Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1750373 | Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews | 2014 | 17 Pages |
Abstract
The biofuels penetration rate target in Ireland for 2013 is 6% by volume. In 2012 the fuel blend reached 3%, with approximately 70 million litres of biodiesel and 56 million litres of ethanol blended with diesel and gasoline respectively. For January and February 2013, the blend rate had only reached 2.7%. The target of 10% by 2020 remains which equates to approximately 420 million litres. Achieving the biofuels target would require 345Â ktoe by 2020 (14,400Â TJ). Utilising the indigenous biofuels outlined in this paper leaves a shortfall of approximately 12,000Â TJ or 350 million litres (achieving 17% of the 10% target) that must be either be imported or met by other renewables. 70% of indigenous production from one biodiesel plant is currently from TME and UCOME. If this remains for 2020 then only 30% remains equating to approximately 10 million litres indigenous production for a second biodiesel plant (30% of 21+13 million litres) which has planned capacity of 40 million litres (36,000Â t). In terms of the EU biofuels sustainability criteria, up to 2017, a 35% GHG emissions reduction is required compared to fossil fuels. From 2017 onwards, a 50% GHG reduction is required for existing installations and a 60% reduction for new installations.
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Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Authors
Fionnuala Murphy, Ger Devlin, Rory Deverell, Kevin McDonnell,