Carinata and Camelina as Intermediate Crops for Sustainable Biofuels in Italy and Spain
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Conceptual Framework
2.1. System Design
2.1.1. Land Use
2.1.2. Biomass Production
2.2. Competitive Priorities
2.2.1. Flexibility
2.2.2. Quality
2.2.3. Cost
2.2.4. Innovation
2.2.5. Transparency
2.3. Competitive Priorities and Indicators
- fitting within short crop calendar windows
- adapting to diverse agro-ecological conditions
- enabling year-round biomass availability through rotation diversification.
- life-cycle GHG emissions
- soil organic carbon and nutrient balance
- biodiversity protection
- water-use efficiency
- soil compaction risk during harvesting.
- production costs (seed, fertiliser, machinery, labour)
- gross margins at representative yields
- levelised cost of feedstock
- transport and storage costs.
- varietal development (early maturity, drought tolerance)
- low-input agronomic practices
- improvements in harvesting and pre-treatment technologies
- compatibility with emerging biofuel pathways.
- use of fallow or marginal land
- absence of displacement of main crops
- verifiable land-use baselines
- compliance with certification schemes.
2.4. Optimisation Strategies with Competitive Priority Indicators
3. Comparative Case Study: Italy and Spain
3.1. System Design
3.2. Policy Integration
3.3. Case Study Framing
3.4. Comparative Analysis: Italy and Spain
3.4.1. Land Use
- Italy: Seasonal fallow land is more limited and regional, requiring careful alignment with CAP crop calendar rules. Indicators such as soil organic matter, erosion risk, and biodiversity protection are critical to demonstrate environmental integrity in regions with shorter fallow periods.
- Spain: Larger expanses of fallow and under-utilised land provide greater scaling potential. Indicators such as land availability and SOC gains are particularly relevant in semi-arid zones, where the soil restoration potential is high. Traceability and monitoring are essential to verify compliance under Spain’s Real Decreto 376/2022 [40].
3.4.2. Biomass Production
- Italy: Yield stability must be achieved within shorter crop calendar windows, often in rotations with durum wheat and maize. Indicators linked to cost and innovation (e.g., varietal development, precision agronomy) are central to ensuring reliable, low input cultivation.
- Spain: Camelina–barley rotations dominate, with wider sowing windows and stronger SOC gains. Indicators of flexibility and quality (e.g., soil compaction risk, residue retention) are critical to demonstrate resilience under semi-arid conditions. Logistics indicators are particularly important given the concentration of biodiesel plants in Andalusia and Catalonia.
3.5. Optimisation Strategies/Regulatory Interventions for Intermediate Crops in Italy and Spain
3.5.1. Land Use
- Italy: Strategies emphasise prioritising seasonal fallow land, aligning sowing with CAP crop calendar rules, and clustering production near established oilseed processing hubs in Emilia-Romagna and Lombardy.
- Spain: Strategies focus on exploiting larger semi-arid fallow areas, integrating camelina–barley rotations, and strengthening traceability under Real Decreto 376/2022 [39].
3.5.2. Biomass Production
- Italy: Optimisation emphasises early maturing varieties, precision agronomy, lightweight machinery, and improved storage near crushing facilities.
- Spain: Strategies prioritise drought tolerant camelina varieties, adjusted harvest timing for semi-arid soils, residue retention, and reduced transport distances to biodiesel plants in Andalusia and Catalonia.
3.5.3. Integrating Innovation, Biochar, and Compost
- Italy: Compost and digestate provide short-term fertility gains, while biochar supports long-term SOC stability in wetter regions.
- Spain: Biochar is especially valuable for semi-arid soils, improving water retention and resilience, while compost supplements nutrient balance in rotations.
3.5.4. EU-Level Optimisation
3.5.5. National Implementation in Italy and Spain
- Italy: Piano Strategico della PAC 2023–2027 and Decreto Biocarburanti define the GAEC requirements, soil management obligations, crop calendar rules, and sustainability certification procedures [38].
| Value Chain Stage | Challenges | Competitive Priority | Key Indicators | How Indicators Provide Evidence (Italy and Spain) | Optimisation Strategies (Italy and Spain) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Land Use | Ensuring use of fallow/under-utilised land; avoiding displacement of main crops; alignment with CAP crop calendar rules | Quality | • Land availability • Biodiversity protection • SOC • Soil nutrient balance | Italy: Demonstrates cultivation on seasonal fallow land with strict CAP alignment. Spain: Verifies use of larger fallow areas and higher SOC restoration in semi-arid zones. | Italy: Prioritise seasonal fallow land; align sowing with CAP rules. Spain: Exploit larger fallow areas; integrate semi-arid rotations. |
| Cost | • Land preparation cost • Proximity to storage/processing | Italy: Identifies parcels near oilseed facilities in Emilia-Romagna/Lombardy. Spain: Minimises logistics costs by proximity to biodiesel plants in Andalusia/Catalonia. | Italy: Cluster production near crushing facilities. Spain: Reduce transport distances to biodiesel hubs. | ||
| Innovation | • Land suitability mapping • Remote sensing data | Italy: Supports precision allocation in fragmented landscapes. Spain: Provides spatial evidence for semi-arid land suitability. | Italy: Use geospatial tools for fragmented parcels. Spain: Apply remote sensing for semi-arid suitability. | ||
| Transparency | • Land use traceability • Monitoring feasibility | Italy: Ensures CAP compliance via digital farm records. Spain: Strengthens RED III documentation under Real Decreto 376/2022. | Italy: Implement geotagged monitoring for CAP. Spain: Enhance digital traceability systems for RED III. | ||
| Land Use | Maintaining SOC; preventing erosion; nutrient balance under low input systems | Quality | • SOC • Nutrient balance • Erosion risk | Italy: Evidence of soil health in rotations with cereals. Spain: Demonstrates erosion control and SOC gains in semi-arid soils. | Italy: Apply reduced tillage; compost/digestate amendments. Spain: Use biochar to enhance SOC and water retention. |
| Innovation | • Soil improvement practices • Precision nutrient management | Italy: Compost and digestate improve fertility. Spain: Biochar enhances resilience in semi-arid soils. | Italy: Adopt precision fertilisation. Spain: Integrate biochar as soil enhancement. | ||
| Biomass Production | Achieving reliable yields in short growing windows; biodiversity protection; maintaining low input cultivation | Cost | • Yield stability • Input intensity | Italy: Quantifies viability in durum wheat/maize rotations. Spain: Identifies cost drivers in camelina–barley rotations. | Italy: Select low input, fast growing varieties; optimise sowing dates. Spain: Reduce fertiliser use; exploit barley–camelina synergies. |
| Innovation | • Water use efficiency • Agronomic innovation indicators | Italy: Demonstrates efficiency gains from precision agronomy. Spain: Shows resilience through drought tolerant varieties. | Italy: Adopt early maturing varieties; precision agronomy. Spain: Use drought tolerant camelina; optimise water use. | ||
| Biomass Production | Minimising soil compaction; preserving soil carbon; adapting machinery to small seed crops | Flexibility | • Soil compaction risk • Machinery suitability | Italy: Lightweight machinery reduces compaction in wetter soils. Spain: Adjusted harvest timing for semi-arid soils. | Italy: Use lightweight machinery; adjust timing. Spain: Adapt machinery for semi-arid conditions. |
| Quality | • SOC retention • Harvest losses • Residue retention | Italy: Demonstrates efficient biomass recovery and residue management. Spain: Highlights SOC retention under semi-arid conditions. | Italy: Improve harvest techniques; retain residues. Spain: Avoid soil disturbance; maximise residue retention. | ||
| Biomass Production | Minimising emissions from drying/storage; maintaining seed quality; reducing logistics footprint | Quality | • Storage losses • Seed moisture control • Transport/logistics emissions | Italy: Quantifies impacts of storage near oilseed facilities. Spain: Identifies opportunities to reduce transport distances to biodiesel plants. | Italy: Improve drying efficiency; optimise storage near crushing hubs. Spain: Reduce transport distances; optimise logistics for biodiesel plants. |
3.6. Economic Viability and Competitiveness
- Production costs for camelina and carinata seeds vary between EUR 400/t and EUR 550/t depending on crop type and region. Gross margins at representative yields are positive under current PAC incentives, particularly for camelina in Spain, where larger fallow areas and semi-arid conditions support low input cultivation. In Italy, profitability is enhanced when coproducts, such as protein meal and glycerine, are monetised, thereby offsetting higher seed costs. These findings suggest that farmer uptake is viable when supported by targeted incentives and integration into established supply chains [10,33,34,35].
- Aviation (SAF): Camelina-based HEFA and ATJ pathways deliver SAF at EUR 17–22/GJ, with carbon intensity reductions of 10–30 gCO2eq/MJ depending on the SOC gains. Although SAF costs are higher than maritime or heavy-duty fuels, competitiveness is driven by RED III GHG-based intensity targets and SAF blending mandates [33,35].
- Heavy-Duty Road Transport (HVO blends): Camelina seed feedstock at EUR 400/t supports competitive HVO blending at 10–15%, while carinata seed at EUR 550/t remains viable at lower blending shares. Farmer gross margins are positive under PAC incentives, making heavy-duty transport a near-term market for intermediate crops [10].
- Italy: Stronger integration into established oilseed processing hubs (Emilia-Romagna, Lombardy) supports competitiveness, but higher seed costs require coproduct valorisation and policy incentives (Decreto Biocarburanti).
- Spain: Larger fallow land areas and semi-arid conditions reduce input costs and enhance the SOC gains, making camelina particularly competitive for SAF and biodiesel under Real Decreto 376/2022 traceability requirements.
4. Policy Recommendations for Carinata and Camelina as Intermediate Crops in Italy and Spain
4.1. Volumetric Versus GHG-Based Targets
- Under volumetric (% RES) targets, the emphasis is on increasing the supply of compliant biofuels, favouring feedstocks with stable yields and established conversion pathways.
- Under GHG-based targets, the focus shifts to marginal GHG savings, including soil carbon accumulation, reduced fertiliser use, etc.
4.2. RED III: Aligning Sustainability Criteria with Mediterranean Agronomy
4.3. Emission Savings from Soil Carbon Accumulation (ESCA) and Carbon Removals and Carbon Farming Regulation (CRCF): Recognising Soil Carbon Benefits
4.4. CAP: Enabling Crop Calendar Flexibility and Soil Quality Improvements
- region-specific crop calendars based on GAEZ and GDD (Growing Degree Days) thresholds;
- recognition of intermediate crops under GAEC 6 (soil cover) and GAEC 7 (rotation);
- support for diversified rotations, including intercropping and relay cropping where compliant;
- incentives for lightweight machinery, decentralised storage, and soil improvement practices.
4.5. Market Mechanisms and SAF Integration
4.6. Cross-DG Coordination
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| Value Chain Stage | Main Activities | Challenges Affecting Sustainability and Resource Efficiency | Competitive Priorities | Key Indicators | Optimisation Strategies |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Land Use | Land identification and allocation | Ensuring use of fallow/marginal land; avoiding displacement of main crops; alignment with CAP crop calendar rules | Quality, Innovation, Transparency, Cost | • Land availability (fallow/marginal land) • Biodiversity protection • Land use traceability • Monitoring feasibility • Land preparation cost • Proximity to storage/processing | Prioritise fallow land; avoid sensitive habitats; align sowing windows with CAP; use geospatial tools; strengthen digital farm records; select land requiring minimal remediation; reduce transport distances |
| Soil quality management | Maintaining soil organic matter; preventing erosion; nutrient balance under low-input systems | Quality, Innovation | • Soil organic carbon (SOC) • Soil nutrient balance (N, P, K) • Erosion risk • Soil structure/compaction sensitivity • Soil improvement practices • Precision nutrient management | Reduced tillage; residue retention; optimised nutrient management; introduce cover crops; adopt precision fertilisation | |
| Biomass Production | Crop sowing and annual management | Achieving reliable yields in short growing windows; biodiversity protection; maintaining low-input cultivation | Cost, Innovation | • Yield and yield stability • Input intensity (fertiliser, pesticides, water) • Water-use efficiency • Lifecycle GHG emissions • Biodiversity impact of management practices | Select low-input varieties; optimise sowing dates; reduce fertiliser use; adopt early-maturing, drought-tolerant varieties; use precision agronomy |
| Harvesting | Minimising soil compaction; preserving soil carbon; adapting machinery to small seed crops | Flexibility, Quality | • Soil compaction risk • Harvest losses • Residue management/SOC retention • Machinery suitability for small seed crops | Use lightweight machinery; adjust harvesting timing; improve harvesting techniques; retain residues | |
| Pre-treatment, storage and transport | Minimising emissions from drying/storage; maintaining seed quality; reducing logistics footprint | Quality, Cost, Innovation | • Storage losses • Seed moisture and quality • Emissions from drying/storage • Transport distance and logistics emissions | Improve drying efficiency; optimise storage; reduce transport distances |
| Value Chain Stage | Challenges | Relevant Competitive Priorities | Suitable Indicators | How Indicators Provide Evidence (Italy and Spain) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Land Use | Ensuring use of fallow land; avoiding displacement of main crops; alignment with CAP crop calendar rules | Quality | • Land availability (fallow/under-utilised land) • Biodiversity protection • SOC • Soil nutrient balance | Italy: Demonstrates cultivation on seasonal fallow land with strict CAP alignment. Spain: Verifies use of larger fallow areas and higher SOC restoration in semi-arid zones. |
| Cost | • Land preparation cost • Proximity to storage/processing | Italy: Identifies cost-effective parcels near oilseed facilities in Emilia-Romagna/Lombardy. Spain: Minimises logistics costs by proximity to biodiesel plants in Andalusia/Catalonia. | ||
| Innovation | • Land suitability mapping tools • Remote sensing data | Italy: Supports precision allocation in fragmented landscapes. Spain: Provides spatial evidence for semi-arid land suitability. | ||
| Transparency | • Land use traceability • Monitoring feasibility | Italy: Ensures CAP compliance through digital farm records. Spain: Strengthens RED III documentation under Real Decreto 376/2022. | ||
| Land Use | Maintaining soil organic matter; biodiversity protection; preventing erosion; nutrient balance under low-input systems | Quality | • SOC • Nutrient balance • Erosion risk | Italy: Evidence of soil health in rotations with cereals. Spain: Demonstrates erosion control and SOC gains in semi-arid soils. |
| Innovation | • Soil improvement practices (biochar, compost, digestate) • Precision nutrient management | Italy: Introduces compost and digestate to enhance soil fertility. Spain: Applies biochar to improve water retention and long-term SOC. | ||
| Biomass Production | Achieving reliable yields in short growing windows; adapting machinery to small seed crops; maintaining low-input cultivation | Cost | • Yield and yield stability • Input intensity (fertiliser, pesticides, water) | Italy: Quantifies viability in durum wheat/maize rotations. Spain: Identifies cost drivers in camelina–barley rotations. |
| Innovation | • Water use efficiency • Agronomic innovation indicators (varietal development, precision agronomy) | Italy: Demonstrates efficiency gains from precision agronomy. Spain: Shows resilience through drought-tolerant varieties. | ||
| Biomass Production | Minimising soil compaction; preserving soil carbon | Flexibility | • Soil compaction risk • Machinery suitability for small seed crops | Italy: Evidence of operational adaptability with lightweight machinery. Spain: Adjusted harvesting timing for semi-arid soils. |
| Quality | • SOC retention • Harvest losses • Residue retention • Soil bulk density reduction | Italy: Demonstrates efficient biomass recovery and residue management. Spain: Highlights SOC retention under semi-arid conditions. | ||
| Biomass Production | Minimising emissions from drying/storage; maintaining seed quality; reducing logistics footprint | Quality | • Storage losses and seed moisture control • Seed quality preservation • Transport and logistics emissions | Italy: Quantifies impacts of storage near oilseed facilities. Spain: Identifies opportunities to reduce transport distances to biodiesel plants. |
| Sector | Italy–Carinata/Camelina | Spain–Camelina |
|---|---|---|
| Aviation (SAF–HEFA/ATJ) | Estimated production cost: EUR 400–600 per tonne of oilseeds; levelised SAF cost EUR 18–22/GJ. Profitability depends on SAF mandates and RED III GHG-based intensity targets. | Camelina grown on degraded soils yields SAF at EUR 17–21/GJ, with carbon intensity 10.5–30.8 gCO2eq/MJ depending on the SOC gains. |
| Maritime (HVO/FT diesel) | Carinata biodiesel chain in Tuscany shows economic viability with gross margins positive at representative yields; biodiesel cost EUR 16–19/GJ including coproducts (meal, glycerine). | Camelina biodiesel integrated into Spanish biodiesel plants achieves competitive cost EUR 15–18/GJ, especially when logistics are optimised near Andalusia/Catalonia hubs. |
| Heavy-Duty Road Transport (HVO blends) | Novel vegetable oil feedstock prices: camelina EUR 996/t, carinata EUR 1169/t. Co-fed HVO becomes competitive at 5–15% blending shares, depending on crop. | Camelina feedstock at EUR 996/t supports competitive HVO blending at 10–15%, with farmer gross margins positive under PAC incentives. |
| Policy Domain | Policy Challenge | Relevant Competitive Priorities | Key Indicators (from Section 3.2) | How Indicators Provide Evidence | Policy Recommendations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RED III (incl. IR 996) | Fixed sowing/harvest dates not aligned with Mediterranean agronomy | Quality, Flexibility | • Sowing window compatibility • GDD requirements • Rotation fit | Demonstrate that crop development depends on temperature accumulation rather than fixed dates | Replace fixed dates with GDD-based criteria; allow region-specific calendars; ensure compatibility with main crop rotations |
| Demonstrating low-ILUC-risk for fallow land use | Transparency, Quality | • Land availability (fallow/under-utilised land) • ILUC-risk indicators • Land-use traceability and monitoring feasibility | Verify non-competitive land use and compliance with RED III | Require geotagged field records; integrate remote-sensing verification; harmonise MS reporting | |
| ESCA | Recognising soil carbon benefits of intermediate crops | Quality, Innovation | • SOC • Erosion risk • Residue retention | Provide evidence of soil carbon gains and erosion reduction | Include intermediate crops as eligible soil carbon enhancement practices; reward SOC improvements |
| Integrating soil improvement practices into carbon accounting | Innovation, Quality | • SOC • Nutrient balance • Water-use efficiency | Demonstrate long-term carbon retention and soil quality improvements | Recognise biochar, compost, and digestate as eligible ESCA measures; support monitoring methodologies | |
| CRCF | Enabling carbon credit generation for soil improvements | Transparency, Innovation | • SOC • Soil nutrient balance | Provide measurable evidence for carbon crediting | Allow farmers to generate CRCF credits for SOC increases from intermediate crops and soil improvement practices |
| CAP (GAECs, crop calendars, GAEZs) | Crop calendar rigidity and lack of regional differentiation | Flexibility, Cost | • Sowing window compatibility • Growing cycle length | Show that Mediterranean regions require differentiated calendars | Allow regional crop calendars based on GAEZ data; integrate GDD thresholds |
| Recognition of intermediate crops in GAEC 6 and GAEC 7 | Quality, Transparency | • Soil cover • SOC • Erosion risk | Demonstrate soil cover and soil quality benefits | Recognise intermediate crops as eligible for GAEC 6 (soil cover) and GAEC 7 (rotation) | |
| Supporting diversified rotations | Innovation, Flexibility | • Rotation fit • Biodiversity indicators | Show benefits of 3-crop rotations | Encourage 3-crop rotations; allow intercropping/relay cropping where compliant | |
| Machinery, storage, and logistics constraints | Cost, Flexibility | • Soil compaction risk • Storage losses and seed moisture control • Transport and logistics emissions | Identify operational bottlenecks | Use CAP Pillar II to support lightweight machinery, decentralised storage, and soil improvement units | |
| Cross-DG coordination (AGRI, ENER, CLIMA, ENV) | Fragmented governance across DGs | Transparency, Innovation | • Monitoring feasibility • Certification alignment | Show need for harmonised guidance | Establish cross-DG coordination for RED III, CAP, ESCA, CRCF; issue joint guidance on intermediate crops |
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Panoutsou, C.; Tozzi, F.; Chiaramonti, D. Carinata and Camelina as Intermediate Crops for Sustainable Biofuels in Italy and Spain. Energies 2026, 19, 2803. https://doi.org/10.3390/en19122803
Panoutsou C, Tozzi F, Chiaramonti D. Carinata and Camelina as Intermediate Crops for Sustainable Biofuels in Italy and Spain. Energies. 2026; 19(12):2803. https://doi.org/10.3390/en19122803
Chicago/Turabian StylePanoutsou, Calliope, Francesca Tozzi, and David Chiaramonti. 2026. "Carinata and Camelina as Intermediate Crops for Sustainable Biofuels in Italy and Spain" Energies 19, no. 12: 2803. https://doi.org/10.3390/en19122803
APA StylePanoutsou, C., Tozzi, F., & Chiaramonti, D. (2026). Carinata and Camelina as Intermediate Crops for Sustainable Biofuels in Italy and Spain. Energies, 19(12), 2803. https://doi.org/10.3390/en19122803

