1.1. Background and Literature Review
In order to expand the market share of renewable electricity, many countries in the world have implemented policies to encourage the development of renewable energy industries [
1,
2]. Price-based feed-in tariff (FIT) and market-based renewable portfolio standards (RPSs) schemes are the two most frequently-used support schemes [
3,
4]. Countries which have implemented FIT schemes include Germany, Denmark, and Spain; they set fixed prices or a price premium over the market price of electricity for a specified time period [
5]. The RPS scheme is represented by the UK, the US, and Australia, which require electricity producers to acquire a certain percentage of renewable electricity. Tradable green certificates (TGCs) are issued for all renewable electricity produced.
At present, renewable electricity production in China is supported by the FIT scheme. Under this scheme, the installed renewable energy capacity has significantly increased. The portion of the FIT higher than the market price coming from the Renewable Energy Development Fund (introduced by the government) has created a great financial burden on the government [
6]. According to the relevant research, the financial gap of the Renewable Energy Development Fund had reached US
$18.13 billion by 2018 [
7].
According to the Chinese government plan [
8], China’s renewable energy policy will ultimately transform from an FIT scheme to an RPS scheme, which means that the subsidy funds that renewable electricity producers had received from the government before will mainly come from the TGC market in the future.
It is known that the reason that the FIT scheme for renewable energy has brought a heavy fiscal burden on to China’s government is the higher subsidy intensity. Thus, a question has arisen: What kind of subsidy intensity is rational?
The current theoretical research related to the FIT focuses on assessing its effectiveness. Scholars have usually discussed effectiveness from the aspects of social welfare, technological innovation, and installation growth of renewable energy [
9]. Scholars have seldom paid attention to the rationality and accuracy of the FIT subsidy intensity.
Compared with traditional fossil energy, renewable energy is conducive to environmental protection and resource conservation—namely, it has positive externalities. Positive externality refers to the beneficial effects of economic activities of one economic entity on other economic entities; the recipients of positive externalities do not need to pay any cost [
10]. The internalization of positive externality transforms the external benefits generated by the positive externality maker into private benefits of the positive externality maker in different ways [
11]. It can solve the social optimal supply shortage caused by a lack of incentives, thus overcoming the efficiency loss caused by positive externalities and re-achieving the Pareto optimality [
10]. Compared with traditional power, renewable electricity has positive externalities. It can increase social benefits and reduce pollutant emissions. According to the principle of modern economics, there is a phenomenon of insufficient resource allocation in industries with positive externalities. The internalization of positive externalities is the fundamental way to solve this type of problem. That the government formulates policies to support the development of renewable electricity is a form of the internalization of positive externality.
The positive externality of renewable electricity is the main reason why the government provides a subsidy to encourage its development. Biomass power generation is a classic type of renewable energy, for convenience, we take it as an example to demonstrate our research route.
Generally speaking, biomass power generation can be viewed as a type of agricultural circular economy [
12]. The question of how to scientifically determine the subsidy intensity of biomass power generation is equivalent to the question of how to regulate the development of a circular economy accurately.
A circular economy has obvious positive externalities [
13,
14]. Despite the academic disagreement over the impact of the development of a recycling economy on the performance of a business, most scholars approve of the viewpoint that the development of a circular economy needs the support of the government [
15,
16]. Many countries have begun to pay more attention to the role of the circular economy in achieving sustainable development [
17,
18].
The internalization of externalities is an effective way to promote the sustainable development of industries with external characteristics. Therefore, whether the externalities have been compensated for can provide a reference standard for evaluating the effect of regional transformation from a traditional economy to a circular economy, and can provide a quantitative standard for evaluating the developmental performance of a regional circular economy, as long as the externality of the circular economy can be monetized. After decades of attempts, scholars have successfully established a method for an environmental economic loss assessment, based on the market value approach; although the assessment of environmental losses is a very difficult problem [
11,
19]. The application of environmental loss assessment techniques and methods has led to the development of relevant empirical studies [
20,
21]. Research on the measurement of economic losses caused by environmental pollution in China has also achieved rich results [
22,
23].
At present, scholars in the field of environmental management have studied the rationality and optimization of industrial policies from the perspective of the quantitative measurement of externalities [
24,
25]. For example, Ding et al. (2008) [
26] proposed a reverse logistics investment valuation model to calculate the number of subsidies the government needs in order to provide theoretical guidance and a decision-making basis for the government to regulate and control an enterprise’s investment in environmental protection projects or technologies through the implementation of incentive policies. Ding et al. (2014) [
13] built a quantitative assessment model of the internalization of externalities with a life cycle assessment and net present value analysis to explore the reasonable subsidy space and promote the development of new energy vehicles.
Relatively speaking, there have been few achievements in the study of the internalization of externalities from the perspective of green products or enterprises. This type of study is in its infancy.
Present studies have paid attention to the negative environmental externalities of economic activities, while few scholars have focused on the positive externalities of a circular economy in the social and environmental fields.
China supports the development of a circular economy, but its support for a circular economy lacks a scientific standard of judgment [
9]. In the field of biomass power generation, China has formulated detailed supportive policies, including tax breaks and price subsidies. However, whether the government’s support policy for biomass power generation is reasonable is a problem to which few scholars have paid close attention.
1.2. Comprehensive Utilization of Agricultural By-Products
An important component of the development of an agricultural circular economy is to comprehensively utilize agricultural by-products. According to estimates, the dry weight of apple tree branches pruned per hectare ranges from 2.4 to 6.6 tons every year [
27,
28]. For primary apple production areas, an apple tree branch is an important type of agricultural by-product; the total production of apple tree branches is quite substantial, and has considerable potential utilization value. However, in practice, the resource utilization of apple tree branches has not caught people’s attention. Currently, apple tree branches are used mainly as firewood for cooking or heating (as is the case for straw, also), which not only produces waste but also pollutes the environment. In some apple production areas, apple tree branches are smashed and bagged to produce edible fungus [
29,
30]. Few apple production regions use apple tree branches as feedstock for biomass power generation. These regions are apt to obtain a type of clean energy named biogas, by building methane-generating pits and constructing an industrial circular economy chain, named “grass-livestock-biogas-fruit,” centered on biogas [
31,
32]. In rural areas, biogas is an important kind of clean energy, which generally uses livestock excrement as feedstock. This is the reason why the development of biogas utilization typically accompanies the development of livestock breeding industries. The sustainable utilization of biogas cannot be separated from livestock excrement (having a high heating value) as the fill for a methane-generating pit. Both apple orchard management and livestock breeding belong to a labor-intensive industry; however, it is difficult for an orchard operator to undertake the dual work of both managing orchards and caring for livestock, as rural labor is insufficient when viewed against the backdrop of rapid urbanization. For instance, the areas of apple tree cultivation in Jingning County of the Gansu Province account for 68.7% of the total area of arable lands, reaching 707 km
2 in 2016, which was the largest area of such cultivation in China [
33]. The agricultural distribution pattern in Jingning County is divided into the south, mainly the apple orchard industry, and the north, which is primarily the grain growing industry [
34]. In the southern part of the county, most farmed arable lands are used to plant apple trees, and it is difficult for the owners of livestock to breed livestock due to the lack of crop straw as fodder. There are almost no large livestock operations among the local fruit farming communities.
In 2015, we conducted a questionnaire survey of over 500 local fruit farmers. The results indicated that 66.5% of the households of the respondents did not breed any large livestock, such as pigs, cattle, and sheep; 32% of them had methane-generating pits; and 40% of the respondents thought that the main factor that hampered the improvement of biogas utilization efficiency was the lack of feedstock with a high heating value, such as cattle excrement. The survey results are in accordance with the research conclusions of local scholars. For example, Wang and Yan (2015) pointed out that, with an increase in the number of rural migrant farmers who had left for urban jobs, rural areas were dominated by the remaining elders and children, with a lack of skilled young and post-adolescent laborers. Meanwhile, with the promotion of industrial products, such as electric cookers in rural areas, the advantage of biogas in cooking has continuously weakened, and most people have begun to ignore the management and maintenance required for methane-generating pits. Thus, the utilization rate of biogas has decreased yearly [
35].
In summary, there are two aspects to the problem of comprehensive utilization of agricultural by-products in the main apple tree production areas. On the one hand, influenced by many factors (such as insufficient manpower), small-scale livestock breeding and management are out of place, and the utilization rate of methane-generating pits is low. Enthusiasm for the building of new methane-generating pits is not high, and the circular economy model of “grass-livestock-biogas-fruit” does not work well in primary apple production areas. On the other hand, affected by traditional habits and development concepts, a large number of apple tree branches are treated as firewood and are burned directly for heating and cooking, which wastes resources and contaminates the environment.
This study explores the feasibility of generating power using apple tree branches as fuel inputs to replace biogas in the primary apple production areas using a case study in Jingning County, Gansu Province. We analyze the economic and environmental benefits, in order to provide theoretical guidance for the promotion of a circular economy model of “apple-biomass power generation-organic fertilizer” in the primary apple production areas and evaluate the reasonableness of the governmental support policy, based on an assessment of the positive externality of biomass power generation. Meanwhile, this study also builds a dynamic system model which can help to ascertain more accurately the subsidy intensity conducive to improving the efficiency of governmental support policies for the development of industries with positive externalities.
1.3. Basic Conditions of Jingning County
Located in the northern latitudes 35°01′~35°45′ and eastern longitudes 105°20′~105°05′, Jingning County belongs to a typical hilly-gully area in the Loess Plateau and is one of 18 arid counties in the central Gansu Province with an annual rainfall of only 423.6 mm. The total population of Jingning County is 48.78 million, and it has an arable land area of approximately 98,000 hm
2, where 93% of the ploughed land is located on the slope of a hill or ditch [
36]. Jingning County has 22.4 million poor people in rural areas. The poverty rate, which is the proportion of poor people to all people in the rural areas, reached 59.6% in 1986 [
37]. Based on the concept of poverty alleviation through agricultural industrialization, Jingning County’s poverty alleviation plan prioritized the development of apple cultivation supplemented by grain planting from 1986 to 2002, and the county gradually formed a spatial production pattern of “north grain and south apple” [
34]. As of 2015, the total area of apple orchards in the entire county reached 707 km
2 (of which, fruiting orchards accounted for nearly 50%), the total weight of apple products reached 0.6 million tons, and the total earnings reached US
$0.3778 billion. The income from apple sales accounts for 80% of the rural per capita net income in Jingning County. By 2018, the poverty rate in Jingning County had dropped to 13.32% [
38].
The samples of apple tree branches used in this study, which cover the main apple varieties in Jingning County, were collected from the towns of Chengchuan and Weirong. All samples were first dried and smashed, and then the heating values of the dry weights were measured through a microcomputer oxygen bomb calorimeter. The measurement process of every sample was repeated three times. The ash content was measured with a dry ash method. The ash-free heating value equals the heating value of dry weight/(1-ash content). The mathematical analysis adopted the
t-test. Compared with crop straw and other high-energy plants, apple tree branches have obvious advantages with regards to the heating value of the dry weight and the ash-free heating value (see
Table 1).
The ash-free heating value of apple tree branches in Jingning County reaches 18.23 MJ/kg, which is higher than the average value for terrestrial plants globally (17.79 MJ/kg) [
41]. Compared with wheat, maize, and other crop straws, apple tree branches have the characteristics of higher heating values and lower ash contents. Research has shown that there is a significant correlation between the ash content and heating value of the dry weight [
41]. Under the fixed conditions of the generating efficiency of a biomass power generation plant, apple tree branches are one of the most desired feedstocks.
The total area of apple cultivation in Jingning County was 707 km
2 in 2016. We calculated that the range of the annual total amount of apple branches is from 0.16 to 0.47 million tons. With an increase in the age of the apple tree, the annual total production of apple tree branches will reach its peak value, of more than 0.4 million tons, in approximately 10 years. Meanwhile, Jingning County also has many straw resources; their output reached 0.55 million tons in 2012, of which maize straw accounted for 66.30% and wheat straw accounted for 23.15% [
42].
In the eastern developed regions of China, the biomass fuel cost of a biomass power plant is approximately US
$0.068/kWh, which accounts for nearly 70% of the total cost [
43]. In 2013, the biomass power generation capacity in China reached 7790.02 MW, of which the total scale of Eastern China, Central China, and South China accounted for 77.65% [
44].
For economically developed regions in China, biomass resources are relatively rare, and the price of biomass feedstock is boosted when biomass power plants compete for the purchase of biomass fuel. At present, the purchase price of biomass fuel is basically between 30.22–52.89 US
$ per ton, but the price in Jingning County was between 30.22–45.34 US
$ per ton in 2012, which is obviously lower than that of China’s eastern regions; additionally, the biomass feedstock sold in rural markets accounts for only 4% of the total production [
23].
The results of the questionnaire given to fruit farmers in Jingning County in 2015 showed that over 95% of the respondent fruit farmers used apple tree branches—pruned down in the process of managing orchards—for heating and cooking; only very few fruit farmers directly burned them. In summary, the biomass feedstock market in Jingning County has not yet been exploited at present.