Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Elisabeth Angenendt is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Elisabeth Angenendt.


Gcb Bioenergy | 2018

Status quo and perspectives of biogas production for energy and material utilization

Enno Bahrs; Elisabeth Angenendt

Biogas is in many respects a serious alternative to other fossil resources and complements other renewable energy sources from wind and sun. Biogas can be produced in many places decentrally. Its energy potential is high, and it is widely used in the EU and all over the world. With more than 16,000 ktoe of oil equivalent in the EU in 2016, it corresponds to approximately 8% of the total primary energy produced by renewable energies in the EU, produced with nearly 17,000 biogas plants. Nevertheless, the production costs of biogas and its products like energy, heat, and fuel are still too high. Kost et al. (2018) show a comparison of electricity generation costs of different renewable energies and their future potentials. While electricity from huge biogas plants offers generation costs from 10 to 15 ct/kWh, electricity from onshore wind and huge solar systems offers generation costs from 4 to 8 ct/kWh. Although substantial progress has been made with regard to substrate use, production techniques and market designs, many more innovations are needed throughout the biogas value chain for it to be competitive in energy markets without high subsidies. As several papers in the special issue on biogas show, there are numerous innovations and product designs with regard to energy and material uses that could maintain or even increase the importance of biogas production both within and outside of the EU. There are many potential benefits of biogas, as it offers high shares of produced renewable energies as well as large amounts of material products like digestates and in future maybe products of higher value such as proteins or lactic acids.


Bioeconomy : Shaping the Transition to a Sustainable, Biobased Economy. Ed.: I. Lewandowski | 2018

Modelling and Tools Supporting the Transition to a Bioeconomy

Elisabeth Angenendt; W.-R. Poganietz; Ulrike Bos; Susanne Wagner; Jens Schippl

The strategy of using biogenic resources in a bioeconomy could be seen as one answer to the geopolitical challenges the world is facing in the twenty-first century. One of those challenges is the closing of the prosperity gap between rich and poor countries. However, considering the current global population growth and anthropogenically induced climate change, it is expected that efforts to achieve this goal will be accompanied by an increasing demand for food, feed, products, and energy, which cannot be satisfied by the expected supply of non-biogenic raw materials and resources.


Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment | 2006

Disaggregated greenhouse gas emission inventories from agriculture via a coupled economic-ecosystem model

Henry Neufeldt; Michael Schäfer; Elisabeth Angenendt; Changsheng Li; Martin Kaltschmitt; Jurgen Zeddies


Agricultural Systems | 2015

Costs and benefits of ammonia and particulate matter abatement in German agriculture including interactions with greenhouse gas emissions

Susanne Wagner; Elisabeth Angenendt; Olga Beletskaya; Jurgen Zeddies


International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability | 2015

Impact of farm management diversity on the environmental and economic performance of the wheat–maize cropping system in the North China Plain

Nan Ha; Til Feike; Elisabeth Angenendt; Haifeng Xiao; Enno Bahrs


Agricultural Systems | 2016

Global warming potential and abatement costs of different peatland management options: A case study for the Pre-alpine Hill and Moorland in Germany

Tatjana Krimly; Elisabeth Angenendt; Enno Bahrs; Stephan Dabbert


agriculture 2017, Vol. 2, Pages 75-100 | 2017

Economic and ecological impacts of bioenergy crop production—a modeling approach applied in Southwestern Germany

Hans-Georg Schwarz-v. Raumer; Elisabeth Angenendt; Norbert Billen; Rüdiger Jooß


Agricultural Systems | 2017

Assessing ammonia emission abatement measures in agriculture: Farmers' costs and society's benefits – A case study for Lower Saxony, Germany

Susanne Wagner; Elisabeth Angenendt; Olga Beletskaya; Jurgen Zeddies


GIL Jahrestagung | 2017

Modellierung von Angebot und Nachfrage landwirtschaftlicher Biogassubstrate - ein Ergebnisvergleich für Baden-Württemberg.

Eckart Petig; Elisabeth Angenendt; Enno Bahrs


55th Annual Conference, Giessen, Germany, September 23-25, 2015 | 2015

Kosten Und Nutzen Der Reduktion Von Emissionen Von Ammoniak Und Partikeln In Der Tierhaltung In Niedersachsen

Susanne Wagner; Elisabeth Angenendt; Olga Beletskaya; Jurgen Zeddies

Collaboration


Dive into the Elisabeth Angenendt's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Enno Bahrs

University of Hohenheim

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eckart Petig

University of Hohenheim

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jens Schippl

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nan Ha

University of Hohenheim

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge