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The EU’s Misallocation Of Biomass
Monday, 09 September 2013 The EU’s Renewable Energy Directive (RED) is hindering the development of materials use and consequently the entire creation of a bio-based European economy, according to Michael Carus, managing director of Germany’s Nova Institute. As a consequence, companies like DSM and BASF are choosing to make investments in other countries such as the USA and Brazil, as well as Asia. “The EU’s bioenergy and biofuel policy, as embodied in the ambitious objectives fixed by RED, leads to the systematic allocation of biomass to energy to the disadvantage of material use,” Carus told Il Bioeconomista . “RED has triggered the development of national action plans and support systems for bioenergy and biofuels and this in turn has driven up biomass prices and agricultural leases, making it far more difficult for other sectors to get their hands on biomass and distorting prices. “The ‘misallocation of biomass’ is the right phrase here, since this is blocking higher value material uses like chemicals and plastics from coming to fruition. RED-linked developments on the ground will have a considerable impact on the future availability of biomass for the materials industry.” Bioenergy and biofuels are expected to make up roughly 60% of the overall EU’s RED quota and about 90% of the transport quota by 2020. “We urgently need a new political framework for the most efficient and sustainable utilisation of biomass,” Carus said. “This means especially a level playing field between material and energy use. Five years ago this was a worldwide problem – today it is mainly a problem for Europe. In America and Asia the political framework for bio-based chemicals and plastics is now much more favorable than in Europe. Accordingly, most of the new investments are going to the US, Canada, Brazil, Thailand, Malaysia and China.” Continue reading
KiOR Illustrates The Futility Of Cellulosic Biofuels
Sep 5 2013, 15:13 | about: KIOR Disclosure: I have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. (More…) KiOR is the latest object lesson in how energy investors ignore science at their own peril. As of 30 June 2013 this start-up was down to $11.5M in cash and $20M in untapped credit, with long-term debt of $150M and a quarterly burn rate well over $30M. Since commissioning its 10 MGY commercial-scale facility last October, it has produced no more than 73,000 actual gallons of RIN-eligible cellulosic blendstock with total revenues of $310,000 (~$4/gal). Cost of product revenue totals $20.5M (~$280/gal) and shows how far it is from break-even, let alone profitability. With about 60 days of liquidity left, bankruptcy looms before the end of September without an infusion of new investor cash. Recently a class action shareholder lawsuit was announced claiming that CEO Fred Cannon’s forecasts of production and revenues were unreasonably optimistic. The Company’s widely-circulated expectations to produce 3 million to 5 million gallons in 2013 contrasts with a production rate less than 1/10th the necessary annual pace. It is not just shareholders, but Wall Street analysts and government agencies that seem to have been caught by surprise. The EPA’s original 2013 renewable volume obligation counted on KiOR for over 5 million of the 14 million gallons of cellulosic gasoline and diesel required. Cannon’s most recent prediction for 2013 has been revised downward to 1 million to 2 million gallons . Why is producing competitively priced liquid fuel from cellulosic feedstock such a challenge? The answer is in fundamental chemistry and biology and physics that stubbornly limit what even the cleverest geneticist and richest venture capitalist can do. A comprehensive and mutli-disciplinary look at the full spectrum of biofuels is available via the Waterloo University Institute for Complexity and Innovation . Hopefully a brief discussion below can outline the basic case and help more investors from being separated from their money chasing this white rabbit. To illustrate the ultimate futility of cellulosic ethanol, it is instructive to compare it with corn ethanol. US corn farmers, benefiting from generations of technical and genetic improvements, have increased yields six-fold since 1940 and today can produce from a single acre as much as 500 gallons of ethanol from 5 tons of corn kernels. However, growing and processing the corn at such scale consumes huge amounts of energy. Rigorous lifecycle analyses have revealed that the energy return on investment (EROI) of corn ethanol is only 1.25:1; only 1.25 units of energy are output for every unit of energy input into farming and processing. And the energy portion delivered as ethanol is just equal to the energy input from natural gas and petroleum fossil fuel. Only the creative bookkeeping practice of counting the distillers dry grains and solubles byproduct (DDGS) as energy instead of animal feed gives the overall process that tenuous 25% energy profit. The massive US corn ethanol program than consumes more than 40% of the corn crop is essentially a way to convert non-renewable fossil fuel into non-renewable ethanol with a bit of renewable animal feed protein supplement as a kicker. When compared to the EROIs of gasoline and diesel fuel and coal electricity, which range from 10:1 to 30:1, it is clear that corn ethanol represents a huge opportunity cost in terms of using that same fossil fuel energy more directly to serve society. The facts are even less kind to cellulosic ethanol. The input energy required to make alcohol or other fuel blendstocks from cellulosic biomass is about three times higher than from corn kernels, which means cellulosic biorefineries at scales similar to today’s corn ethanol refineries deliver a product that has a negative energy balance and EROI far less than 1:1. Scaling up the operation just digs a bigger hole faster. The reasons for this disparity in EROI are basic chemistry and basic farming. The basic chemistry of crop-based biofuels is growing plants to harvest their sugar and convert it into fuel. The snowflake-shaped sugar molecule is the building block of all green plants and can be assembled into many forms, all of which are collectively known as “carbohydrates.” But not all carbs are created equal, as any dietician knows. Some sugar molecules remain loners or bound in pairs and comprise the simple sugars and starches found in the easily digestible, high-calorie, food portion of crops such as fruits and sugarcane sap and corn kernels. These are also the portions most easily converted into alcohol. But carbohydrates also come in the form of million-molecule polymers of sugar molecules that are chained together to form cellulose fibers. These massive molecules are incredibly tough and resistant to being broken down. Compounding the problem is that cellulose fibers are trapped in a matrix of lignin, another massive polymer molecule even tougher to break down, and the two must first be separated at the cost of huge additional amounts of energy. Even after separation, cellulose is indigestible to humans and can only be broken down in nature by specialized ruminant animals like cattle that spend their entire waking hours grazing and chewing and fermenting it in their four stomachs because it is a low-density, low-power, low-EROI energy source. A field of grass can provide energy at a pace to sustain walking cows, but not speeding cars, so we must multiply the energy by harvesting more acreage. However, both corn ethanol and cellulosic ethanol fail to benefit much from scaling up. This is because farming is an industry that is more responsive to economies of density than economies of scale . The major costs of farming (fertilizer and chemicals and farm equipment fuel) are proportional to the acreage of land that must be sown and harvested. When yield per acre is low, the cost of harvesting and collection and transportation rival the per-acre value of the crop. All the revolutions in agriculture over the past century have been targeted to squeeze more yield out of fewer acres. To illustrate how scaling up actually hurts, consider that a biorefinery surrounded by crop fields must send its trucks further outward from the plant with longer round trips to collect each additional increment of biomass – feedstock unit costs go up rather than down with increased plant demand and production. The tyranny of geography is one of the reasons why start-ups moving from pilot to commercial-scale biorefineries have not seen their feedstock prices coming down as they anticipated. Sustainably growing enough cellulosic biomass to replace US petroleum fuels without boosting crop density with fertilizers and other EROI-decreasing practices of modern intensive farming would require multiple billions of acres of crop land. Even intensive farming of cellulosic biomass crops with the same energy-intensity as corn will only reduce the farm land necessary to about half a billion acres — more than twice the nation’s currently harvested crop land — and the energy return would be hugely negative. The sobering truth of all the above is reflected in the price of bioethanol. US corn ethanol continues to be more expensive than gasoline when compared on an equal-energy, equal-octane basis, which is much more meaningful than the volumetric basis (gallon-to-gallon) favored by the EPA and refineries because it hides the wholesale cheating of consumers that is being done via the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS). Energy in the gas tank, not gallons, is directly proportional to the distance a vehicle will travel. As of January 2013, the US Department of Energy reported that, on an equivalent energy content basis, E85 ethanol was $1.19 more a gallon than gasoline . American Automobile Association surveys of pump prices also reflect that E85 is consistently more expensive on an MPG-corrected basis than premium octane gasoline. If the price of bioethanol is plotted out against gasoline over the past 8 years, it is not only consistently much higher, but shows the same degree of volatility. The higher price per joule or BTU of ethanol translates into an additional $8.1 billion that Americans paid in 2012 at the gas station for miles not put into their gas tanks because they got ethanol instead of gasoline. When added to the $6.1 billion in federal expenditures for corn crop program subsidies and ethanol blending tax credits, the total cost was $14.2 billion to displace 9.5% of US motor gasoline volume (6.4% of its energy content) with corn ethanol — and the cheaper petroleum gasoline being displaced was ironically being exported to Venezuela and Europe and other countries while we increasingly import Brazilian sugarcane ethanol . Such is the perverse effect on our national energy security of ill-conceived policies uninformed by science. If generations of hybrid breeding and decades of direct genetic engineering performed on corn and the enzymes and bacteria and yeasts that process it cannot deliver ethanol with competitive EROI and price from the inherently more favorable chemistry of starch feedstock, then what scientific basis is there to expect inferior cellulosic feedstock to deliver more? Cello , Range Fuels , KL Energy ( KLEG.PK ), Iogen, ZeaChem, Virdia, Virent, Gevo ( GEVO ), Coskata, Primus Green Energy , Chevron , Shell, and Codexis have all beat their heads and fistfuls of cash against this wall and failed to make a breakthrough in commercially viable bulk fuel from cellulosic feedstock. Geneticists and venture capital cannot bypass the laws of physics and chemistry. BP ( BP ) apparently saw the writing on the wall last October when it suspended plans to build a commercial-scale cellulosic biofuel plant in Florida . KiOR and INEOS Bio are having their turn at figuring it out the hard way right now. Next up with planned commercial-scale plants are Abengoa ( ABGOY.PK ) and DuPont ( DD ). A recent trend in cellulosic ethanol plants, as evidenced by INEOS and Abengoa, is to build natural gas co-generation facilities instead of pure cellulosic biorefineries. This author suspects the plants are being built this way because these companies are coming to grips with the truth of cellulosic ethanol above and are positioning themselves to convert to compete in the natural-gas-to-liquid (NGTL) fuel race as Coskata and Primus have already done. NGTL is another topic for another article, but suffice it to say that it is a far more viable pathway to commercially competitive liquid fuel than cellulosic ethanol. Investors would do well to make their plays anticipating that no company relying exclusively on bulk liquid fuel sales from cellulosic biomass feedstock will ever see profitability. KiOR, like Cello and Range Fuels, has nothing to fall back on and is irretrievable. INEOS Bio may find a way to eke out a living as a landfill methane-powered electricity and heat plant, but not as a bulk liquid biofuel vendor. Abengoa and DuPont’s biorefinery efforts are ill-advised and will never make any honest profit for their parent companies. The only scheme for survival of such plants is with taxpayer help in the form of direct federal subsidies for their product in combination with selective additional taxes on their competitors. So far EPA RINs and blending mandates have proven inadequate to compensate for the inherent energy deficit of cellulosic ethanol. Even a steep carbon tax is unlikely to shift the scales enough to make cellulosic ethanol competitive, and it will certainly never be able to compete with corn ethanol or sugarcane ethanol if all are getting the same federal financial and regulatory assistance. In Europe, the standards for claiming “renewability” for liquid fuels are getting tighter . If that trend crosses the Atlantic, it will further hinder liquid biofuels by exposing their true lifecycle GHG emissions and large fossil fuel energy content. The liquid biofuels sector is living on taxpayer-funded life support and cannot survive without it. KiOR is proving once again that cellulosic ethanol cannot survive, even with it.[/color][/color] Continue reading
Powering Ahead With Biomass
Biomass is often overlooked within the renewable energy sector, but is now emerging as a key player for many countries seeking cleaner ways to power their economy, Gosia Klimowicz reports. One emerging technology that could boost the biomass sector is a new, 40MW straw-fired localized biomass model by DP CleanTech and the Polish Energy Partners. Image:biomassenergy.gr With urbanisation accelerating across the world, the global demand for energy is set to double by 2035. Given the dwindling supply of fossil fuels, those countries which are abundant in renewable energy sources are finding themselves in a privileged position – particularly those rich with wind, hydro, or solar energy. However, from being an often overlooked energy resource, biomass may just become the game changer for some countries. In countries such as Poland, for example, biomass co-firing has emerged as one of the largest sources of renewable power. As part of their green energy initiatives, several local utilities – including PGE, Tauron and Enea – have upgraded their coal-fired installations to allow for burning biomass as well as coal. Under its new three-pack energy law, Poland has just concluded works on a new law on renewable energy sources, which covers electricity, gas and renewables. Legislators debated whether to increase the share of renewable energy in the power generation mix, which will drive reforms to the green certificates system, whilst at the same time limiting subsidies for biomass co-firing generators, as well as other renewables such as wind or photovoltaics. Green certificates – tradeable documents proving that certain electricity is generated using renewable energy sources – are part of Poland’s scheme to support the renewable energy market. Green certificate trading enables the industry players to generate additional profit from the production of renewable energy. Changes to this system would help to avoid last year’s market crash where prices plunged almost 70 per cent, caused by the oversupply of green certificates. This reform could also help lift the share of the energy mix using renewable sources to 15 per cent in 2020 to meet the European Union (EU) targets. This target has been scaled back from the initial target of 20 per cent, which was an ambitious target for a country heavily dependent on coal. “The new law seeks to adjust Poland’s renewables support mechanism to the changing conditions of the renewable energy market,” Piotr Czopek, renewable energy specialist at the Polish Ministry of Economy told Eco-Business. Poland presented its draft bill on renewable energy support in mid-August. The main legislation is expected to come into force by the end of the year, or at the latest by June next year. According to the Ministry, the current green certificates framework – which provides the same level of support for all technologies using alternative energy sources – has been one of the causes of excessive development of technologies which offer very little innovation. Specifically, this equal treatment of different technologies has led to a rapid growth of biomass co-firing in coal power plants. Whilst, 50 per cent of current Polish electricity from renewable energies is produced from biomass, almost a third comes from co-firing biomass in coal-fired power plants. However, this method of generating power has come under criticism by environmentalists who say that most co-firing coal power plants do not use the emerging waste heat – about 75 per cent of the electricity from biomass is produced without using it. Waste heat is a by-product of energy conversion processes, mostly discarded in cooling towers, ponds, the atmosphere, or discharged into the sewer. Recovering value from waste heat can be another major opportunity to lower energy costs, increase the productivity, as well as reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Furthermore, Polish bioenergy experts have noted that Poland has been importing a huge amount of biomass in the past five years, when there is a vast amount of idle land, and waste agricultural streams which could be used for growing country’s own feedstock. They also state that the activities of large energy companies, which use biomass in order to receive compensation in the form of green certificates, have contributed to a considerable wastage of this resource. Nearly 30 per cent of the available biomass from agricultural waste weighing millions of tonnes is used for co firing, which is a highly inefficient use of the fuel. With more efficient technology and feedstock distribution, it is estimated that around 170,000 households could be heated with the same amount of biomass. Benefits and challenges of biomass co-firing Co-firing can be a cost-effective and relatively swift means of adding a renewable energy component, converting biomass to electricity by adding biomass as a partial substitute fuel in high-efficiency coal boilers. “ Provided the biomass is sourced sustainably, co-firing reduces emissions of carbon dioxide. Biomass also contains significantly less sulfur than most coal. This means that co-firing will reduce emissions of sulfurous gases such as sulfur dioxide that will then reduce acid rain.” Krzysztof Dragon, DP CleanTech “It incorporates environmental, socio-economic and strategy advantages”, says Krzysztof Dragon, vice president of clean energy solutions provider DP CleanTech. “For example, provided the biomass is sourced sustainably, co-firing reduces emissions of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas that can contribute to the global warming effect. Biomass also contains significantly less sulfur than most coal. This means that co-firing will reduce emissions of sulfurous gases such as sulfur dioxide that will then reduce acid rain.” Co-firing facilities are also less sensitive to seasonality in biomass fuel production as well as biomass availability and price. Power stations allows for greater flexibility in terms of the origin of the fuels, (for example from forestry, agriculture or municipal waste), as well as the ratio of each biomass fuel in the power mix. This is because it does not affect the fossil fuel load, which can still operate at 100 per cent. For many European countries, the promotion of co-firing is a key initial step for the development of sustainable biomass markets as well as for the creation of expertise on biomass handling and combustion. In Poland, biomass projects will continue to be supported through 2017, but the increasing number of projects has led to a large price hike for popular biomass feedstocks. Acting on such environmental and economic concerns, the government is cutting subsidies for biomass co-firing and the issuance of green certificates for co-incinerators. In response, the industry has come up with innovations that could boost the country’s biomass sector – without subsidies. One such solution is a new, localized biomass model conceptualized by DP CleanTech and the Polish Energy Partners. Currently under development, this optimized 30MW and 40MW straw-fired model will be more sustainable and energy-efficient. It will process most types of organic, carbon-containing feedstock without causing air pollution, greenhouse gases (GHG) and environmental harm. “It allows the co-firing of agricultural and forestry biomass, where agricultural waste can make up to 100 per cent of the power mix; and wood chips can constitute up to 80 per cent”, explained Piotr Maciołek, Industrial Energy Outsourcing Director, Polish Energy Partners. “This gives us a lot of flexibility in terms of location and availability of resources. In the future, we would like to build more power plants based on this model.” “ The new technology will significantly reduce the fuel consumption of biomass power plants, which leads to increased energy savings, improved cash flow and better return on investment. The project also features a special boiler design that will also minimize nitrogen oxide emissions, and an innovative feeding system that will handle both square and round bales. The new technology will significantly reduce the fuel consumption of biomass power plants, which leads to increased energy savings, improved cash flow and better return on investment. During the next two years, DP CleanTech will exclusively engineer, manufacture and commission the combustion boiler, fuel feeding and air system. The complete straw-fired power plant will be delivered to PEP in Winsko, in South West Poland. “The design is done, the location confirmed and we have all the approvals for construction. We are now waiting for the government’s decision regarding the new renewables bill. Without it, we won’t know all the economic parameters that we need in order proceed with works on the power plant,” said Mr Maciołek. Asia’s growing potential There is also significant potential for this biomass model in Asia, say private sector experts and academics. “ There is a lot of interest in biomass around the region but the main challenge is to make the business model work properly Dr Tong Yen Wah, National University of Singapore South East Asia has a huge need for distributed power generation and is also home to one third of the world’s usable biomass supply. However many countries still generate power through coal and expensive diesel fuel. Despite having vast waste streams such as rice husk, palm oil waste and wood chips, as well as strong government incentives for dedicated biomass plants around the 10MW range, they lack the infrastructure and resources to efficiently collect and transport biomass fuel. Perhaps by encouraging biomass co-firing as a cost effective first step for governments and utilities to meet renewables targets, the biomass industry will begin to better utilize waste streams and build a reliable fuel collection framework. With a more efficient fuel collection framework, the risk of disruption of fuel availability for small localized biomass power plants around the 10MW range is significantly reduced. Sales Manager at DP CleanTech, Jerome Le-Borgne said: “The incentives for dedicated 10MW plants in countries like Thailand and Philippines are very attractive and allow for fantastic profitability, because it is seen as a great solution for managing waste and providing distributed base load power to rural communities. However the number one challenge we are faced with is ‘bankability’ resulting from unpredictable fuel supplies”. According to Dr Tong Yen Wah, Assistant Professior at the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, National University of Singapore (NUS), while biomass co-firing is the dominating technology in countries such as Korea and Japan, it is less developed in other Asian countries such as Indonesia and Malaysia, which are rich in biomass feedstock. Dr Tong heads a few teams of researchers at NUS who are looking at different models to convert and transport biomass. “The models that we are currently exploring are also strongly focused on the logistics: either collecting the biomass or implementing a transportable technology to convert biomass into energy. We need to find a cost-efficient solution to the many logistical issues.” “There is a lot of interest in biomass around the region but the main challenge is to make the business model work properly,” he said. Clearly, the opportunities are there for biomass to become a much bigger contributor to the renewable energy sector in many countries, but its development will depend on several factors. Building certainty into fuel pricing and fuel supplies can be realised through a combination of government support, market reform, and innovation in logistics processes. However, the efficiency and flexibility of the technology to move along the development curve from co firing to stand alone biomass power plants is an equally critical factor in the development of the industry as a whole. Continue reading