Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8119074 | Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews | 2014 | 35 Pages |
Abstract
The increasing production of modern bioenergy carriers and biomaterials intensifies the competition for different applications of biomass. To be able to optimize and develop biomass utilization in a sustainable way, this paper first reviews the status and prospects of biomass value chains for heat, power, fuels and materials, next assesses their current and long-term levelized production costs and avoided emissions, and then compares their greenhouse gas abatement costs. At present, the economically and environmentally preferred options are wood chip and pellet combustion in district heating systems and large-scale cofiring power plants (75-81 US$2005/tCO2-eqavoided), and large-scale fermentation of low-cost Brazilian sugarcane to ethanol (â65 to â53Â $/tCO2-eqavoided) or biomaterials (â60 to â50Â $/tCO2-eqavoided for ethylene and â320 to â228 $/tCO2-eqavoided for PLA; negative costs represent cost-effective options). In the longer term, the cultivation and use of lignocellulosic energy crops can play an important role in reducing the costs and improving the emission balance of biomass value chains. Key conversion technologies for lignocellulosic biomass are large-scale gasification (bioenergy and biomaterials) and fermentation (biofuels and biomaterials). However, both routes require improvement of their technological and economic performance. Further improvements can be attained by biorefineries that integrate different conversion technologies to maximize the use of all biomass components.
Keywords
IPCCSNGIGCCCFBNGCCIGFCMSWHHVMTOPDOPHAWTWCBPPBTMTBEPLAPolylactideECHPBRPTTSRCDDGSORCSHFdLUCPolyhydroxyalkanoatesCHPSSCFLHVNOPBTXSSFGHG1,3-propanediolO&MiLUCHydrothermal upgradinglower heating valueEpichlorohydrinTOPTechnology reviewBiochemicalBiomaterialsETEResearch & developmentR&DCirculating fluidized bedThermochemicalCombined Heat and PowerIndirect land use changeDirect land use changeGas turbineWell-to-wheelpurPulverized coalBioenergyoperation and maintenancePhotobioreactorFischer–TropschMethanol-to-olefinsFatty acid methyl esterFAME یا fatty acid methyl esters Methyl tertiary butyl etherinternal combustion engineLearning rateProduction costsAnaerobic digestionIntergovernmental Panel on Climate Changeseparate hydrolysis and fermentationsimultaneous saccharification and fermentationPETConsolidated bioprocessingPolyamidePolyethylenePolybutylene terephthalatePolyethylene terephtalatePolyurethanesPolypropylenePolystyrenePVCSteam cyclenatural gas combined cycleCombined cycleOrganic Rankine cyclepolyvinylchlorideNatural gasGreenhouse gasHigher heating valueintegrated gasification combined cycleIceSimultaneous saccharification and co-fermentation
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Authors
S.J. Gerssen-Gondelach, D. Saygin, B. Wicke, M.K. Patel, A.P.C. Faaij,