Direct energy consumption and CO2 emissions in a Finnish broiler house – a case study
Keywords:
broiler production, CO2 emissions, energy consumption, energy measurement, energy efficiencyAbstract
Direct energy (electricity and heating) consumption was measured from one broiler house in southern Finland. CO2 emissions were also calculated. Six broiler flocks were reared per year with an average of 26 000 birds per flock. Heating constituted the major energy input, averaging 1.3 kWh kg-1 of carcass weight. It varied greatly between seasons and was highest during the cold period. Using renewable energy for heating remarkably reduces CO2 emissions compared to fossil energy. Electricity consumption averaged 0.08 kWh kg-1 of carcass weight. The greatest energy saving potential can be found in heating. CO2 emissions can be lowered to similar levels as in warmer countries by using biofuels for heating. Ventilation control is one possibility for direct energy savings in broiler production. Feed production is one of the key elements when total energy consumption is considered.
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Copyright (c) 2015 Agricultural and Food Science
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Accepted 2015-02-16
Published 2015-03-20