Biomass
Biomass
Biomass
E N E R G Y
A G E N C Y
I N T E R N A T I O N A L
E N E R G Y
A G E N C Y
! To maintain and improve systems for coping with oil supply disruptions. ! To promote rational energy policies in a global context through co-operative relations with nonmember countries, industry and international organisations.
! To operate a permanent information system on the international oil market. ! To improve the worlds energy supply and demand structure by developing alternative energy sources
and increasing the efciency of energy use.
OECD/IEA, 2007 International Energy Agency (IEA), Head of Publications Service, 9 rue de la Fdration, 75739 Paris Cedex 15, France.
Please note that this publication is subject to specic restrictions that limit its use and distribution. The terms and conditions are available online at http://www.iea.org/Textbase/about/copyright.asp
Acknowledgements
This paper was drafted for the Renewable Energy Working Party of the IEA in March 2007 by Ralph E H Sims of the IEA Renewable Energy Unit. It reects the views of the IEA Secretariat and may or may not reect the views of the individual IEA member countries. Review comments were gratefully received from Executive Committee members of the IEA Bioenergy implementing agreement (Chair, Kyriakos Maniatis) and members of the IEA Renewable Energy Working Party. For further information on this paper please contact the Renewable Energy Unit of the Energy Technology Collaboration division, [email protected]
Table of Contents
Executive Summary
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Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Rationale and Objectives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 The Essence of Good Practice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
18 19
Long-term biomass supply . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Can the biomass be produced and used in a sustainable manner?
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Source of residues and wastes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Woody weeds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Land use change to energy crops competition with food and fibre . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Sustainable land use . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Nutrients and cycling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Water management
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24
How can we obtain more biomass than is currently available? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Improving crop management and yields . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Integrated harvesting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Breeding of new crop varieties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Growing energy crops . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Why do we need biomass quality standards and fuel specifications to be developed? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Method of payment for the biomass resource . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Disease carriers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
29 29
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Transport by road and rail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 Moisture content reduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Improving the collection and storage of residues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Handling equipment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 What forms of bioenergy carriers can best be generated using the range of conversion plant designs available? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Bioenergy conversion technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Co-combustion and co-firing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
Synthesis gas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Biogas from anaerobic digestion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Biofuels for transport . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Emissions and odours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Ash disposal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
44 44
Sustainable development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
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47 48
Supply contracts long term . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 Energy ratios . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 How are related issues best addressed by the consultation process? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 Obtaining a resource / planning consent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 Regulations 6
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52 52 52
Security of supply . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 Employment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 Health and emissions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 Industry development. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Waste treatment and disposal. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Landscape and biodiversity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 How can strategic support policies for bioenergy be integrated with other local and national policies?. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 Waste treatment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 Rural development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 Land use diversification, subsidies and trade . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 Social policies
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Bibliography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
Executive Summary
Developing a bioenergy project is no easy task. Similar planning issues exist whether the bioenergy plant is a small, on-farm heat plant, a district combined heat and power plant, a utility-owned electricity generating plant, or a large scale commercial biofuels plant.
! The biomass feedstock needs to be available over the life of the plant and produced in a manner that
is deemed to be sustainable as well as renewable. It can be in solid or liquid form.
! This feedstock has to be delivered to the conversion plant by road, rail or waterways as cheaply as
possible in a form that is easy to store, handle and utilise. The low-bulk density and energy density of many forms of biomass make this a particular challenge.
! The quality and moisture content of the feedstock need to be assessed on delivery to ensure efcient
conversion and fair means of payment.
! Where the biomass is to be imported, certication of its source and the identication of low-cost
transport methods, in both nancial and energy terms, need consideration.
! Selection of the energy conversion technology and size of plant should be based on the nature of the
biomass, the volume available, the reliability and the risk of failure from immature technologies.
! Markets for the bioenergy carriers produced (as heat, electricity, gaseous fuels, liquid biofuels, or
solid fuels such as pellets) need to be assessed and purchase agreements sought where feasible. 7
! Design and construction of the bioenergy conversion plant, choosing its location, the proximity to
power, gas and water supplies, and obtaining the necessary resource and planning consents, can be major barriers requiring solution by the project developer. These Good Practice Guidelines do not analyse the technologies or costs of a bioenergy plant but endeavour to identify the potential issues for bioenergy project developers that will need to be overcome during the complex planning and consultation process. For example a cogeneration plant at a sugar mill in Australia took two years to develop and required 17 separate legal contracts to be negotiated. It is hoped that a greater awareness of the potential barriers by fuel suppliers, developers, planners, consenting authorities, policy makers and other stakeholders from the outset will aid the consultation process. This in turn will help to enable a more rapid deployment of bioenergy projects worldwide.
Introduction
Rationale and objectives
Modern biomass, and the resulting useful forms of bioenergy produced from it, are anticipated by many advocates to provide a signicant contribution to the global primary energy supply of many IEA member countries during the coming decades. For non-member countries, particularly those wishing to achieve economic growth as well as meet the goals for sustainable development, the deployment of modern bioenergy projects and the growing international trade in biomass-based energy carriers offer potential opportunities. However developing a bioenergy plant can be a challenging process. Securing reliable and cost effective supplies of biomass feedstocks, produced in a sustainable manner over the operating life of the plant, can prove to be difcult. This paper endeavours to facilitate the development of bioenergy projects by providing a discussion of good practice guidelines for use by policy makers, local resource consenting authorities, plant developers and biomass feedstock suppliers. Whether the project is designed to provide electricity, heat, cogeneration of heat and power, liquid biofuels for transport, or a range of products from a biorenery is incidental. The overall aim is to ensure that proposals and planning for a bioenergy project can proceed expediently and in an appropriate manner. This will help to ensure that the bioenergy industry maintains its reputation of being responsible with regard to minimising the potential environmental and social impacts that a project might bring to a community. The paper does not attempt to describe and evaluate the various production and conversion technologies related to biomass and bioenergy or their costs. These are extremely well covered within the IEA Bioenergy Implementing Agreement and its various activities (IEA Bioenergy, 2007) and in a recent overview paper (Faaij et al, 2007).
development. There will also be major variations in the regulations imposed by local, regional and national governments. Consequently not all aspects discussed here will be relevant for even bioenergy schemes of similar scale and type. This discussion document simply aims to present the range of issues and basic principles involved. To undertake good practice, these issues will need to be considered by developers, even of small schemes on private property. The same issues will need to be addressed by local decision makers in order to produce their own planning guidelines and regulations specic to local conditions. It is therefore imperative that proper advice is sought from the local authority at an early stage and that ofcial regulations are adhered to. The public image of biomass feedstock production and bioenergy conversion plant operation remains contentious in many locations. This is often due to a lack of understanding by objectors rather than from any rst hand experience of poorly designed and managed plants. Good projects are designed to remain sustainable in the long term based on full life cycle analysis. Bad projects are usually designed to maximise the short-term prot of the investors with little consideration for the wider issues involved. For the future long-term ability of the global biomass industry to reach its full potential, it is important that the current image is enhanced and does not become tarnished. Greater education concerning the benets of bioenergy and biofuels and improved dialogue between stakeholders to better understand the diverse range of views is therefore warranted.
10
Figure 1 " Bioenergy projects require consideration of environmental and social issues
Nutrients Forest residues Land use change Harvesting methods Energy crop management Biomass feedstock Transport Vehicle movements Planning consents Noise Storage Fuel quality Fuel specifications Funding and finance Water use Agricultural crop residues Human and animal wastes Biodiversity and ecology Integrated crop production
Scale of plant
Related social issues such as community cohesion, employment, rural development, waste avoidance and health benets can be of equal importance (though are not shown here).
Agriculture
Energy & short rotation crops. Crop residues. Animal wastes
Forestry
Forest harvesting & supply chain. Forest & agroforest residues
Waste
Landfill gas. Other biogas. MSW incineration & other thermal processes Traditional biomass: fuelwood charcoal & animal dung from agricultural production
Matching biomass supply & demands for bioenergy, biofuels and materials
Bioenergy utilization
Energy supply
Transport
Building/industry
Industry
Eventually the energy carriers provide a range of useful energy services as well as co-products at both the large and small scales
Biomass feedstocks originating from a wide range of sources can be converted in many different types, designs and scale of plants to provide useful forms of bioenergy carriers (Figure 2). The role that biomass will play in the future global mix of consumer energy supply will not solely depend on the many technologies which exist nor on further R & D investment to improve their efciencies. It will also depend upon the ability to overcome the barriers that inhibit project development and constrain sufcient commercial investment. For a project to be bankable, investors must have condence that it will proceed satisfactorily without delays and will continue to operate protably over a long term period. In this regard eight broad questions need to be asked by bioenergy project developers, stakeholders, decision makers and investors.
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! What types and amounts of biomass resources are available or can be produced sustainably? ! Are there competing uses for this biomass and would its use for energy purposes impact
on other industries?
! What suitable supply chain and conversion technology developments available now, or in the
near future, will enable environmentally acceptable bioenergy products and energy carriers to be generated more efciently than at present?
! In terms of preparing an environmental impact assessment in order to gain planning approval, what
impacts will the increasing use of biomass in a region have on the local environment and on water supplies?
! Will benecial social issues result such as employment, rural development, social cohesion, improved
health, equity and development?
! What level of investment will be needed to establish the proposed bioenergy project, not just for
plant construction, operation and fuel purchase but also for obtaining the necessary consents and negotiating the relevant legal contracts which can be numerous?
! What markets for the bioenergy carriers exist now or will be established in the future? ! What is the level of risk from investing in such a business, including competition from other energy
supply systems (such as wind, geothermal and fossil fuels), and investments in energy efciency measures that, if successful, could avoid the need for additional energy supply? The last three questions on investment, markets and risk belong to the business proposition for a commercial bioenergy investment and are not directly relevant to the objectives of this paper. The rst ve questions relating to environmental and social barriers and benets of a bioenergy project are discussed below as:
! Section 1. The biomass resource; ! Section 2. Delivering the biomass and producing the bioenergy carriers; and ! Section 3. Overcoming barriers and encouraging benets.
12
13
14
Clockwise from top left: plantation forest thinnings; the solid green fraction of MSW from demolition timber, pallets and garden refuse; energy crops such as oilseed rape; cereal residues such as straw as used in heating plants; traditional fuelwood; bark residues accumulated at a pulp mill; short rotation coppice eucalyptus crop; oil palms grown for biodiesel feedstock; and forest arisings remaining after harvest and extraction of stemwood logs.
Figure 4 " Biomass feedstocks arising from residues and energy crops
Pasture crop production Animal production Food products Forest & agricultural crop production Harvest Food, fibre & material processing Secondary residues Fibre products Consumption Wastes & recycled materials Tertiary residues
The solid or liquid biomass feedstock can be converted using numerous technologies to provide more convenient energy carriers in the form of solid fuels (e.g. wood chips, pellets, briquettes), liquid fuels (e.g. methanol, ethanol, biodiesel, bio-oil), gaseous fuels (synthesis gas, biogas, hydrogen) or direct heat (Figure 5). Just as from oil, gas and coal (which all began as biomass many millenia ago), a range of chemical products can also be co-produced from biomass. The concept of developing a bio-renery to produce multi-products from a single feedstock similar to an oil renery has promising potential. Some high value chemical products, such as polymers or furfural, could be produced in small volumes whilst other products, including useful heat and electricity, tend to have lower value but could be produced as large volume outputs. Multi-product plants already exist in the form of large scale, commercial sugar mills, pulp mills, rice mills etc. where the main product is sugar, paper pulp or rice, but the waste bagasse, black liquor or husks can also be used for heat and power generation for use both on-site and for export. Similarly vegetable oil processing plants to produce biodiesel usually also produce a high protein meal for feeding livestock, straw, stover or kernels suitable for combustion for heat production or pulping, and glycerol that can either be upgraded to glycerine for use in cosmetics and explosives, or, once in surplus supply with a low value, could possibly be used as another energy feedstock. 15
Steam turbines
Gas turbines
Micro turbines
Fuel cells
Methanol
Ethanol
Biodiesel
Bioenergy carriers
Process steam Synthesis gas
Refining Steam boiler Direct combustion Gasification Lignin Methane Acid or enzme hydrolysis (cellulase) Biogas Landfill gas Lignin/cellulose complex Pre-hydrolysis acid or enzyme (hemicellulase) Fermentation /distillation Glucose Pentose sugar Bio-oil Flash pyrolysis Esters Interesterification
Conversion processes
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Anaerobic digestion
Animal fats
Vegetable oils
Meat processing
Biomass feedstock
Sewage sludge
Animal manures
Green crops
Forest arisings
Short Crop residues Vegetative rotation Crops (bagasse, forest (miscanthus, straw, (salix, rice husks, canary grass) populus, coconut eucalyptus) shells, palm fibre)
Examples of the wide range of solid, liquid and gaseous biomass resources that can be converted using numerous technologies and pathways to provide bioenergy carriers in the form of heat, electricity and transport fuels from which useful energy services can eventually be obtained. The developer of a bioenergy project can start at the top of this chart and determine the options available to produce the preferred energy carrier whereas the owner of a biomass resource can start at the bottom and consider the options for its conversion.
Residues from agriculture, plantation forests and food and bre processing operations are collected worldwide and used in a wide variety of bioenergy conversion plants. These are difcult to quantify. Obtaining accurate data on the biomass resource available even in a local district can be challenging as it varies from year to year and across seasons. A very useful publication, the Biomass Assessment Handbook (Rossillo-Calle et al, 2006) helps provide the tools needed to understand the biomass resource base and its assessment, whether it be for woody biomass, herbaceous biomass, or crop residues. Measuring tree volumes, assessing the moisture content of a truck load of wood chips, calculating the
energy content of a eld of straw, using remote sensing techniques to measure variations in crop yields in a district, are just a few examples of the challenging tasks needed for accurate biomass resource assessment. Changes to carbon uxes and carbon stocks from growing energy crops, including any effects on soil carbon content, are also difcult to measure and monitor (Figure 7). Where sufcient data is available, GIS (geographical information systems) and overlay mapping techniques can be used to identify known biomass resources or to match proposed energy crops with current land use, soil types, rainfall and sunshine hours. This can also be a powerful tool to identify the best location/s for a proposed bioenergy plant, depending on the volume of biomass needed per year, the nature of the roads for transport, and access to existing power lines. Where the international export of large volumes of biomass is anticipated, good rail or road access or close proximity of the plant to a port is essential.
17
Recent coppice re-growth evident in the foreground and 2-year rotation biomass in the background.
Figure 7 " Greenhouse gas balances include soil carbon stocks under plantation
Establishing the GHG balances requires all processes involved in the use of bioenergy systems on a full fuel-cycle basis to be assessed (IEA BioenergyGHG, 2007).
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Tests undertaken for various parameters including moisture content are standard procedure at large biomass plants to ensure quality factors are maintained and a fair means of payment to the supplier can be assessed rather than be based on tare weight alone.
The moisture content of slurries and wet biomass feedstocks, as used with anaerobic digestion or fermentation plants, are less important than for solid biomass since the feedstock is usually not transported long distances and will not deteriorate. The total solids content of a liquid can however have an effect on the biogas plant efciency and the cost of storing larger volumes. Also it may need to be determined when the wet crop, slurry or efuent is traded.
19
The trees planted to drive down the water table to overcome dryland salinity problems in Western Australia become a source of biomass.
a variety of reasons (such as their aesthetic, recreational, biodiversity, water cycle management and carbon stock qualities) should never be used for energy purposes. However for other sources this is not always so clear cut. The debate continues on what exactly is the denition of sustainable biomass (Figure 10). Harvesting indigenous forests for biomass would not normally be seen to be sustainable, though sustainable harvesting of forest products can have legal status as in Austria. Certication schemes, criteria, indicators and guidelines for biomass dened as being sustainably produced are under discussion (see for example www.pefc.at and www.globalbioenergy.org).
20
Residues in this Australian eucalyptus regrowth forest being considered by staff of Shell International Renewables as to whether their extraction for biomass feedstock would be acceptable or not as a sustainable activity.
Residues from plantation forests that would otherwise be left to decay, and wood process residues that would otherwise be disposed of in landlls, probably are sustainable forms of biomass. Growing sugarcane for ethanol production and using the bagasse for heat and power generation possibly is sustainable as long as the soil nutrients are well managed and any nutrients removed at harvest are eventually replaced. However the intensive production of corn for ethanol production, or oilseed rape for biodiesel production, needing relatively high inputs of fossil fuels, nitrogenous fertilisers and agri-chemicals possibly is not, depending on the denition of sustainability. The Global Bioenergy Partnership, established by the G8 meeting at Gleneagles in 2005 is investigating this in association with the IEA Bioenergy Implementing Agreement, Task 40 Sustainable Bioenergy Markets, Trade and Resources (see www.bioenergytrade.org). The industry needs to clarify this issue immediately since public concerns about the environmental impacts from using biomass as an energy source lead to a number of frequently asked questions.
! Will the use of land for energy cropping reduce the area of land now used for food and bre
production so that scarcities will result?
! Will genetically engineered trees and crops need to be developed specically for use for biomass
energy supplies?
! Will soil nutrient levels be depleted by continually removing large quantities of biomass material
such as crop residues from the land to supply nearby conversion plants?
! Will biodiversity be further threatened and agri-chemical use increase if ever greater areas of
monocultural crops are grown?
! Will planting large areas with fast growing trees as energy forests reduce both water run-off and
percolation into the groundwater, thereby affecting downstream users?
! Will transport of large quantities of biomass to the power plants result in increased trafc congestion,
noise, dust, road damage etc?
! Will an increasing number of wood-red heat and power plants lead to an incentive for investors and
shareholders to support the cutting down of existing forests?
! Will stack emissions from municipal solid waste-to-energy plants, and also possibly from wood-red
biomass plants, contain toxic substances such as dioxins?
! Will using waste for energy purposes reduce the desirable incentives to minimise and recycle waste
materials if it is cheaper to burn it?
Woody weeds
Where non-native trees have established naturally after their unintentional introduction, possibly following the introduction of an exotic species for non-commercial purposes, such as gorse in New Zealand or mimosa in Northern Australia, then land clearing is encouraged to control the spread of the
species. The biomass collected could then become a useful fuel. The limitation however is the longterm supply of the resource. If complete eradication is successful after maybe 5 or 10 years, by which time the land will have begun to revert to its former native vegetation, no more biomass supply is available. Therefore a bioenergy plant using the feedstock would become short of fuel. Dependence on a single feedstock is often risky anyway. So plant designs to handle multi-feedstock are recommended where feasible but are more difcult to design.
Land use change to energy crops competition with food and fibre
Land requirements for future energy crop and energy forest plantations compete with land used for the traditional production of food and bre products. Land use change will only happen on a large scale if the landowners can gain more revenue or other benets from growing a new energy crop than is being received from the traditional crops currently being grown. The difculty is that traditional forms of energy remain relatively cheap so energy crops have to compete with these low USD/GJ prices. Conversely to grow an energy crop requires inputs of seed, fertiliser, chemicals, machinery, fuel, labour etc. and hence requires a good sale price in order to compete with the revenue received from growing other crops. In essence biomass already collected at a site (such as bark at a pulp mill) is cheaper than collecting more dispersed biomass residues (such as forest residues), which in turn is cheaper than growing purpose grown energy forests. Therefore to make energy cropping a viable business proposition for a landowner, either agricultural subsidies need to be introduced or adjusted to encourage energy crop production over food and bre crop production, or the co-benets from growing the crop need to be better valued. These can include landscape enhancement, wild life habitat, improved water quality, rural development, employment opportunities, carbon sequestration, etc. Planting a mix of species is sometimes worth considering, not only for landscape benets but also for added resistance to the spread of pests and diseases. New crops can have a major visual impact such as when oilseed rape was rst introduced in the UK which is bright yellow when it owers. Whether the impact on the landscape is seen to be benecial or negative depends on perception by an individual, where it is grown, the character of the existing landscape, and how intensive the crop becomes within a concentrated area. Developers and growers could undertake a landscape assessment process in order to better understand and communicate the impacts on the landscape (see Section 3). The area of land needed to grow energy crops will ultimately depend on the annual yields of biomass as achievable on a sustainable basis, water requirements and water availability, recognition of co-benets, government support schemes, and the conversion efciency of the resource to useable fuels or energy carriers. As an example 240 ha of energy forest plantation yielding 15 oven dry tonnes (odt) /ha/y of woody biomass would be needed per MWe of installed capacity to supply a wood-red power plant with 35% efciency conversion of fuel to electricity when running for 7 000 hours per year. For a CHP plant of say 70% efciency less of the solar energy stored in the biomass would be wasted as useless heat. Careful site selection may also reduce the need for control of pests, including rabbits, gazelle, deer etc. by costly fencing, as well as weed control and diseases by agri-chemicals.
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This land clearing practice is continuing in several world regions but usually the standing or cut forests are burned in the eld with no consideration to use the biomass for energy. The loss of a carbon stock and resulting increase in atmospheric carbon content are serious concerns as is the loss of biodiversity.1 Even where native forests have been harvested then allowed to fully regrow before re-harvesting, such as is common practice for Eucalyptus forests in Australia, Scots pine in UK, and Norway spruce in Scandinavia, the practice has been questioned by environmental groups. Their argument against the use of forest residues for bioenergy is that if the value of cutting the forest increases since more revenue is generated from the sale of biomass products as well as of the primary logs, then more land will be harvested. When land use change occurs in order to grow an energy crop, the type and proximity of habitats adjacent to it will need consideration. Some crops may attract bird life to feed on the insects or seeds, some may compete with water from neighbouring wetlands, and some may produce self-set wilding plants in nearby elds that will require future eradication. The intrinsic ecological and historic value of a site should also be assessed prior to any activity related to biomass production occurring. Many countries have clear regulations regarding protection of sites of special historic or scientic interests or identied as conservation reserves. Not all archaeological sites appear on maps as they have not been properly surveyed or recorded, and in some instances are known of only by oral history from the indigenous people. Legal consequences may result from protected habitat or wetland destruction and advice from the local authorities should be sought at an early stage of the process.
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regulations concerning the land treatment of bio-wastes. However the storage and irrigation costs tend to be prohibitive compared with other forms of sewage or efuent treatment and often only limited volumes are available from sources close enough to cropping land. So it has not become common practice. In the longer term genetically modied crops grown specically for energy purposes may become feasible and accepted perhaps more so for energy crops than for food crops. These could be leguminous based to avoid the need for nitrogenous fertiliser applications. With careful management, recycling of other nutrients may become feasible, as in the manner of todays organic food farms.
Water management
Some energy crops uptake more soil moisture by transpiration than others. Short rotation poplar, willow and eucalyptus plantations for example all have a high water demand when water supplies are readily available but very different tolerances when they are not. This is partly due to their deciduous / nondeciduous nature but it also varies with the specic crop variety and location. For any crop, a grower should consider the implications of water demand and rainfall when choosing a species and variety, not only on the biomass yield but also, if to be planted extensively, on any downstream water users. In drier regions planting forests has been associated with reducing the volume of groundwater available due to higher levels of evapo-transpiration compared with other crops or native vegetation. A perennial plantation can be designed to minimise negative impacts on water use and develop benets by such factors as planting in one large block or several smaller blocks, planting blocks sequentially over the years to produce a range of ages for harvesting in sequence, or avoiding planting near bore holes unless the aim is to reduce water contamination. 24 Crops more suited to arid or dryland regions tend to put their roots down further which can have an impact on soil nutrient levels. Conversely fast-growing tree crops in moist soil can form a dense mat of roots down to a metre or so which enables them to become an effective mechanism for soaking up nutrients and act as a buffer. A possible problem may be the damage by vigorous rooting systems to any eld drainage system in place. Another benet may be that access to machinery, including for harvest during wet seasons, is facilitated by the root mat providing support for the vehicle weight.
Integrated harvesting
There are usually xed amounts of available biomass in any given district based on existing agricultural, forestry, municipal and industrial activities. Where some of the biomass is being left on the ground after harvest of the crop, then greater efforts to collect it may be feasible. However this would probably be for a relatively higher cost so integrating the harvesting of biomass with the harvesting of the primary product could be warranted. Skidding whole trees after felling to a central processing site nearby in the forest is an example. The logs are separated from the arisings (the remaining biomass material), thereby giving two product streams that can then be transported separately to sites for further processing. Increased nutrient removal (see Section 1) can be a constraint to taking the arisings for some lower fertile soil types, unless nutrient cycling is achieved.
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! assessing whether the selected crop will be economically viable to grow, harvest and store under the
specic circumstances of the market at that time;
! selecting the most appropriate species and provenance to best match the soil types and climatic
conditions; and
! crop management to maximise environmental benets, minimise any negative impacts and to t in
with existing crop rotations and machine and labour availability. A grower will select a suitable site for producing an energy crop once a reliable market has been identied and the economic viability conrmed. Site selection will depend on such factors as landscape, visibility, road access, proximity to a bioenergy processing plant, soil type, water availability, disease
and pest history, archaeological history, competition for growing other crops and public access. Where a popular view is likely to be blocked or modied, or access to a public right of way reduced, then public resistance to the project will be increased. Landscapes of specic quality and with conservation values may be under special protection and local policies may apply that inhibit new crop production. Tree crops can also affect visibility of paths and views and impact on peoples visual amenity. Straight rows and boundaries for tree plantations for example can have a greater visual impact than planting around the contours. Conversely some plantations may contribute positively to variations in landscape and biodiversity, provide shelter and wind breaks and provide recreational value. Where a heat demand exists on a farm or for local industry it could make sense to use straw or other crop residues from existing crops. Where no other suitable biomass resource is available, a crop could be grown to meet that purpose. The sale of any surplus biomass by a landowner could generate additional income if there is a market, and also make better use of any under-utilised land. For all biomass producers, if there is a bioenergy plant nearby within an economic transport distance, the energy crop producer would need to consider how best to become part of the supply chain. This may involve agreeing to a long-term supply contract with transport charges placed on the grower. Therefore the supply radius might be limited to around 50 kms. Forming a co-operative between several growers may assist bulk selling to the plant owner as is common with vegetable and other horticultural products. Alternatively a group of growers could create a local market through a district heat plant or by collaborating on their own power generation plant development. Grants and other subsidy payments may be payable in some regions to assist with such a development. 26
Disease carriers
Untreated biomass material such as the bark component of wood chips, seed contamination of straw residues, or soil contamination of vegetative grass energy crops, can carry a wide range of pathogens and weed seeds. Transporting biomass materials between locations can cause the spread of diseases, pests and weed proliferation so some form of border controls are necessary. Additional concerns arise where biomass in the form of sewage sludge, animal manures, or efuent from meat and other food processing industries is utilised, either for direct combustion as an energy feedstock for biogas plants etc. or indirectly if applied to an energy crop as a form of treatment. Biomass processed into other energy carriers such as pellets, bio-oil, liquid fuels etc. prior to transport off site, and especially for export, can normally overcome any contamination risk, especially where heat is involved in the process. Certication of the resource and a complete tracking of its origin and history are technically feasible. This would serve to overcome any concerns that local residents might have about the spread of pests. It would also allay any fears the biomass purchaser and user might have about maintaining acceptable resource quality to suit the conversion plant handling and processing systems.
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Summary
Most countries and districts have access to one form of biomass supply or another and often in relatively large quantities. Even if classed as a waste product, the resource should be assessed as to its sustainable supply over the long term. Biomass feedstocks available as co-products from farms, forests, processing plants and municipal treatment plants are normally limited in the total volume available depending on population, size and scale of the source. Where additional biomass is required to ensure a sufcient supply of fuel exists for a bioenergy conversion plant over the long term, then increased efciency of conversion processes, multi-feedstock supplies or possibly the more costly option of growing energy crops can be considered. For specic biomass feedstocks to provide vegetable oils for biodiesel or sugar/starch crops for bioethanol, energy corps will also need to be grown. In either case competition for land use, nutrients and water resources then needs evaluation. Where biomass transport and trading are involved, methods to measure and certify the resource are required to ensure that the quality is maintained and the risk of spread of pests and diseases is minimised.
29 The production of biomass is reasonably well understood and many conversion technologies are mature. However, with the exception of where biomass is produced and used on site, large volumes of biomass usually need to be transported. Some material is already travelling thousands of kilometres to markets such as wood pellets from Canada being shipped to Scandinavia for use in district heating plants and palm oil from Malaysia arriving in Sweden and the Netherlands for biodiesel feedstock. The logistics of transporting, handling and storing the often bulky and variable biomass material for delivery to the bioenergy processing plant gate is a key part of the supply chain that is often overlooked in the early stages of planning. This section covers this topic and links the forms of biomass available to the various conversion plant types. Details of the design, engineering and operation of the numerous bioenergy conversion technologies are not discussed here in detail.
What is the best method to harvest, collect and transport the biomass?
Harvesting and collection
If not collected at the time of harvest using integrated systems (see Section 1), then residues, often widely distributed, will need to be brought to a central location. The method will vary with the type of residue, terrain, machinery availability, location, soil access etc. Whether the biomass comes from forest residues on hill country, straw residues from cereal crops grown on arable land, or the non-edible components
of small scale, subsistence farming systems, the relative cost of collection will be considerable. Careful development of a system to minimize machinery use, human effort and energy inputs can have a considerable impact on the cost of the biomass as delivered to the processing plant gate. One study, for example, compared harvest, handling and transport systems for collecting and delivering arisings from a forest to a proposed bioenergy plant in Nelson, New Zealand, 80km away. The model gave a wide range of delivered costs in terms of USD/GJ, purely as a result of the system selected (Figure 11).
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USD/GJ delivered
Arisings taken from a single forest site, purchased for USD 4/dry tonne, then delivered 80km over an identical route to a proposed bioenergy processing plant gate, using 7 different options (A-G) for collection and transport systems result in a wide range of costs (Sims, 2003).
Before planting an energy crop the rst question a grower should ask is How will it be harvested? For some crops such as vegetative grasses, existing agricultural machinery such as hay mowers and balers can be employed for the harvesting operation. Others crops such as short rotation forests will need specialist harvesters to be designed and built which tend to be expensive (Figure 12). Issues such as:
! gaining access in wet weather for heavy machines and trailers; ! leaving areas available for stock-piling the biomass in temporary storage; ! planning the layout of a tree plantation to enable a harvester to gain access and then turn and
manoeuvre;
! servicing the harvester with trailers to collect the biomass and keep up with the rate of material
harvested;
! assessing the proximity to the roadside for access by transport vehicles; and ! designing the overall system by matching machine capacities in order to convey the biomass between
harvesters, trailers, interim storage areas and trucks without costly delays; all need careful planning at an early stage of project development.
Equipment designed and manufactured to harvest new crops coppiced Salix, and store the biomass, (here shown as round bales of Salix stems) are relatively expensive in terms of USD/t harvested due to lack of mass production and limited demand.
Figure 13 " Delivered energy costs vary with moisture content of the biomass
Tonnes 30 Tonnes per load GJ per load 20 GJ 250 200 150 100 50 0 70 0 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Moisture content 0 70 0 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Moisture content 15 1 10 USD per GJ 5 USD per tonne 0.5 USD/t USD/GJ 1.5
10
Weight, and energy per load vary with moisture contents to give different delivered energy costs (USD/t and USD/GJ) of woody biomass when using a 26 tonne maximum payload truck over a cartage distance of 35 km and based on a charge of USD 0.42/t/km.
Table 1 " Typical scale of operation for various sizes and types of bioenergy plants
Type of plant Heat(th) or power(e) capacity ranges, and annual hours of operation. 100 - 250 kWth 2 000 hr 250kWth 1 MWth 3 000 hr 500 kWe 2 MWe 4 000 hr 5 10 MWe 5 000 hr 20 30 MWe 7 000 hr Biomass fuel required (oven dry tonnes/year) 40 - 60 Vehicle movements for biomass delivery to the plant Land area required to produce the biomass (% of total within a given radius). 1 - 3% within 1 km radius 5 - 10% within 2 km radius 1 - 3% within 5 km radius 5 - 10% within 10 km radius 2 - 5% within 50 km radius
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Small heat
3 - 5 / yr
Large heat
100 - 1200
10 - 140 / yr
Small CHP
1 000 - 5 000
150 - 500 / yr
30 000 - 60 000
Transport and land use requirements to meet annual biomass demands when operating at various capacity factors. Biomass yields when produced from forest arisings, agricultural residues or purpose grown energy crops, are assumed at around 5 - 10 oven dry tonnes per hectare annually.
The forest and sugar industries have largely overcome the large-scale transport problems of bulky feedstocks many years ago. Sugar processing plants for example typically handle around 300 000 t of sugarcane billets during the 6- to 7-month harvesting season and as a result need an efcient transport system. Some sugar mills in Queensland, Australia for example rely on road trucks that can automatically hitch and detach several trailer bins towed behind them, whereas other mills have built a network of narrow gauge railway tracks to connect the growing areas directly with the mill (Figure 14).
A tractor high-rise tipping trailer used to collect billets by running alongside a sugarcane harvester then transferring the load to bins on a mini-rail transport system for delivery to the sugar mill.
The collection and transport of biomass can result in increased use of vehicles, higher local air emissions from their exhausts, and greater wear and tear on the road infrastructure. Who should pay for the extra costs is difcult to determine. Where the roads are maintained by higher charges placed on local ratepayers, most of whom receive little benet from the passing of heavy trucks through their district, the problem is hard to resolve. 33
Freshly harvested green wood Drying for 1-2 weeks post harvest Sawmill residues Demolition timber / pallets Air dried biomass Wood processing off-cuts Oven dry wood for comparison
60 50 40 30 20 10 0
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A 2 000 cm3 piece of wood with basic density of 500 kg/m3 and high heat value (HHV) of 19.9 MJ/kg dry weight is combusted. The moisture content of the biomass fuel and combustion of the hydrogen contained in the fuel affects the nal useful heat energy available (lower heat value LHV).
Since traditional heat plants (furnaces or boilers) are usually designed to maintain sufciently high exhaust gas temperatures to avoid condensation in the ue stack of the combustion plant, this heat is usually not recoverable. However condensing steam boilers and turbines gain extra efciency by condensing the water vapour and retrieving much of the latent heat of evaporation available by so doing. Fans are then often used to force out the exhaust air and hence avoid tars condensing in the ue. Thus higher conversion efciencies are obtained for a relatively small extra capital investment. Such technology is available over a range of boiler sizes from domestic to >5MW.
occurs in storage over time as a result of respiration processes and as the product deteriorates. Dry matter loss is normally reduced over time if the moisture content of the biomass can be lowered or oxygen can be excluded in order to constrain pathological action. Conserving green crops by natural drying (such as pasture hay) or by ensiling it for use later in the season (perhaps as green feedstock for biogas plants), are good examples. The storage of biomass is often necessary due to its seasonal production versus the need to produce bioenergy all year round. Therefore to provide a constant and regular supply of fuel for the plant requires either storage or multi-feedstocks to be used, both of which tend to add cost to the system. Since biomass tends to have relatively low energy density (whether as a solid, liquid or gas), and is organic, then the storage of large volumes can be costly. For example biogas needs either large plastic or steel storage tanks or to be compressed and stored in cylinders, both being expensive options. Therefore matching the biogas production rate to the demand is the more usual approach. For dry biomass material such as straw the risk of re when stored in large piles is high, and Greener materials such as bagasse or wood chips are also risky being prone to spontaneous combustion when stored in piles due to bacterial action causing heat build-up (similar to composting). Regular stirring of the piles to dissipate the heat is the usual solution. Some plant managers employ a contractor to be responsible for providing the fuel supply within certain specied parameters relating to fuel quality and moisture content. For example where a number of biomass types and sources are used, the biomass can be comminuted (broken into small pieces) on delivery then stored in piles according to the appropriate moisture content. The yard operator can then select material from each of the piles to try and maintain a mix entering the plant that has a fairly constant average moisture content to best suit the design of combustion or gasication system (Figure 15).
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Mixing by the loader operator of the plant conveyor maintains the optimum feedstock moisture content to match the combustion system design.
Bales are produced for easy transport by road or rail to the bioenergy plant the one shown here being the largest in the world, in Finland. Source: John Deere Company; www.timberjack.com
Innovative supply chain processes for delivering forest arisings to bioenergy plants have been developed to overcome many of the logistical problems identied (Figure 16).
Handling equipment
The physical handling of biomass fuels during collection or at a processing plant can be challenging to conveying equipment designers, particularly for solid biomass. It has even led to the early failure of entire bioenergy projects. Even the pumping of slurries, efuent and manure, although common practice, still leads to problems due to worn pumps, foreign bodies, corrosion of pipes, restrictions at bends etc. Wherever a pipe is used, invariably at some stage it will become blocked. Biomass fuels tend to vary with density, moisture content and particle size (some even being stringy in nature) and can also be corrosive. Therefore biomass fuel handling equipment is often a difcult part of a plant to adequately design, maintain and operate. Augers and pneumatic conveyors tend to block whereas open, at bed conveyors are limited to the steepness of the gradient and can also malfunction when the feedstock characteristics vary from the normal. Overcoming potential problems by improved conveyor design and the use of non-corroding materials is feasible, but then higher costs for such better quality equipment can become a barrier.
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What forms of bioenergy carriers can best be generated using the range of conversion plant designs available?
Raw biomass materials can be broadly classied into wet or dry resources as well as liquids or solids. Biomass with a high moisture content is usually preferred for anaerobic digestion, pyrolysis or for biofuel production whereas dry solid biomass is preferred for combustion or gasication. Bioenergy carriers can range from a simple rewood log for domestic heating to a highly rened liquid transport fuel for blending in large volumes. Different biomass products therefore suit different situations. Specic objectives for utilizing biomass are governed by the quantity, quality and cost of the feedstock available, location of the consumers, type and value of the energy services required, and any specic co-products or benets that result.
To fully utilise the capital investment costs of a bioenergy plant, just as for any other investment, operating it 24 hours a day, every day, other than the down-time needed for occasional maintenance, is the ideal business case. This necessitates having reliable suppliers of the feedstock. To enable any available biomass resource to be matched with the end use energy carrier required (heat, electricity or transport fuels) the correct selection of conversion technologies is required. Using Figure 5, starting with the available biomass resource then following the alternative lines up the chart to the chosen energy carrier at the top will help identify the conversion technology options possible. Thus if a coconut processing company wished to generate electricity on-site, it could either use the coconut shell residues for direct combustion to produce steam to power an engine or a turbine, or use a gasier and gas engine, or opt to go via the pyrolysis route to produce bio-oil for combustion to raise steam. The costs and other barriers associated with each optional pathway would then need to be assessed in detail to identify the most protable and practical option.
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range 50-700 MWe have operational experience of co-ring with woody biomass or wastes, at least on a trial basis. Commercially signicant lignites, bituminous and sub-bituminous coals, anthracites, and petroleum coke have all been co-red with a very wide range of biomass material up to 15% (by energy) content, including herbaceous and woody materials, wet and dry agricultural residues and energy crops. This experience has shown how the technical risks associated with co-ring in different types of coal-red power plants can be reduced to an acceptable level through proper selection of the type of biomass (to avoid ash clinkering problems etc) and choosing the most suitable fuel mixing and co-ring technology. It is a relatively low cost and low risk means of adding biomass capacity, particularly in economies in transition and developing countries where old and in efcient coal-red plants remain prevalent. Improved insight into fundamental aspects relating to combustion performance and ash behaviour of various biomass feedstocks when used in a blend with coal, or indeed alone, could lead to further increases in plant reliability and efciency. Overall emission levels and specic investment costs can be reduced as a result but a better understanding of the combustion of more difcult biomass fuels with high alkali content such as cereal straw is needed.
Synthesis gas
Gasication of biomass to synthesis (producer) gas consisting mainly of CO and H2, has a relatively high overall conversion efciency (40-50%) when used to generate electricity through a gas turbine ( or around 30% through a gas engine). The gas produced can also be used as feedstock for a range of liquid biofuels based on the Fischer-Tropsch process. Development of efcient BIGCC systems is nearing commercial realization but the challenges of gas clean-up remain. Several pilot and demonstration projects have been evaluated with varying degrees of success.
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Global biofuel consumption in 2002 was around 15 billion litres but by 2005 this had tripled. Around 38 billion litres of bioethanol (1.2 EJ) were produced mainly in Brazil, USA and China for use in blends normally up to 10% ethanol but up to 85% in ex-fuel engines (or even 100% hydrous ethanol in Brazilian designs). In addition over 3 billion litres of biodiesel were produced, mostly in Europe. Commercial bioethanol production costs, without any agricultural subsidies, direct grants or other government incentives included, currently range from USD 0.25 per litre of gasoline equivalent (lge), (sugarcane, Brazil) to USD 0.80/lge (sugar beet, UK) with corn ethanol around USD 0.60/lge (USA) and ligno-cellulosic ethanol from pilot scale plants claimed to be between USD 0.80 to 1.00/lge. Biodiesel costs range from USD 0.42/l (animal fats, New Zealand) to USD 0.90/l (oilseed rape, Europe; soybean, USA; palm oil; Malaysia) (Figure 17). Technology development and larger scale plants could lower production costs of bioethanol by 2030 to USD 0.23-0.65/lge and biodiesel to USD 0.40-0.75/lge.
Figure 17 " Biofuels costs compared with diesel and gasoline wholesale prices
Wholesale petroleum product price (USD/l) 1.1 1.0 0.9 0.8 0.7 FT 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 35
Unleaded gasoline
Daily market fob prices for petroleum products at several global locations from 3 January 2005 to 6 April 2006
ELC
ES
Diesel and gas oil
39
BA BV
40
45
50
55
60
Present cost ranges Bioethanol Cost estimates by 2030 ES: EC: EB: EW: ELC: Sugarcane Corn Beet Wheat Ligno-cellulose BA: Animal fats BV: Vegetable oils FT: Fischer Tropsch synthesis liquids Biodiesel
Daily wholesale gasoline and diesel prices (USD/l free on board) in 12 locations versus the crude oil price compared with the production cost ranges for biofuels without any government support schemes, both now and as anticipated by 2030.
Ethanol from sugar cane can compete when the crude oil price is around USD 40-50 /bbl and biodiesel from animal fats around USD 60-70 /bbl without any government support measures. Without support, other biofuels will only compete when oil is well above USD 70/bbl until the production costs can be signicantly reduced as a result of returns on current and future RD&D investment; by plant scale-up to the fully commercial size; and through consequent learning experience. Otherwise biofuels will continue to be dependent on various government interventions such as agricultural subsidies, trade barriers and excise tax exemptions.
Ash disposal
Ash resulting from combustion or gasication of biomass is either collected as bottom ash from the furnace or, in larger plants, as the y ash by separation from the exhaust gases in the ue. Straw and vegetative grasses tend to have large volumes of ash (8-12% of the original dry weight) than woody biomass (1-5%). Gasication can produce less ash from the same feedstock by comparison with its combustion. The ash can have a value as a low nitrate fertiliser or as a raw material in the brick and cement industries. The nature of the ash, access to nearby land, soil types, and existing soil nutrient levels will determine if the practice of returning it to the land may be feasible in order to recycle some of the nutrients and trace elements and to use it for soil conditioning. Ash contents vary with the source of biomass and can often include a concentration of heavy metals if the biomass was co-red with coal or originated from soils on land carrying a treatment process where sewage or other liquid wastes and soil conditioners are applied. This can add to the complexity of the disposal process. An assessment of the ash content should be made. Where there is no practical use for the ash, disposal to landll is usually the preferred option. Handling and disposal procedures are often regulated so local requirements will need to be met.
Summary
Harvesting the biomass resource and delivering it to the bioenergy plant is often a costly logistical exercise not always planned for in detail when a biomass project is contemplated. The biomass fuel needs to be of suitable and consistent quality, available when required (usually all year round), and have a low USD/GJ price delivered to the plant gate. A large range of bioenergy conversion technologies exist and selection is dependent on the biomass resource available and the energy carrier required. Production costs vary with scale of plant and location as well as with the delivered costs for the biomass fuel. These range from being negative where a waste disposal cost is avoided, or being relatively expensive compared with fossil fuel alternatives where a purpose grown energy crop is produced on good arable land having a high opportunity cost.
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43 Developing a bioenergy project is not without its challenges in order to appease all the stakeholders involved. ! Environmental groups are sensitive to bioenergy projects and will only accept the use of biomass if dened and certied as sustainably produced. ! Biomass producers want good returns per hectare for collecting or growing the resource (which therefore has to compete with other land uses) or for collecting and storing it if produced as a waste product from another process. (However as soon as a by-product material is seen to have a value it is no longer seen as a waste and the purchase price will inevitably increase). ! Bioenergy plant developers want the security of long-term fuel supply contracts in place before proceeding further to invest in the plant. ! Equipment manufacturers want their products selected so design should ensure improved thermal efciencies, better controls and reliable feedstock handling in order to gain better returns and a larger share of the market. Efcient plant operation necessitates the biomass fuel supply reaching the consistent quality standard for which the plant was designed. ! Project nanciers want to reduce the risks of investment by having heat or power purchase agreements in place, along with fuel supply contracts, and perhaps green pricing options. ! Power plant operators want quality biomass fuel delivered consistently all year round to an agreed prescribed set of standards and characteristics. Installation of back-up fuel combustion facilities (such as for LPG or natural gas) can offset the risks of non-delivery.
! Competing markets may wish to secure the biomass resource for other end uses such as garden mulch, pulp, bre board manufacture, transport biofuel production, chemical plant feedstock etc. ! Communities, particularly in rural areas where most biomass plants will be located, want secure and long-term employment, independence, and some control over local resources. ! Immediate neighbours want their lives to continue as normal without additional noise, trafc, dust etc.
What are the barriers and the possible means to overcome them?
Removing barriers to bioenergy project implementation is a challenge for developers and policy makers wishing to see more projects up and running. For some technologies such as landll gas plants, the co-benets are evident and rapid deployment has consequently occurred since the 1980s with little government intervention. The more rapid deployment of other bioenergy technologies where all the benets are less evident could be achieved by offering a number of incentives.
Sustainable development
Any utilisation of biomass for bioenergy must be planned within the context of national policies relating to economic growth and sustainable development. In IEA member countries this will be through endeavouring to meet the needs for energy services by the present generation without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. For the least developing countries, the increased deployment of modern bioenergy as a reliable and affordable source of energy could be part of the solution to overcoming their current constraints concerning GDP growth. In all cases, production and use of biomass should be sustainable in terms of the social, environmental and economic perspectives (Section 1).
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Economic
On the one hand a biomass producer will not embark on a business venture without a denite market for the biomass. On the other hand a bioenergy developer will not invest in constructing a bioenergy plant without rst securing a biomass fuel supply over the long term. A reliable market for the heat, power or biofuels to be produced also needs to be identied and purchase agreements signed. A project will only become bankable once these issues have been resolved. An investor or banker will need to have condence that all aspects of the project are well dened and contracts and warranties are all in place because a plant is likely to require a substantial nancial commitment over a relatively long period before a return on investment results. Many bioenergy projects are technically feasible but investments do not proceed because other forms of energy appear to be more cost competitive. A signicant barrier results where the relatively high costs for bioheat, biopower or biofuels cannot compete on purely economic terms with fossil fuels used to provide the same amount of useful energy. The concept of providing a level playing eld to enable true cost comparisons to be made that include all subsidies, co-benets etc is often suggested but rarely achieved in practice.
Many investors still perceive the risks of bioenergy projects to be signicant and would often prefer to invest in other renewable or conventional fossil fuel energy projects. Effective risk management and establishment of demonstration plants could help to reduce these perceived barriers and thereby lead to an increase in the number of willing investors. This would result in more competitive nancing opportunities. Investors often tend to seek a short payback period of 2-4 years which favours conversion plants with low capital cost, albeit usually with a high fuel cost. Large bioenergy heat and power plants usually have a relatively high capital cost of around USD 1300 - 2 500/kW compared to gas or coal plants at around USD 900 - 2 000/kW. The granting of increased depreciation rates would help to reduce this high capital cost barrier and help encourage potential investors to favour bioenergy plants (see below). At the smaller scale, for individual small business investors such as a sawmiller building a wood-red timber drying kiln, or a pig farmer constructing a biogas plant (Figure 18), the installation of a bioenergy facility on their property may be one of the largest single capital investments that they will make. The ability to raise the capital funds needed for the investment may be beyond their means. Such businesses often possess basic, hands on, engineering skills so tend to purchase, modify and install second hand plant and equipment. However this is usually less efcient, requires higher labour inputs, and involves more maintenance such that investment in new, efcient, low labour intensity plants would be a better economic proposition in the longer term, assuming sufcient capital was available. However a poor understanding of the project risks by bank managers and investors can lead to difculty obtaining nance and a decit of capital needed to build the project is the result. Relatively high transaction costs are also commonly experienced for the development of smaller scale plants since it costs a similar amount of time, effort and money to secure USD 2M nance for say a 1 to 2 MW project as it does to secure USD 200M for a 50 - 100MW project. 45
This 4 000 sow pig farm in South England using two gas engines (housed in the closed shed) to provide electricity for use on the farm as well as low grade heat for drying lucerne for horse feed as an ancillary farm operation.
Economic risks of using biomass for power generation in the electricity market are high due to competitive costs from coal- and gas-red plants and from other renewable energy plants including hydro, geothermal and wind. Similar competition exists in the heat market between biomass, gas and coal. Delivered forest residues for example can cost double, in terms of USD/GJ, for coal delivered to the plant gate, yet the savings in CO2 emissions and other environmental costs are rarely accounted for. Therefore bankers and nanciers should be invited to become more involved during the project development process in order to fully understand the issues. The problems of low condence in nancial projections and possible insufcient debt service coverage could then be explored. Financial investors specialising in renewable energy projects are now appearing, as are insurance companies willing to offer specialist cover for the many risks that a renewable energy project and its development might incur. This should assist the deployment of bioenergy. Other economic barriers result from the deregulation of the power industry in many countries. In some cases this has made it more difcult for renewable energy projects, including bioenergy ones, to enter the market due to the resulting lower wholesale electricity price. In addition deregulation has resulted in low investment in infrastructure by the industry. This however means that some independent power producers may now be able to benet by developing a bioenergy project where it has become more competitive to do so, perhaps due to its location on a weak part of the distribution grid. The uptake of embedded, distributed energy systems could help minimise transmission costs and losses, increase rural energy security, and enable smaller scale bioenergy plants to be built, possibly more suited to CHP systems than stand-alone power plants.
Taxation
46 Investment costs for bioenergy plants can be partly overcome by increasing the depreciation rates on plant and equipment for tax purposes. This would reduce the investment payback period, increase the return on investment, and hence help to alleviate the capital investment and long payback period barriers that bioenergy plants currently face. For example, in theory biomass boilers might have a useful life of say 25 years, yet during that period it is quite possible that the biomass fuel supplies will change and obsolescence will therefore occur. A shorter operating life therefore results and tax depreciation assessments could reect this. For biofuels, reducing excise taxes, especially if the overall benets can be shown to offset the loss in government revenue, may be applied to the use of fuels with a biofuel component as is already the case for biodiesel in Germany and bioethanol in France.
Technical experience
When it comes to building the plant, higher costs than anticipated usually occur in the early stages of development. For new plant designs and immature technologies as are often found with bioenergy plants today, the risks can be partly mitigated for by good design and by long term (5- to 10-year) warranties from equipment manufacturers. Construction risks can be overcome by having a xed contract price, and by purchasing insurance cover against delays and liability. Most technologies move down an experience curve based on learning by doing. The many pitfalls and problems that usually arise when building a prototype plant can be partly overcome when building a second plant. As more experience is gained fewer problems occur and shortcuts can also be taken. In general terms, for every doubling of total installed capacity of an energy technology, such as a biodiesel manufacturing plant, the capital costs will be reduced by around 20%.
Public image
Barriers to bioenergy deployment include public concerns relating to: ! the perception of burning biomass as dirty as a result of assumed high atmospheric emissions and using out-dated technologies; ! the need to grow large-scale monocultures, possibly genetically modied, and negatively impacting on landscape and biodiversity; ! the impact on land use diversication and biodiversity by having to secure long-term biomass fuel supplies; ! the clearing of native forests to plant perennial energy crops such as oil palms and eucalyptus trees (see Section 1); ! increased transport activities due to the relatively low energy density of many forms of biomass (see Section 2); ! the relatively high demand for water and nutrients by some crops although possibly no higher than for traditional food and bre crops; ! the high transport requirements from the need to collect biomass feedstocks that are widespread, or to import them, in order to achieve economies of scale for commercial conversion plants; and ! obtaining resource and planning consents with minimum consultation due to time pressures to negotiate nancing and contractual arrangements. Before planning consents can be obtained for a bioenergy project, an environmental impact assessment is often needed in which many of these concerns can be addressed. 47
Investors. People proposing to invest in bioenergy plants also sometimes lack key relevant information and may rely on their own knowledge often derived from magazines, out-dated publications or gleaned by word of mouth. To reduce their investment risk they could opt to seek and pay for quality advice. Communities. People living in close proximity to a proposed plant may well lack the appropriate information regarding its possible impacts. Where a novel crop is to be grown and a bioenergy plant established, a high level of public interest will naturally result. This will especially be the case if the proposed project can also provide opportunity for local recreational activity. Providing a visitor information centre, or public wildlife area with educational potential, could be an additional incentive for securing a resource consent from the local authority (and possibly earn extra revenue for the land owner). In addition the bioenergy plant itself could become a visitor attraction to provide educational opportunities as well as additional revenue.
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managed, harvested, stored and transported. This is not a new concept and sequential harvesting dates have long been the arrangement between growers and processors of canned and frozen vegetables and fruit in order to ensure that adequate quality is maintained. Fuel supply risks from competing markets for the biomass can be overcome by negotiation of appropriate contracts and forward sales agreements. However many biomass fuel suppliers are farmers who are not used to long-term contracts. For a large plant a fuel supply merchant could be contracted to provide guaranteed fuel supplies with a penalty clause for non-delivery and hence transfer the risk. In addition incentives (or penalties) could be given to fuel suppliers and growers to provide consistent fuel quality as delivered to the conversion plant to further reduce the risks. All eventualities (such as the death or insolvency of a supplier) need to be covered since access to fuel by the plant operators will be required whatever the circumstances.
Energy ratios
The energy balance of a bioenergy project is not always favourable, though this is particularly the case for some biofuels produced from annual energy crops, where at times energy unit inputs into the overall system can be similar to, or even exceed, the energy unit outputs in the bioenergy product. In contrast, for biomass produced from perennial crops used for heat, the useful energy output can be at least 10 20 times greater than the energy input. For second generation bioethanol, the promising development of enzymatic hydrolysis of ligno-cellulose should have a more favourable energy balance than when using sugar or cereal crops as feedstock together with energy intensive distillation techniques to produce the anhydrous ethanol. A full life cycle analysis is needed in order to accurately assess energy input/output ratios.
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Consultation is part of the overall development process and should be integrated into it. Local communities are inevitably going to be affected one way or another by the construction and operation of a new bioenergy plant. The extent to which a community could be affected will depend on the scale and type of project. Even a small on-farm scheme can affect the neighbours so that consultation in advance, even if very informal, is recommended. This includes discussing issues relating to transport of the feedstock; the construction of the plant itself; times of construction working and plant operating; noise emanating from vehicles and plant operation; possible landscape change depending on the crops grown; light pollution if operated after dark; and the potential for increased workforce numbers to affect local house prices and demands on service facilities. The project developer is responsible for managing the consultation process. If it is done well the project may proceed smoothly. In all cases it is recommended to undertake well planned consultation at an early stage of development in order to facilitate the planning and avoid the possibility of conict resolutions occurring later which can be lengthy and costly to mitigate. The consultation process also needs to be exible as a strategy may need to be changed as circumstances evolve. Stakeholder analysis can often be a useful approach. Those people and organisations most likely to have an interest need to be identied from the onset. Gleaning information on local issues can also be benecial in preparing for the critical consultation and communication strategy. If the industry is new in the region, then prepared, printed and presented educational material can be a useful tool to explain what the plant will look like and what all the possible impacts might be. This requires the developer to consider what possible impact the construction and operation of the proposed plant could have on the community and neighbourhood. 50 The developer will need to begin discussions with the local and regional statutory authorities at an early stage to help identify acceptable sites for the proposed bioenergy plant and to possibly eliminate those unacceptable for any reason. For example it may not be readily apparent from a map that a preferred site is actually a site of historic importance. Local authorities and government agencies are used to dealing with developers at an early stage of proceedings so early discussions, in condence, can often prove helpful. Those living and working in the vicinity of the proposed bioenergy plant including local interest groups and local authorities, together with other interested but non-resident stakeholders such as nongovernment organisations, will usually all have an interest in the project. Depending on its nature and scale, others with a possible interest could include: ! policy planners; ! local government agencies; ! transport authorities; ! tele-communication companies; ! civil aviation authorities; ! electricity regulators; ! historic places, archaeology and heritage organisations; ! water, waste treatment and waste disposal sectors; ! health and safety bodies; ! environmental and amenity groups; ! landowners and potential growers of the biomass;
! country user associations; ! wildlife, ecology and nature conservation groups; ! re prevention bodies; and ! engineering consultants who provide technical services. Developers of a project are recommended to identify possible areas of concern for each relevant group and involve them at the appropriate stage. If the project is fairly novel in the region, this could be a time consuming process to explain exactly what is proposed. If it is one of a series of similar projects, consultation should become easier over time due to increased familiarity by members of the community as more similar projects are deployed, landll gas projects being one such example. Different groups will have different concerns. Those living and working near the proposed plant will require information on noise, visual impact, local emissions etc. Others may be more concerned about impacts on local landscape, recreational areas, water quality or even broader global issues such as climate change mitigation. The timing of the consultation is often critical. If initiated too early it could raise concerns by the community that the developer has not even had a chance to consider. If left too late then the local community members could claim it is a fait accompli with no opportunity to receive their input. Where the project is the rst in a district, the community will be unfamiliar with what is entailed and will generally imagine the outcomes to be worse than what they might prove to be in reality. Early consultation is then necessary on such detailed issues as transport routes, new power line routes, noise level contours etc. Rapid responses by the project planner to any particular concerns identied by the public will help raise general condence in this new industry, especially if it is the rst plant of its type to be built in the region. Honesty and openness are respected. Where details requested have not been nalised at the stage reached in the development and planning process, then the community will probably understand the reasons and welcome the opportunity to comment on them as they are developed in the future. Where a rm decision has already been made on an issue and cannot now be altered to the extent that the community representatives might like it to be, then a clear explanation why it had to be made is often the best way to proceed. Ideally the consultation process should be structured alongside the processes necessary for obtaining formal planning permission and resource consents. These vary from country to country. In some cases the process may need to be extended where aspects of the project fall outside of the usual formal legal process. In other cases agreement by government or the local authority may be all that is required with no community consultation needed at all. For example on-farm storage of manure feedstock in ponds to supply a proposed biogas plant may not need a formal consent in some countries but neighbours may need to be assured that odours will not become an issue. In other countries new plants might simply be built regardless of any local concerns expressed. Methods of consultation will vary with the circumstances. They could include public meetings; open days; site visits to similar projects; special individual meetings with key groups; public exhibitions with good visuals of plans, plant diagrams, trafc routes; questionnaires; and discussion groups. It is usual for discussions to continue as the project proposal develops because new issues will inevitably arise at various stages. These may also concern the production of the biomass, especially if a new crop system will need to be developed involving land use change, water use issues, biodiversity monitoring etc. as 51
could be the case with growing novel vegetative grasses or short rotation forests. Even after the project has been commissioned, liaison between the plant operators and community should continue to ensure no underlying problems have occurred and any required monitoring of emissions are fairly reported. This may be a condition of gaining the consent. In some cases community members may be given the opportunity to become shareholders in the project. This third party funding approach may help ease the consultation process but will not eliminate the need for it. Generating pride in the project by the local community is a sign of success. This could entail encouraging new business developments such as guided tourist trails, nearby cafes, and school visits.
Regulations
Stringent controls already in place regarding planning zones, water access, road access for heavy vehicles, priority access to grid power line connections etc. may constrain a bioenergy project development. Often these are well established so are difcult to avoid, even by means of seeking specied departures from the local or government policies where a strong case can be made. Seeking amendments to existing regulations to better suit a new concept, possibly one not even thought of when the regulations were rst drafted many years ago, is usually a slow and laborious process with much legal input needed. It may be possible to achieve success but often at a high cost and with major delays to the project.
Carbon emission trading is certainly an incentive for renewable energy projects to displace fossil fuel use. Although carbon trading has begun in Europe and elsewhere, it is not yet certain whether it will proceed internationally over the long term and national greenhouse gas emission reduction obligations under the second commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol after 2012 have not yet been agreed. If trading does continue and expand internationally, then many bioenergy projects could receive additional revenue in terms of measurable carbon offsets. Others will possibly be built under the Joint Implementation and Clean Development Mechanisms of the Protocol and this could aid the rate of project deployment.
Security of supply
This is a complex subject revolving around future oil supplies, technical power system outages, sabotage and terrorism, geopolitics, weather patterns etc. Bioenergy (and other renewable energy) projects can assist in reducing the risks of these various energy supply constraints which can have serious political consequences. However they also carry their own risks of insecurity, variability and unreliability. A more detailed discussion can be found in the 2007 IEA publication Contribution of Renewable Energy Technologies to Energy Security. The transport fuel sector in most countries largely depends on imported oil and rened petroleum fuels. Growing concerns regarding geo-political oil concentrations, limited reserves, and high and uctuating prices have created considerable interest in alternatives including biofuels. Several types of biofuels exist but most remain more costly to produce (Figure 17), hence societal costs such as agricultural subsidies, grant support schemes, excise tax exemptions are all needed to further expand this edgling industry. Even with climate change mitigation benets and R & D investment to drive the production costs down over the next few decades, biofuels are unlikely to gain a major share of the market. However when produced for internal use by a country they are able to provide some transport fuel supply security, at least for maintaining emergency services. To enhance the security of power generation systems, bioenergy power and cogeneration plants built reasonably close to the demand load will reduce transmission losses and can at times strengthen the local electricity distribution grid by providing additional and alternative resources. Security of supply can also be improved by greater diversication of the portfolio mix. For heating plants, greater security from using biomass fuels depends on the current source of existing oil, gas or coal fuels and their reliability, versus the risks involved with securing sufcient supplies of biomass over the long term.
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Employment
There is little doubt that biomass can provide useful employment both for agricultural workers, possibly in the off-season when some harvesting or processing of energy crops can be carried out, and also for both skilled and unskilled workers at the bioenergy processing plant. Since bioenergy implementation depends on securing a reliable supply of sustainably produced biomass, it can create much needed employment opportunities in rural areas (Figure 19). Designing and building of the plants also creates jobs. However it should be noted that employing labour costs money. Hence if it is a relatively labour intensive process, producing bioenergy can become a relatively expensive option for providing electricity, heat or liquid biofuels energy carriers.
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Labour is required for operating and maintaining various renewable energy projects after their construction, with bioenergy projects also requiring additional labour to produce and deliver the biomass to the plant.
In some countries there may well be a future shortage of unskilled workers needed for the harvesting and collection of biomass. So although employment opportunities from greater bioenergy uptake are often quoted, nding willing workers for what can be somewhat arduous and repetitive work may not be easy in either developed or developing countries.
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and carbon monoxide. Modern domestic bioenergy appliances, better wood-stove designs, and new biomass based fuels such as ethanol gels, can help reduce this major health issue.
Industry development
Biomass can be used at the small local scale for supplying heat for individual buildings such as schools or hospitals. It can be used for drying crops or for heating houses, animal buildings or greenhouses on a farm or in a village. These applications can often save on energy bills. Larger scale schemes can provide process heat, district heat, electricity for use on-site or fed into the national grid, or biofuels for blending into the regional transport fuel supply at the renery. The size of a bioenergy plant usually does carry economies of scale but these are often constrained by the additional transport costs if having to collect the biomass from larger distances (Table 1). Regardless of the scale of plant the manufacturing industry will need to be expanded in order to design and build more appliances as increased deployment occurs. In addition more ancillary handling and processing equipment will be needed. Together this will provide local employment and possibly export opportunities for some manufacturing companies.
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How can strategic support policies for bioenergy be integrated with other local and national policies?
Linking national bioenergy objectives and targets with other government policies to achieve similar goals is a strategic way forward. Such policies can include: ! greenhouse gas mitigation by displacing fossil fuels and providing both physical and chemical carbon dioxide capture and storage opportunities; ! security of energy supply by expanding the energy portfolio and encouraging the uptake of local renewable energy systems and alternative fuels; ! increasing employment opportunities by using skilled and unskilled labour in larger bioenergy projects, in the plant and equipment manufacturing industry, and in rural areas; ! transport by encouraging the uptake of biofuels; ! water quality by encouraging riparian strips and efuent treatment on to land; ! waste treatment and minimisation by landll plants and various other waste-to-energy projects; ! rural development in developing countries, in particular to provide the necessary energy supply using indigenous resources; ! land use diversication including the stated aim in some regions to de-couple agricultural subsidies from food, stockfeed and bre production in the longer term; and ! social issues such as the long-term goals to establish sustainable cities. 56 The rst ve of these policies have already been discussed in the section above. More general comments followed by additional points on the other four policies follow below. Policies to support bioenergy will be needed if its share within the global energy mix is to be increased. Policies can be established to directly encourage the production of biomass by, for example, encouraging land use change or placing high prices on organic waste disposal at landlls. Alternatively policies can be applied indirectly by encouraging the demand for bioenergy (with separate policies needed for heat, power and biofuels) which would imply the need to secure more biomass as feedstock for the conversion plants. Bioenergy project deployment will partly depend on future world oil, gas, coal and carbon prices making biomass more or less competitive with fossil fuels. However at this time where the rate of deployment of bioenergy projects is in the balance, more often than not regulatory and scal barriers exist. These include an absence of effective markets, such as green pricing, to stimulate the bioenergy industry in many countries and the continuation of grants and subsidies that support fossil fuel energy systems. Together these make the entry of bioenergy into the market more difcult. Overall bioenergy has been envisaged to become a more signicant contributor to global renewable energy in the short to medium term. Estimates of its future market potential and costs vary widely due to the complex characteristics of the resource, their site specicity, uncertainties around supporting national policies, labour input costs, and efciency of the conversion technologies used. However, overall the costs are expected to continue to decline over time, whilst the social and environmental co-benets, including carbon sequestration opportunities, are anticipated to become drivers of greater bioenergy project deployment.
Waste treatment
Increases in the cost of disposal of wastes and residues, driven by growing environmental concerns, will necessitate the need to nd alternative options. Waste-to-energy projects not only avoid the cost of disposal but provide useful and valuable outputs in the form of methane, heat and electricity energy carriers.
Rural development
From the social perspective there can be little doubt that bioenergy projects protect existing rural employment, provide new jobs, give learning opportunities in order to transfer skills, introduce new skills, and provide training and educational opportunities. The growing interest towards distributed heat and electricity generation using smaller scale plants and embedded power generation systems should result in a decline in urban drift once rural communities are able to develop and grow using the new sources of bioenergy available to them. Once proven in developed countries the concept can then be easily transferred into developing countries together with capacity building initiatives. This in turn will produce a sense of pride and independence, of particular importance to many indigenous and aboriginal communities who are struggling to maintain their cultural identities.
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The whole biomass trade issue is complex and is under evaluation by the OECD, Global BioEnergy Partnership (www.globalbioenergy.org) , IEA Bioenergys Task 40 (IEA BioenergyTrade, 2007), and elsewhere. Several IEA countries are already purchasing some of their biofuel from other producers such as Brazil and Malaysia. Others are seriously contemplating doing so to meet growing demands. Importing biomass could prove to be a cheaper option than producing their own, partly depending on any trade tariffs imposed. However since there are very limited volumes of solid biomass and liquid biofuels available for sale on the world market at present, and the energy and economic costs of transporting the biomass would need to be included in any comparison with local production, given the anticipated increases in demand, the future price of biofuels is likely to increase signicantly. In addition, it would seem sensible for a developing country producing bioenergy carriers to use them internally to aid its future economic development, rather than to gain short term income from exporting them. A joint workshop between IEA Bioenergy Task 40 and the World Bank however concluded that a combination of producing bioenergy carriers for export as well as for local use would generate revenue for development from the export earnings as well as support local industry (IEA BioenergyTrade, 2007). Sustainable production of biomass and its utilisation in order to preserve the local food situation and protect biodiversity is a prerequisite in developing this new potential. So overall, the extent to which the international trade in biomass will develop is uncertain.
Social policies
Other than employment, health and rural development, many countries have national polices relating to social cohesion, education, pride, support for indigenous peoples etc. The IEA Bioenergy (2007) has an activity (Task 29) covering the Socio-economic aspects of bioenergy systems within its Implementing Agreement and more details can be found at www.eihp.hr/task29.htm. Education and easy access to information about the problems of energy supply security, climate change and greenhouse gas emissions may create greater awareness and encourage companies, communities and individuals to be prepared to act. This could involve behavioural change in the longer term and result in the immediate uptake of more biomass and other renewable energy systems. There is a growing trend towards communities taking responsibility for their local environment. Bioenergy provides the opportunity for many people living in cities to also have an improved quality of life. Private ownership of bioenergy plants such as biogas plants in Denmark or district heat and power cogeneration plants in Sweden are good examples. In poorer urban areas in developing countries, bioenergy plants could provide social benets resulting from having lights to read by and for children to complete their homework. In wealthier countries biomass benets could be in terms of better levels of home heating or cooling. For individuals, communities and businesses based in cities who value the goal of achieving sustainability for whatever motive, using biomass as an energy source could help meet their objectives of becoming self-sufcient, renewable energy supporters, low carbon emitters, and also becoming recognised as environmentally aware and responsible citizens.
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possibly building a long-term reliance on them; and how their future phasing out and removal would affect the industry. Ideally policies need to be made for the longer term, particularly for the bioenergy industry since energy crops can take time to grow and projects can take time to develop. For electricity there are two main types of mechanisms. ! RECs and ROCs (renewable energy certicates / renewable energy obligations) As well as selling the electricity privately or through the wholesale market, electricity generators and retailers are able to trade renewable energy certicates issued after generation from specied types and scales of generation plant. Trading via an internet-based market has begun in several countries. The rights are sold into the market once the power is generated and the price varies with varying supply and demand. The certicate value can be capped by imposing a penalty that retailers will have to pay if they do not meet their renewable electricity targets as set by the regulations. Renewable electricity markets have good potential to boost bioenergy projects with landll gas plants gaining most interest to date. Targets set by governments for new renewables including bioenergy can be successful in gaining increased uptake. Australia for example, with its 2% (9,500GWh/y) mandatory renewable energy obligation on electricity retailers by 2010, has made good progress because most power generation companies soon identied commercial projects in which to invest. Bioenergy will be a major provider of this target since landll gas, bagasse and forest residue-fuelled bioenergy power plants are being built that can be cost-competitive with wind and solar under Australian climatic conditions. Combined heat and power plants, and the co-ring of biomass with coal or gas, are more difcult to monitor so are not always included in a RECs portfolio of approved projects. ! Feed-in tariffs An alternative popular government incentive would be for bioenergy generation plant operators to receive a xed price for any power generated that is normally above the market price. Advantages are that new project investors are able to estimate their total revenue in advance since this additional income can be included as a xed price into the project economic analysis. For biofuels, mandatory obligations on oil companies to provide a certain percentage of biofuels in their products is becoming a popular approach to stimulate increased market shares. Policies to support renewable energy heating and cooling that relate to bioenergy are scarce. Bioenergy project developers should follow closely any national policy developments as they occur. They are continually being produced and updated. A full list of policies and measures that relate to government policies to support bioenergy can be found on the IEA database at http://renewables.iea.org 59
Summary
Biomass currently provides a signicant amount of global consumer energy but mainly for traditional domestic cooking and heating in developing countries. New and improved modern bioenergy technologies for electricity, transport and industrial heat production have reached the market and, in some cases, are successfully competing with fossil fuels even without government incentives, especially in the landll gas and heat markets. Modern bioenergy projects however are not developing as rapidly worldwide as had been anticipated. Many potential investors and developers do not have a good understanding of the technical, social and environmental issues that should be addressed when seeking approval to develop a bioenergy project. Ready access to information on biomass fuel supply and quality issues, bioenergy plant design and
technologies, conversion plant economics etc, could assist their understanding. This should help meet the industry objective to install good quality, well designed bioenergy plants in order to gain a good return on investment from meeting growing energy demands using sustainably produced biomass fuels. However the process for developing a bioenergy project can still be complex in comparison with building a wind farm or small hydropower scheme. It is anticipated that a more thorough understanding of the issues involved in developing a bioenergy project, as outlined in these guidelines, should enable the project approval process to stand a greater chance of success. As global energy demand is projected to continue to grow, all options must be pursued.
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Bibliography
Berndes G, Hoogwijk M and van den Broek R, 2003. The contribution of biomass in the future global energy supply: a review of 17 studies, Biomass and Bioenergy, 25(1), 1-28. Rosillo-Calle F, Hemstock S, de Groot P and Woods J, 2006.Biomass Assessment Handbook, Earthscan, London. www.earthscan.co.uk ETSU, 1996. Short rotation coppice for energy production, Energy Technology Support Unit, Department of Trade and Industry, UK. Faaij A P C et al., 2007. Potential contribution of bioenergy to the future worlds energy demand, Position paper, IEA Bioenergy. In process. www.ieabioenergy.com IEA Energy Technology Essentials, 2007. Bioenergy for power generation and CHP and Biofuels, International Energy Agency, Paris, http://www.iea.org/Textbase/techno/essentials.htm IEA Bioenergy, 2007. Bioenergy Implementing Agreement, International Energy Agency www. ieabioenergy.com IEA BioenergyGHG, 2007. Bioenergy Implementing Agreement, Task 38, Greenhouse Gas Balances of Biomass and Bioenergy Systems www.ieabioenergy-task38-org) IEA BioenergyTrade, 2007. Bioenergy Implementing Agreement, Task 40, Sustainable International Bioenergy Trade Securing Supply and Demand www.bioenergytrade.org IEA, 2006. World Energy Outlook 2006, International Energy Agency, Paris. www.iea.org OECD, 2004. Biomass and agriculture- sustainability, markets and policies. Proceedings of Workshop, Vienna, June 2003, OECD, Paris. Sims R E H, 2003. The Brilliance of Bioenergy in business and in practice, Earthscan Ltd. www. earthscan.co.uk and James & James (Science publishers), London, www.jxj.com
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