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BioMass Fueling our Future

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Title: BioMass Fueling our Future


1
BioMass Fueling our Future
  • Ryan Canady

2
Agenda
  • History on Biofuels
  • Types of Biofuels
  • Current Biofuel trade Economy
  • Future Economics of Biofuel trade
  • Production of Biofuels
  • Biofuel Technology
  • Government Programs and Support
  • Interesting Facts

3
Millenium Development Goal 7
  • Integrate the principles of sustainable
    development into country policies and programmes
    reverse loss of environmental resources.
  • Reduce by half the proportion of people without
    sustainable access to safe drinking water.
  • Achieve significant improvement in lives of at
    least 100 million slum dwellers, by 2020.

4
Biofuel Drivers
  • increase of security of energy supply
  • reduction of dependence on fossil fuels
  • reduction of greenhouse gas emissions
  • reduction local air pollution
  • protection of soil and groundwater through the
    use of biodegradable products
  • reduction of health hazards by using non-toxic
    products.

5
Biofuel Detractors
  • Drives up cost of food as corn and sugar products
    are diverted into fuel tanks
  • Biodiesel is currently about one and a half times
    more expensive than petroleum diesel fuel.
  • It takes energy to produce biodiesel fuel from
    crops
  • Biodiesel fuel can damage rubber hoses in some
    engines, particularly in cars built before 1994.
  • Biodiesel cleans the dirt from the engine. This
    dirt then collects in the fuel filter, which can
    clog it. Filters must be replaced frequently
    initially.
  • Biofuels are not distributed as widely as
    traditional petroleum

6
Biofuel History
  • Since the dawn of fire, man has used biofuels in
    the form of wood and dried waste.
  • Nikolaus August Otto (combustion engine
    inventor), originally designed his engine to run
    on ethanol
  • Rudolf Diesel (diesel engine inventor), designed
    his to run on peanut oil. Debuted at 1900 Worlds
    Fair.
  • Henry Ford originally designed Model T to run on
    pure ethanol.

7
Biofuel History
  • WWII brought about cheap Middle Eastern oil which
    lessened the overall interest in biofuels as oil
    became cheaper and more abundant
  • Through the decades interest has waxed and waned
    as the price and availability of oil has
    fluctuated.
  • Recently the rising cost of oil, global warming
    and government awards has renewed the interest in
    the biofuel industry.

8
Various Types of Biofuels
  • Biodiesel
  • Ethanol
  • Vegetable oils
  • Alcohols (Butanol, methanol, and other blends)
  • Biohydrogen

9
Biofuel Yields
10
Biodiesel
  • How is biodiesel made?Biodiesel is made through
    a chemical process called transesterification
    whereby the glycerin is separated from the fat or
    vegetable oil. The process leaves behind two
    products -- methyl esters (the chemical name for
    biodiesel) and glycerin (a valuable byproduct
    usually sold to be used in soaps and other
    products).
  • Understanding Blending Blending is the process
    by which biodiesel is mixed with petroleum-based
    fuel. In its purest form, biodiesel is signified
    as a B100 blend (100 biodiesel). Blending can be
    achieved at any percentage. A B10 blend simply
    means that the fuel contains 10 biodiesel and
    90 petrol-diesel.
  • Biodiesel is biodegradable and non-toxic, and
    typically produces about 60 less net carbon
    dioxide emissions than petroleum-based diesel, as
    it is itself produced from atmospheric carbon
    dioxide via photosynthesis in plants.

11
Biodiesel Description
  • Golden to dark brown in color
  • High boiling point
  • Low vapor pressure
  • Immiscible to water
  • Viscosity similar to petroleum
  • Flash point 150 C
  • Pure Biodiesel is non toxic.
  • Higher lubricity index than diesel (extends
    injector life)

12
Biodiesel Feedstock
  • Rapeseed
  • Soybean
  • Jatropha
  • Sunflower
  • Palm oil
  • Canola
  • Waste vegetable oil
  • Virgin oil feedstock
  • Animal fats
  • algae
  • Sewage (A company in New Zealand has successfully
    developed a system for using sewage waste as a
    substrate for algae and then producing
    bio-diesel)

13
World Biodiesel Production
14
Jatropha
  • natively occur in tropical areas, India, Africa,
    North America, and the Caribbean.
  • resistant to drought and pests
  • produces seeds with up to 40 per cent oil content

15
Jatropha
  • When the seeds are crushed, the resulting
    jatropha oil can be used in a standard diesel
    car, while the residue can also be processed into
    biomass to power electricity plants
  • The plant can grow in wastelands, fertilizes the
    soil that it grows in, and yields more than four
    times as much fuel per hectare as soybean more
    than ten times that of corn. A hectare of
    jatropha produces 1,892 liters of fuel (about 6.5
    barrels per acre)

16
Rape Seed
  • Also known as Canola, Rapa, and oilseed rape.
  • Rapeseed oil is the preferred oil stock for
    biodiesel production in most of Europe, partly
    because rapeseed produces more oil per unit of
    land area as compared to other oil sources, such
    as soy beans.

17
Rape Seed
  • Rapeseed derived biodiesel cost more to produce
    than standard diesel fuel. Prices of rapeseed oil
    are at very high levels presently (start November
    05) due to increased demand on rapeseed oil for
    this purpose.

18
Ethanol
  • Ethanol is "an alcohol product produced from
    corn, sorghum, potatoes, wheat, sugar cane, even
    biomass such as cornstalks and vegetable waste.
    When combined with gasoline, it increases octane
    levels while also promoting more complete fuel
    burning that reduces harmful tailpipe emissions
    such as carbon monoxide and hydrocarbons."
    (Abengoa Bioenergy)

19
Ethanol
  • Its oxygen content helps gasoline burn more
    efficiently, cutting tailpipe pollutants
    including carbon monoxide and benzene. E10 can
    cut carbon monoxide emissions by 20, benzene
    emissions by 25 and overall gasoline toxicity by
    30.
  • Over 99 of fuel ethanol in the US is consumed as
    E10, a 10 blend with gasoline. But E85, an 85
    blend, is beginning to emerge. The big three US
    automakers annually sell around 250,000 flexible
    fuel vehicles capable of running on E85 at no
    added cost to buyers.

20
Ethanol Producing Countries
21
Biofuels Pump
  • B20 20 blend of biodiesel and diesel
  • E85 85 blend of gasoline with ethanol
  • E10 10 blend of gasoline and ethanol

22
Comparisons
23
Vegetable Oils
  • Grease Cars typically duel fuel system cars of
    both vegetable oil and diesel.
  • Can be used to both fuels vehicles and heat
    homes.
  • Makes use of filtered waste vegetable oil (WVO)
    and straight vegetable oil (SVO)
  • Should not be used in colder climates without a
    heating system.

24
Alcohols (Butanol Methanol)
  • Due to similar molecular structure of alcohol,
    Butanol is more similar to gasoline than ethanol
    is.
  • Butanol has been demonstrated to work in some
    vehicles designed for use with gasoline without
    any modification.
  • Methanol is currently produced from natural gas,
    a fossil fuel. It can also be produced from
    biomass.
  • Oils are mixed with sodium hydroxide and methanol
    (or ethanol) and the chemical reaction produces
    biodiesel (FAME) and glycerol. 1 part glycerol is
    produced for every 10 parts biodiesel.
  • Glycerol can then be used
  • Medicine and pharmaceutical technology
    (lubricants, cough syrups, laxatives, and
    dessicants)
  • Personal care (toothpaste, mouthwash, soaps,
    deodorants)
  • Foods and beverages (solvent, sweetners, food
    preservatives.)
  • Feed
  • And much more

25
Biohydrogen
  • Hydrogen produced from biomass feedstock.
  • Principle comes from manipulating plants such as
    algae and growing them in conditions that is
    photosynthesizes hydrogen from the water
  • Most often used in fuel cells to produce
    electricity.

26
Small Scale Biodiesel Operation
  • Materials needed
  • Oil (seed oil, waste oil, etc can usually be
    obtained for free from many restaurants)
  • Chemicals (Lye, Methanol 0.50/gallon)
  • Containers (12 /5 gallon polyethylene resin
    container)
  • Freedom Fueler Deluxe Biodiesel kit (4500,
    produces 80 gallons in 24 hours 110v/220V)
  • Processing costs is about 0.70 a gallon)

27
Savings
  • Buying 100 gallons of diesel 2 monthly at 3 a
    gallon costs 300
  • Assuming a 0.70 processing cost.
  • By making our own we will save 2.30 a gallon or
    230 a month if we use 100 blending. Break even
    would be at 20 months for kit price
  • Using a 20 blend the savings are reduced to
    46.00. Break even would be at 8.1 years for
    kit price
  • The glycerin byproducts can be composted back
    into the soil or crops used to grow the oil
    producing plants.

28
Growing Seed Oil for Coop
  • We choose to use Jatropha since it is a hardy
    plant, and native to most of the world.
  • Its ability to grow in a range of soils makes it
    ideal as a seed oil crop.
  • Since it is toxic to animals, we dont have to
    worry about livestock consuming the plants.
  • It is also drought and pest resistant
  • The biomass residue left after seed pressing can
    then be used to power electricity plants.
  • It also serves to regenerate topsoil and stall
    erosion
  • It absorbs carbon dioxide as it grows, thus
    making it carbon-neutral even when burnt.
  • A jatropha bush can live for up to 50 years,
    producing oil in its second year of growth, and
    survive up to three years of consecutive drought.

29
Jatropha Coop Land
  • Every hectare can produce 5500 gallons per
    hectare of oil (2.7 tons/hectare) and about 4
    tons of biomass. Every 8,000 hectares of the
    plant can run a 1.5 megawatt station, enough to
    power 2,500 homes.
  • Community farmers could use micro lending
    agencies to purchase the equipment and 5 hectares
    of land per farmer to form cooperatives.
  • Assuming 20 farmers to a coop, this gives 100
    hectares of jatropha fields yielding a total of
    550,000 gallons of oil annually.

30
Cost / Savings
  • The cost of cultivation depends upon labor
    availability and comes around US 550 per
    hectare, or 55,000 annually for 100 hectares.
  • The cost maintenance of plantation is around US
    100-120 per year per hectare, or 12000 annually
    for 100 hectares
  • The cost of oil extraction roughly comes about US
    0.12 / kg or 109 per ton. This gives
    294,000 for 100 hectares of oil extraction.
  • Total cost is 361,000 annually for the coop.
  • 550,000 gallons produced annually means that the
    cost is about 0.66/gal (This comes very close to
    the 0.70 figure for processing previously)
  • Given the 3/gal cost today, that is a savings of
    457 or 2.34/gal. The total savings is 1.28
    million dollars a year.

31
Coop Equipment and Land
32
Time Scale
  • TIMINGBiodiesel typically takes a couple of days
    to a week from start to finish to make a batch.
    Most people making biodiesel make anywhere
    between 20 to 100 gallons at a time in a batch
    process.
  • Here's a breakdown of typical timing intervals
    from start to finish
  • START
  • Collecting Oil - 1-2 hours
  • Filtering Oil - 1-2 hours (depends on amount of
    oil)
  • Titration Of Oil - 10-15 minutes
  • Transferring Oil To Processor - 10-20 minutes
  • Heating Oil - 1-4 hours (depends on amount of
    oil, voltage wattage of element)
  • Making Methoxide - 5-20 minutes (depends on
    amount of methanol and catalyst used)
  • Mixing Methoxide Into Oil - 20-30 minutes
  • Mixing Oil Methoxide - 2-3 hours
  • Settling Oil - 8-10 hours (usually overnight)
  • Draining Glycerine - 5-10 minutes
  • Transferring Biodiesel To Wash Tank - 10-20
    minutes
  • First Mist Wash - 2-3 hours
  • Second Mist Wash - 2-3 hours
  • First Bubble Wash - 6-8 hours (usually overnight)
  • Second Bubble Wash - 6-8 hours (usually
    overnight)
  • Transferring Biodiesel To Drying Containers -
    10-20 minutes (depends on amount)

33
Current trade economy
  • Brazil Sugar Cane (Ethanol)
  • India jatropha (Bio diesel)
  • United States Soy and Corn (Bio diesel)
  • Alaska Fish oils (Bio diesel)
  • Haiti jatropha (Bio diesel)
  • Costa Rica Crude Palm oil (Bio diesel)
  • Europe/Aisa Rapseed (Bio diesel)

34
Government Aid and Support
  • U.S. Dept. of Energy has awarded 375 million
    for bioenergy research centers.
  • A 2006 reports by Global Subsidies Initiative
    (GSI) estimates that subsidies to biofuels are
    between 5.5 billion and 7.3 billion a year
  • Governments around the world continue to show
    their support for increased use of bioethanol,
    with recent initiatives coming from Australia,
    Japan and the world's fastest growing economy,
    China.

35
Brazilian Biofuel
  • Mid-1980s were a major success for mass
    producing biofuels and motor vehicles
  • Farmers payed generous subsidies to grow sugar
    cane for ethanol
  • Higher sugar prices and newly discovered offshore
    oil caused backlash in the 1990s.

36
India Biofuels
  • Two major sources
  • Biodiesel primarily from Jatropha seed oil
  • Ethanol Corn and cane sugar
  • Since the usage of ethanol sources diverts food
    into gas tanks, and sends corn prices
    skyrocketing, jatropha (a non edible plant) is
    gaining a lot of headway in the biodiesel section

37
United States Biofuels
  • Primary Biofuel is Ethanol
  • The current ethanol industry traces its origins
    back to the oil shocks of 1973 and 1979 that
    caused the initial interest in renewable energy
    sources.
  • In 1990 the Clean Air Act (CAA90) created a new
    source of demand for ethanol in the US.
  • In response to CAA90, US ethanol production
    tripled from 1 billion gallons in 1990 to 3
    billion gallons by 2003.
  • Corn is the largest feedstock used in ethanol
    production accounting for 90 of all ethanol
    production.

38
Ethanol Geography
39
US Ethanol Capacity
40
Ethanol by State
41
Oregon Biofuels
  • Ethanol currently comprises 4 of Oregons
    gasoline supply. 
  • Oregon Governor Ted Kulongoski signed legislation
    in July 2007 that will require all gasoline sold
    in the state to be blended with 10 bioethanol (a
    blend known as BE10) and all diesel fuel sold in
    the state to be blended with 2 biodiesel (a
    blend known as BD2).
  • Imports from the Midwest supply most Northwest
    ethanol consumption. According to Federal Highway
    Administration figures, 33 million gallons are
    blended into Washingtons 2.6 billion gallon per
    year gasoline consumption. Oregon blends 14
    million gallons of ethanol into its annual
    gasoline consumption of 1.5 billion gallons.

42
Oregon Biofuel Legislation
  • 7 bills are pending. 
  • Provides incentives to produce biofuels in Oregon
    (HB 3030, SB 736)
  • Provides incentives to utilize Oregon crops (HB
    3031, HB 3032)
  • Sets a renewable fuel standard for gasoline and
    diesel (HB 3033)
  • Expands markets for biodiesel (HB 3034)
  • Cleans up diesel school buses with biodiesel (HB
    3035)

43
Haiti Biofuels
  • Jatropha Biofuel production is in its infancy
    still
  • Big push underway to establish small scale
    jatropha operations in the villages.
  • Farmers can utilize micro credit loans to
    purchase Kick Start presses to run their
    jatropha farms.
  • Village generators can run independently of power
    grids on jatropha seed oil.

44
Costa Rica
  • Primary Biomass
  • Sugar Cane
  • Palm Oil
  • Jatropha
  • Palm Oil can produce up to 5000 litres per acre
    (1100 gallons)
  • Costa Rica announced it's plans to become the
    world's first carbon neutral country by 2030.

Five teams will drive 4,500 miles on grease power
from the USA to Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras,
Nicaragua and Costa Rica.
45
Asia
  • Biodiesel the most prominent resulting from
  • Rapeseed
  • Palm oil
  • Cassava
  • Ethanol is also gaining ground most notably in
    Cellulosic Ethanol
  • China which led the major drive across its cities
    in use of biofuels for transportation, with
    ambitious plan of increasing the present 1
    million tons of ethanol and biodiesel last year
    to 12 million tones in 2020. Japan has also
    followed suit with goals of supplementing
    traditional fuels with bioethanol by 2010.

46
Malaysia
  • Malaysia has already begun preparations to change
    from diesel to bio-fuels by 2008, including
    drafting legislation that will make the switch
    mandatory. From 2007, all diesel sold in Malaysia
    must contain 5 palm oil. Being the world's
    largest producer of crude palm oil, Malaysia
    intends to take advantage of the rush to find
    cleaner fuels.

Newly Started Palm Oil Plantation
47
Europe
  • The European biofuel sector is made up of two
    distinct sectors
  • Ethanol Obtained from fermenting beets, corn,
    barley or wheat, which are used for their sugar
    content that can be transformed into alcohol.
  • Biodisel Biodiesel (or FAME fatty acids methyl
    ester) is produced from rapeseed or sunflower for
    use as an additive to diesel fuel.
  • Combined European production (EU-15) of both of
    these sectors represented 1,743,500 tons
    (equivalent to 1,488,680 toe) in 2003, with a
    strong prominence of biodiesel which represents
    82.2 of European biofuel production. The overall
    figures represent a growth of 26 with respect to
    2002
  • EU has set a goal that by 2010 each member state
    should have at least 5.75 biofuel usage for
    traffic fuel and 10 by 2020.

48
EU vs. World
49
EU Production
50
OPEC Oil
51
Hydrocarbon Projections
52
Future Trade Impacts
  • In terms of Economics, OPEC currently dominates
    the world with their 50 trillion dollar oil
    profits (not excess!!!)
  • However as oil production peaks in 2010 and
    starts to decline through 2050, those profits
    will also begin to dwindle.
  • This will bring about a new world super power in
    terms of fuel economics and power.
  • Currently India and South America lead the way in
    the production of alternative biofuels and
    continue to grow their production and technology.
  • If nothing is done to change the current status
    the OPEC group will lose their grip on the fuel
    leader of the world as Indian and South America
    take over

53
Future Trade Impacts
  • Since OPEC currently has a projected profit of
    50 trillion over the next 15 years, their best
    bet would be to invest part of that (after the
    EDGE students get their cut to reforest the
    world) in the Indian and South American companies
    producing alternative fuels or the creation of
    their own. (Jatropha can grow in deserts!)
  • Europe, Asia, and the US would be the next major
    biofuel players behind India and South America.

54
Future Trade Impacts
  • The scarcity of land for OECD (Organization for
    Economic Co-operation and Development) countries
    presents a problem in the biofuel world.
  • This would increase international trade with
    those tropical and sub tropical countries who
    have the potential for production due to better
    climates, land and infrstructure.

55
Future Trade Impacts
  • There is currently no standard classification of
    Biofuels at the WTO level
  • Ethanol generally classified as agricultural
  • Biodiesel classified as industrial
  • This difference is important because the rules
    differ based on agricultural versus industrial as
    far as market access and subsidies
  • Lack of International Standards and
    Certifications
  • These barriers have limited the emergence of a
    global market in biofuels, but over the next few
    decades, pressure to reduce these barriers or
    eliminate them altogether will increase immensely.

56
Interesting Facts
  • Biodiesel improves domestic energy security. By
    using domestically produced, renewable fuels like
    biodiesel, the United States can reduce
    dependence on foreign countries for oil.
    Biodiesel has the highest energy balance of any
    fuel, further increasing its value in our energy
    portfolio. Every unit of fossil fuel it takes to
    make biodiesel results in 3.2 units of energy
    gain. Since petroleum diesel has a negative
    energy balance of .88, every gallon of biodiesel
    used has the potential to extend our petroleum
    reserves by four gallons.

57
Interesting Facts
  • You can run any diesel engine on restaurant's
    used vegetable oil.
  • Any Diesel engine after '94 needs no alterations
    to its engine in order to make such a conversion.
  • Any diesel engine before '94 just needs new
    tubing for the gas line so that the oil does not
    corrode the fuel lines.
  • Any blend of biodiesel and fossil fuel diesel can
    be used in a diesel engine without fear of any
    engine flaws.
  • Biodiesel also extends the life of your engine by
    20 because it naturally lubricates the engines
    moving parts cutting down on the friction
    created. Also, less friction means less heat
    which in turn will reduce the frequency of heat
    related breakdowns.
  • Burning vegetable oil smells like hot donuts
    cooking in your engine block.

58
Energy Needs
  • Can biofuels replace and meet our Energy needs?
  • Growing biofuel on 100 of the world's farmland
    would only provideabout 20 of the energy
    produced each year from crude oil
  • ..Its a start though.

59
Biofuel Yields
60
World Deforestation
  • Ryan Canady
  • EDGE Summer 2007

61
Annual Deforestation Rates 2000-2005 (x1000
Factor)
Rhett A. Butler / mongabay.com
62
Year 2000 Summary
Rhett A. Butler / mongabay.com
63
Deforestation Rates (x1000)
Rhett A. Butler / mongabay.com
64
World Contributions
Rhett A. Butler / mongabay.com
65
Carbon Emissions (per capita per country)
Rhett A. Butler / mongabay.com
66
Global CO2 Emissions in Tons (in Millions)
67
Reforesting Efforts
  • Planting the wrong kind of trees, such as
    monocultures of eucalyptus or pine where they are
    not native species, can devastate the lands of
    the local people.
  • A practical solution is to plant tough,
    fast-growing native tree species which begin
    rebuilding the land
  • Reforestation, if several native species are used
    can provide other benefits in addition to
    financial returns, including restoration of the
    soil, rejuvenation of local flora and fauna, and
    the capturing and sequestering of 38 tonnes of
    carbon dioxide per hectare per year

68
Worldly Data
  • Total Average Deforested per year 12,599,000
    Hectares
  • 2000-2005 Deforestation 62,995,000 Hectares
  • Carbon Sequestration from Native Species 38
    tonnes per hectare per year
  • Total Sequestration potential over 5 years
    2,393,810,000 tonnes.

69
Reforestation Rates 2000-2005 (x1000 factor)
Rhett A. Butler / mongabay.com
70
Costs
  • Mitigation costs through forestry can be quite
    modest (US0.1US20 / metric ton carbon dioxide)
    in some tropical developing countries
  • As little as 90 US will plant 900 trees, enough
    to annually remove as much carbon dioxide as is
    annually generated by the fossil-fuel usage of an
    average United States resident

71
Carbon Sequestration Diagram
72
US Sequestration
  • In the United States in 2004 (the most recent
    year for which EPA statistics are available),
    forests sequestered 10.6 of the carbon dioxide
    released in the United States by the combustion
    of fossil fuels. Urban trees sequestered another
    1.5 To further reduce U.S. carbon dioxide
    emissions by 7, as stipulated by the Kyoto
    Protocol, would require the planting of "an area
    the size of Texas 8 of the area of Brazil
    every 30 years", according to William H.
    Schlesinger, dean of the Nicholas School of the
    Environment and Earth Sciences at Duke
    University, in Durham, N.C.. Carbon offset
    programs are planting millions of fast-growing
    trees per year to reforest tropical lands, for as
    little as 0.10 per tree over their typical
    40-year lifetime, one million of these trees will
    fix 0.9 teragrams of carbon dioxide

73
What are we doing?
  • ABB (Power and Automation Technologies) built the
    worlds first commercial CO2 capture facility at
    its Shady Point, Oklahoma coal-fired power plant.
    It captures 200 tons of CO2 a day from the
    plants flue gas, which is purified, liquefied,
    and sold to the food products industry (Soda,
    Soda water, Pop Rocks, Baking powder...)
  • AEP (American Electric Power), under DOEs
    Climate Challenge Tree Planting Project, has
    planted 21,914 acres with nearly 19 million mixed
    hardwood and conifer trees at a cost of
    approximately 5.7 million. Projected CO2
    sequestration is 4.7 million metric tons over the
    term of the project. In a separate initiative in
    Louisiana, AEP has planted 9,784 acres with
    nearly 3 million bottomland hardwood trees at a
    cost of 6.25 million. Projected carbon
    sequestration is over 4.4 million metric tons.
  • Royal Dutch/Shell is a member of the CO2 capture
    project CO2 Capture Research Project, an
    international effort by seven of the worlds
    leading energy companies.

74
What are we doing?
  • Pacific Gas and Electric Company has submitted a
    proposal to the California Public Utilities
    Commission (CPUC) for a new and innovative
    environmental program that will allow interested
    customers to contribute toward a cleaner
    California.   This voluntary program would be
    available to most of PGEs residential and
    business customers.
  • Through the Climate Protection Program,
    customers can choose to sign up and pay a small
    premium on their monthly utility bill which will
    fund independent environmental projects aimed at
    removing carbon dioxide from the air.  To read
    more about this program, click here. 
  • In 2004 Weyerhaeuser improved its process for
    inventorying GHG emissions and the carbon stored
    in its forests and products.  The companys
    operations sequestered approximately 26 million
    metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalents and
    emitted approximately 7 million tons from the use
    of fossil fuels and other activities.  This
    effectively sequestered 19 million metric tons of
    carbon dioxide equivalent or 0.5 metric tons of
    carbon equivalents per ton of production, an
    improvement of approximately 18 over 2003.

75
Value of Remaining OPEC Oil
  • 913 Billion Barrels 913,000,000,000
  • Average cost of extraction 15 to 20/barrel
  • Expected Price on Market 75/barrel
  • Scarcity Profit 55 x 913,000,000,000
  • 50,215,000,000,000 50.215 trillion (on
    remaining reserves)
  • If spread over 15 years it will be about 3.347
    trillion/year
  • World population 6.6 billion
  • Oil Profit 507 for/from each person on earth
    per year.
  • Referened from EDGE Summer 07 Lecture 04 B.
    Lusignan

76
Cost of CO2
  • At a cost of 90 for 900 trees that will absorb
    30 tons of CO2 annually, this gives the cost of
    3/ton.
  • 125,128,600,000 worldwide tons of CO2 annually
    multiplied by 3 a ton 375.6 billion to
    sequester the annual CO2 emmissions.
  • OPEC profits are 50.215 trillion (on remaining
    reserves)
  • A contribution from OPEC of 375.6 billion /
    50.125 trillion or 0.74798 of their profits
    could reforest enough of the world to account for
    annual CO2 emmissions.

77
References
  • Wikipedia
  • Greasecar.com
  • www.bbc.co.uk
  • www.laughlinoil.com
  • www.biodiesel.org
  • www.soygrower.com
  • www.saabbiopower.co.uk
  • www.mongabay.com
  • www.ecoworld.com
  • www.jatrophabiodiesel.org
  • Bruce Lusignan, EDGE lectures, 2007
  • The Structure and Outlook for the US Biofuels
    Industry Informa Economics, Inc October 2005
    (www.in.gov)
  • Implications of a Future Global Biofuels Market
    for Economic Development and International Trade
    Henry Lee, William Clark, Robert Lawrence, Gloria
    Viscount Harvard University, May 09,2007
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