Syngas Derived Biofuels from Biomass Gasification

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Syngas Derived Biofuels from Biomass Gasification

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Drivers for developing biofuels produced from biomass. Benefits of using biomass ... Biomass to Liquids (BTL) Current status and progress in the UK. Transport ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Syngas Derived Biofuels from Biomass Gasification


1
Syngas Derived Biofuels from Biomass
Gasification
Geraint Evans National Non Food Crops
Centre York 5th February 2008
2
Introduction
  • Transport fuels market
  • Drivers for developing biofuels produced from
    biomass
  • Benefits of using biomass
  • Advanced biofuels choices
  • Thermochemical route
  • Biomass to Liquids (BTL)
  • Current status and progress in the UK

3
Transport Fuels Market
  • Gasoline
  • UK consumption 17.8 million tonnes pa (Nexant)
  • Declining by -0.5 per year (Nexant/Concawe)
  • 165 g CO2 /km (Concawe)
  • EU has excess production capacity
  • Diesel
  • UK consumption 18.5 million tonnes pa
    (Nexant/Concawe)
  • Growing at 0.9 per year (Nexant)
  • 159 g CO2 /km (Concawe)
  • EU is short of production capacity, UK about in
    balance
  • Aviation Kerosene
  • Significant increase in demand (IP)
  • Close to half of demand met by imports (IP)

4
GHG savings, security of supply, declining fossil
fuel reserves, agricultural benefits
5
Biofuel drivers are regionally influenced
6
Its a Question of Carbon
  • We live in an economy based on ancient sunlight
  • We need alternatives to fossil carbon
  • to provide
  • Power supply
  • Fuels for transport
  • Chemicals and materials
  • Reductions in CO2 and CH4
  • emissions

7
Current Biofuel Types
  • Vegetable Oils (SVO)
  • Biogas
  • Ethanol
  • Biodiesel (FAME)

8
Current/Future 1st Gen Capabilities
  • Current Capacity
  • Biodiesel 400-500KT
  • Further 600 KT in planning stages
  • Bioethanol 55KT
  • Further 1.9 MT in planning/construction stages
  • Assuming a 5050 mix for 2010
  • 1million tonnes Biodiesel will need approx
    1million tonnes of oil
  • 1 million tonnes of ethanol would need approx 3
    million tonnes of wheat
  • the UK typically has a 3 million tonne grain
    surplus, enough to supply the Ethanol requirement
  • In 2006 the UK grew over 250,000Ha of OSR for Non
    Food uses and the number is growing, enough to
    produce about 400,000 tonnes of biodiesel.

9
Prospects for the UK
  • To meet potential UK market targets for transport
    fuels
  • Assumes 50/50 diesel/petrol market split
    constant sales

Ref Amec Techno economic analysis
10
First Generation Technologies Have Limited
Potential
11
Routes to Advanced Biofuels
  • Hydrogenated Vegetable oils (HVO)
  • Provides a product refiners want
  • Potential supply problems with plant oil
    feedstock
  • Fermentation
  • Ethanol
  • Butanol
  • Higher Alcohols
  • Thermochemical
  • Syndiesel
  • Provides an opportunity to combine heat and power
    with fuels and chemicals
  • Provides a product slate refiners want
  • Syndiesel from natural gas already for sale

12
Cellulosic Processes Give Improved Green House
Gas Savings
13
Biofuel CO2 Savings Summary Data
14
Cellulosic Biofuels yield potential
  • Choren JV with Shell
  • Biomass to synthesis gas to diesel
  • Demonstration Unit operational in Freiberg
    E.Germany
  • Potential to increase yield to 8,000l/ha
  • World Scale plant 250,000tpa in 2008/09

Biodiesel
  • 1,300 litres per hectare diesel equivalent

Bioethanol
  • 2,500 litres per hectare diesel equivalent

SunFuel
  • 4,046 litres per hectare diesel equivalent

15
Cellulosic Biofuels looking for a renewable
carbon atom
Energy Maize
30 dt/ha
15 -18 dt/ha
Quelle KWS
16
Potential UK feedstocks
  • If predicted targets are correct we may need a
    further 4MT of biofuel for the period 2020-2030
    on top of that generated in previous years.
  • If we assume all is met through advanced
    technologies we would need ca 20MT of biomass
  • Current figures show the UK to have
  • 10 MT timber
  • 80MT agricultural wastes
  • 7-10MT waste wood
  • 7.5 MT paper and board
  • 30 MT Food industry by products
  • 4.5MT Digestible kitchen waste

17
Gasification opens the way for a number of fuel,
energy and chemical production options subject to
feedstock availability
Ref Nexant
18
Simplified Second Generation Biodiesel Process
The Biomass to Liquids Concept
Ref Nexant
19
BTL yields a high quality synthetic diesel
product which is easy to incorporate into the
existing infrastructures
  • Compared with petrochemical diesel
  • 60 reduction in hydrocarbons emissions
  • 55 reduction in particulates emissions
  • Easy to integrate into existing infrastructures
  • More efficient use of land compared to first
    generation processes

VW
VW / Choren
20
Key Barrier Cost
Choren
21
Approximate Cost Levels for Biofuel Technologies
The term usability is used here to describe how
easily the fuel could be used in the general
transport fuel pool in the short to medium term
22
Thermochemical technologies are now moving from
pilot scale through to demonstration scale
  • Choren (Freiburg, Germany)
  • Partnered with Shell, VW and Daimler
  • Semi-commercial unit of circa 15KT about to
    startup
  • 200,000 tpa (5000bpd) commercial scale plant
    planned from 2011
  • Range Fuels (Georgia, USA)
  • Announced start of construction of 113,000 tpa
    syngas to ethanol plant in November 2007
  • Flambeau River Paper Mill (Wisconsin, USA)
  • Announced in November 2007 their plans to build a
    16,500 tpa demo plant to produce Fischer-Tropsch
    waxes
  • Plant expected to be complete by 2010
  • Future plans include construction of a larger
    scale unit.
  • Stora Enso/Neste (Varkaus, Finland)
  • Currently building a demonstration plant at the
    Stora Enso Varkhaus paper mill, expected startup
    is 2008
  • Plan to subsequently build a 100,000 tpa
    commercial unit.

23
UK progress
  • UK is behind USA, German and others.
  • BP research at Saltend (FT)
  • Newcaste Univ (downdraft gasification and FT)
  • Aston University (pyrolysis)
  • Others
  • NNFCC
  • IBS team (NEPIC, Renew Tees Valley, North East
    Biofuels)
  • Wilton
  • Syngas process appears appropriate
  • Research to be funded by One NE and Defra to
    develop project partners, determine most
    appropriate technology (economics) and LCA

24
Biomass Supply Issues
  • Logistics severely impact the cost of supply.
  • Compromise between logistics and feedstock
    (variable cost) and scale.
  • Choren/Shell set at 5KBPSD but reliant on one
    principle feedstock, namely wood.
  • UK plant is likely to be a polyfeed facility

WOOD WASTE
AGRI- WASTE
BTLCOMPLEX
ENERGY CROPS
OTHER OPTIONS
OTHER OPTIONS
25
Biomass Supply Issues Key Questions
  • Bio-Oil or pyrolysis oil may provide the link
    between a broad range of biomass sources and BTL.
  • Pyrolysis units could be localised and Bio-Oil
    moved in bulk ships to a centralised coastal BTL
    facility
  • ECN in the Netherlands have examined the
    economics of various BTL pre-treatments with
    pyrolysis oil looking favourable for a Rotterdam
    BTL solution

WOOD WASTE
BIO-OIL
AGRI- WASTE
BIO-OIL
BTL COMPLEX
ENERGY CROPS
BIO-OIL
BIO-OIL
OTHER OPTIONS
BIO-OIL
OTHER OPTIONS
26
Biomass for Bio-Oil and BTL
  • Main forestation in the North West, South West
    and Scotland.
  • Source Wheat straw from the Vale of York and East
    Anglia
  • Source Miscanthus in the South East Midlands and
    East Anglia
  • Logistics suggest movement of bio-oil to a major
    port site with local refineries.
  • Humberside appears to fit simple selection
    criteria.

Fuels refinery Straw Sourcing Miscanthus
Sourcing Wood Sourcing BTL Facility
Scotland
Wales
England
27
Biofuel technology continues to evolve. The
industry is now exploiting readily available
First Generation technology whilst developing
Second Generation process for the future
  • Benefits
  • Exploitation of wider and hopefully lower cost
    biomass feedstock base
  • In the case of synthetic BTL diesel, provides a
    performance blend stock with enhanced properties
    refiners can exploit
  • Enhanced GHG performance amongst other
    environmental benefits
  • Opportunities for biomass-driven power-steam
    co-generation
  • Challenges
  • Increased capital cost
  • Major increase in process complexity
  • Reappraisal of agriculture need to meet biomass
    demands
  • Increased biomass requirement per ton of biofuel
    leads to a need for an optimised logistics
    solution to avoid deleterious GHG performance
    upstream of the biofuel facility

28
Conclusions Room to Grow
  • Bio-Energy and Bio-Fuels are big business. The UK
    is behind the US, Germany, others, but activity
    is increasing
  • First generation biofuel production capacity is
    emerging in the UK.
  • Economics are difficult at present may improve
    as the RTFO comes in.
  • Scope to optimise processes.
  • Cellulosic biofuels
  • give an additional raft of biofuels in addition
    to first generation processes. Likely to be
    needed beyond about 10 biofuel substitution.
  • Technologies are emerging. These need to be
    developed at large scale for full benefits to be
    realised
  • Syndiesel provides most useful product but
    process is expensive
  • Huge potential for both UK agriculture industry

29
Thank you
Website www.nnfcc.co.uk
30
Routes via Syngas
31
Global Average Surface Temperature 1850-2005
Ref Defra, Environment in your pocket
32
Fermentation Route
33
Biomass Conversion Fermentation Route
  • more than 25 of lignocellulosic feedstock
    consists of hemicellulose, of which after
    hydrolysis xylose is the most abundant sugar.
  • fermentation of C5 sugars is crucial for
    overall economics of cellulosic ethanol.
  • after hydrolysis cellulose breaks down into
    glucose, a six-carbon (C6) sugar that can easily
    be metabolized by S. cerevisiae

Ref Tamutech
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