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BIOENERGY

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Title: BIOENERGY


1
BIOENERGY SALINITY CONTROL IN WHEATBELT
AGRICULTURE
  • John Bartle, Farm Forestry Unit
  • WA Department of Conservation and Land Management

2
SALINITY IS A VERY LARGE PROBLEM
3
SALINITY TREATMENTS ARE COMPLEX AND COSTLY

JRBartle Feb02
j
4

THE SALINITY DILEMMA
  • Cost of salinity is large.
  • Cost of the solution is also large.
  • Tempting to learn to live with the problem??
  • But likely that we will be compelled by
    domestic and international legal and political
    forces to take remedial action.
  • Present national policy response lacks
    understanding of the scientific, economic and
    social dimensions of salinity (Pannell 2000).

JRBartle Feb02
5
HOW DO WE CREATE NEW PERENNIAL CROPS?
  • Make them profitable!!
  • Develop agricultural systems that integrate
    perennials with the conventional annual species.
  • Develop the industries and markets to support the
    new perennial crops and pastures.
  • Be prepared for a large RD investment.

JRBartle Feb02
6
SCALE OF WOODY CROP INDUSTRIES?
  • Probably need to aim for 20 to 40 woody
    perennial plant cover across southern Australia.
  • Area of low rainfall or wheatbelt agriculture in
    southern Australia is 60 million ha.
  • Biomass productivity can be estimated from
    experience with mallee in WA. Annual average
    yield of biomass on a fresh weight basis is 15
    tonnes/ha/yr.

JRBartle Feb02
7
POTENTIAL WOODY BIOMASS PRODUCTION

JRBartle Feb 02
8
WHAT INDUSTRIES COULD CONSUME BIOMASS ON THIS
VAST SCALE?
9
INDUSTRY OPTIONS
  • Extend existing industries
  • Grazing perennials for meat and wool
  • Conventional forestry for timber production
  • Create entirely new industries
  • Based on low cost biomass production from short
    rotation crops
  • Others

JRBartle Feb02
10
WOODY CROP TYPES
  • Long-rotation tree crops Long term (20 to 40
    years) crops managed to produce sawlogs or
    specialty timber.
  • Short-rotation coppice crops Short harvest cycle
    (2 to 5 years) crops that regenerate or coppice
    from the stump after harvest.
  • Short-rotation phase crops A crop grown as a
    short (2 to 5 years) phase as part of crop
    rotation. Planted by seed .
  • Fodder crops Usually short-lived perennials
    shrubs for intermittent grazing.

JRBartle Feb02
11
JRBartle Feb02
12
PRODUCT OPTIONS
Size ratings Large is gt1 M ha, medium 100 000 -
1 M ha, small lt100 000 ha.
JRBartle Feb02
13
PRODUCT PROSPECTS 2020
14
MALLEE A NEW PERENNIAL CROP CASE STUDY
  • Oil mallee development appears promising
    commercial operations emerging.
  • Progress with mallee is the result of carefully
    planned RD, not serendipity.
  • Mallee fundamentals could be more widely applied.
  • Only constraint is the scale of potential biomass
    production - large markets will be required.

JRBartle Feb 02
15
INTEGRATED MALLEE PROCESSING FEASIBILITY STUDY
CSIRO RD since 1970s gt2 million spent
Enecon Licensee for CSIRO Developed ITP concept
Study manager
1999 - ITP Feasibility Study 250,000 Feed
costs Carbon trials Plant costs Financial analysis
Oil Mallee Co CALM RD planting through
1990s cost gt18 million 900 growers 17 million
trees
JVAP funds through RIRDC Industry funds through
Western Power Corp.
Enecon 2001. Integrated tree processing of mallee
eucalypts. RIRDC publication 01/160
16
Turbine
Steam
Electricity
Whole Tree Feed
Combustion WH Boiler
Boilers Internal WH
Steam
Water Gas
Heat
Heat
Carbonisation Plant
Activated Carbon Plant
Wood
Activated Carbon
Charcoal
Wood/Leaf Separation
Gasification WH Boiler
Ash for Recycling
Spent Leaves
Oil Distillation Plant
Eucalyptus Oil
Leaf Material
INTEGRATED MALLEE PROCESSING FOR RENEWABLE
ENERGY, ACTIVATED CARBON AND EUCALYPTUS OIL
Enecon Pty Ltd - Oct. 2000
17
INDICATIVE COSTS AND REVENUES
  • For a processing plant to use 100,000 tonne/year
    of green, whole tree mallee feed
  • Opportunity cost for trees 15/tonne
  • Harvest and delivery 15/tonne
  • Capital cost of plant 25 million
  • Direct employment gt 40 (jobs handling
    processing)
  • Total revenue approx. 16 million/year
  • Activated carbon 3,500 tonne
  • Eucalyptus oil 1,000 tonne
  • Electricity 5 MW
  • Nominal share of feedstock cost by products
  • activated carbon is 35 of feedstock can pay
    35/tonne for chip
  • eucalyptus oil is 1 of feedstock can pay
    1000/tonne
  • electricity is 64 of feedstock only needs to
    pay 8/tonne for the waste

Enecon Pty Ltd - Oct. 2000
18
IMP POTENTIAL
  • each IMP requires 100 000 tonnes feedstock/year
    from 10 000 ha mallees
  • each IMP factory with mallee resource base will
    cost 45m
  • potential for a 9 IMP factories in the wheatbelt
    with 90 000ha of planting at capital cost of
    405 m
  • this is less than 2 of the target woody
    perennial crop area for the WA wheatbelt!

JRBartle Feb02
19
MALLEE FUNDAMENTALS
  • United farmer participation
  • Amenable to large scale production systems and
    economies of scale
  • Locked-in local processing ensures community
    support
  • Short rotation means easy financing and farmer
    ownership
  • Dispersed belt layout needs farmers in management
    control
  • Multiple products with efficient integrated
    processing means bioenergy options for
    residues/wastes
  • Compatibility with agricultural practice
  • Native species advantage (adaptation, genetics,
    biodiversity)

JRBatle Feb 02
20
CONCLUSIONS
  • Commercially viable woody perennial crops are
    essential for building sustainable agricultural
    systems.
  • There is great promise and great challenge in
    development of woody perennial crops, especially
    SRCs.
  • Integrated processing of multiple products
    enables full biomass utilisation and achieves
    major processing economies.
  • Without very large scale penetration of energy
    markets it will not be possible to achieve
    salinity control on a large scale in Australia.

JRBartle Feb02
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