Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7064299 | Biomass and Bioenergy | 2014 | 15 Pages |
Abstract
This study estimates the potential physical amounts and financial costs of post-harvest forest residue biomass supply in Canada. The analyses incorporate the locations of harvest activities in Canada, the geographical variation of forest productivity patterns and the costs associated with the extraction and transportation of residue feedstock to bioenergy facilities. We estimated the availability of harvest residues within the extent of industrial forest management operations in Canadian forests. Our analyses focused on the extraction of biomass from roadside harvest residues that involve four major cost components: pre-piling and aggregation, loading, chipping and transportation. The estimates of residue extraction costs also included representation of basic ecological sustainability and technical accessibility constraints. Annual supply of harvestable residual biomass with these ecological sustainability constraints were estimated to be approximately 19.2-23.3 Tg*yearâ1 and 16.5-20.0 Tg*yearâ1 in scenarios that included both ecological and technical accessibility limitations. These estimates appear to be less than other similar studies, due to the higher level of spatial details on inventories and ecological and operational constraints in our analyses. The amount of residual biomass available in baseline scenarios at a supply cost of $60 ODTâ1 and $80 ODTâ1 were 1.08 and 1.38 Tg yearâ1 and 7.82 and 10.14 Tg yearâ1 respectively. Decreasing residue extraction costs by 35% increased the amount of residues available at a $60 ODTâ1 and $80 ODTâ1 supply price by â¼5.5-5.7 and â¼1.5-1.6 times respectively. The assessment methodology is generic and could be extended to examine residue supplies for specialized biomass markets such as lignocellulosic ethanol production.
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Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Process Chemistry and Technology
Authors
Denys Yemshanov, Daniel W. McKenney, Saul Fraleigh, Brian McConkey, Ted Huffman, Stephen Smith,