamboo (Charcoal) | Cassava (Biodiesel and Bioethanol) | Coconut palm (Biodiesel) | Jatropha (Biodiesel) | Nypa palm (Bioethanol) | Oil palm (Biodiesel) | Sugar cane (Bioethanol)
Bioenergy feedstocks edit

Biodiesel feedstocks:
Currently in use: Animal fat | Castor beans | Coconut oil | Jatropha | Jojoba | Karanj | Palm oil | Rapeseed | Soybeans | Sunflower seed | Waste Vegetable Oil (WVO)
Currently in research and development: Algae | Halophytes (Salt-tolerant plants)


Ethanol feedstocks:
First-generation: Cassava | Corn | Milo | Nypa palm | Sorghum | Sugar beets | Sugar cane | Sugar palm |Sweet potato | Waste citrus peels | Wheat | Whey
Second-generation: For cellulosic technology - Grasses: Miscanthus, Prairie grasses, Switchgrass | Trees: Hybrid poplar, Mesquite, Willow


Charcoal feedstocks: Bamboo | Wood
Waste-to-energy (MSW)


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