ppt07 t4 - bioskoh and beyond - savvina loutatidou
TRANSCRIPT
WWW.PNOCONSULTANTS.NLwww.pnoconsultants.com
BIOECONFIN 2017
BIOSKOH: BIG BIOREFINERIES FOR PAN-EU REPLICATION - BIOMASS AND BROWNFIELD LOCATION MAPPING
SAVVINA LOUTATIDOU
PNO CONSULTANTS (BRUSSELS-EU OFFICE)
22-11-2017
CONTENT
1. INTRODUCTION TO BIOSKOH
2. TOOL: BROWNFIELD MAPPING
3. TOOL: BIOMASS MAPPING
4. TOOL: SITE DESCRIPTION
5. LEVERAGING ON OTHER EU INITIATIVES
6. NEXT STEPS
BIOECONFIN 2017
BIOSKOH: THE PROJECT IN A NUTSHELLBIOECONFIN 2017
Total cost: MEUR 30EU contribution: MEUR 21Number of partners: 11Coordinator: BIOCHEMTEX
Project topic
1st of a kind commercial scale Flagship that will to showcase the techno-economic viability of large scale 2nd
generation bioethanol production based on a sound business plan and 4 stepping stones (yield, biomass cost, brownfield and industrial symbiosis)
Quick facts
Timeline: 06/2016 – 05/2021
Action: Bio-based Industries Innovation action - Flagship
Status: ongoing
BIOSKOH’s Innovation Stepping Stones for a novel European Second Generation BioEconomy
BIOSKOH’S ECOSYSTEM AND TIMELINEBIOECONFIN 2017
THE CONSORTIUM
A flagship 55 kton second generation biorefinery to produce cellulosicethanol for EU biofuel mandates
Second stage investment for biorefinery scale-up to 110 kton – the largest inEurope
DEVELOPMENT PHASES
2019
2021
BIOSKOH’S 4 STEPPING STONESBIOECONFIN 2017
Superior biorefinery technology
Industrial symbiosis Brownfield approach
Abundant,secure and sustainable biomass.
SITE SELECTION FOR BIOSKOH REPLICATIONBIOECONFIN 2017
1
2Estimation of maximum theoretical biomass within a certain distance from the identified sites
3
Compilation of a list of existing, abandoned or underutilised sites
Create a more accurate description of the most promising sites – data collection through site visits and/or interviews
COMPILATION OF BROWNFIELD DATABASEBIOECONFIN 2017
European Bank for Reconstruction &
Development
Brownfield locations in Eastern Europe with a strategic importance for the regional economy
Brownfield databases
Existing European industries recorded in various publicly available databases
PNO’s networkChemical sites known to PNO that have stated high interest and/or are already taking action towards integrating biobasedoperations
The sample list is composed of various brownfield sites considered for retrofitting or repurposing intobiorefineries - such as pulp and paper mills, polymer production plants, food processing plants,etc.
CORINE LAND COVER (CLC)BIOECONFIN 2017
CORINE LAND COVER
• Geospatial inventory of 27 ECmember states and otherEuropean countries
• Minimum mapping unit: 25 ha• Based on satellite imaging
jointly carried out by the JointResearch Centre of theEuropean Commission and theEEA
LAND CLASSIFICATION AROUND BROWNFIELD
BIOECONFIN 2017
“PRODUCTIVE LAND” AS SOURCE OF AGRICULTURAL RESIDUALS
non-irrigated arable land
permanently irrigated land
“MARGINAL LANDS” WHERE DEDICATED ENERGY CROPS COULD BE GROWN
annual crops associated with permanent crops
land occupied by agriculture
natural grasslands
pastures
100 km
ESTIMATION OF BIOMASS AROUND BROWNFIELD
BIOECONFIN 2017
1
23
Land classification
% associated with CLC classes
Theoretical biomass potential Agro-residues Dedicated crops
x biomass yields
Max
Min
4
SHORTLISTING SITES FOR FURTHER REVIEWBIOECONFIN 2017
TOTAL NUMBER OF LOCATIONS
[150]
LOCATIONS WITH
KNOWN ADDRESSES
[126]
LOCATIONS WITH MAX. BIOMASS X kton/year
[121]
LOCATIONS WITH MIN. BIOMASS X kton/year
[14] SHORTLISTED SITES[18]
PNO’s network – assisted by EBRD
THE “WILLING”
THE “UNKNOWN”
DESIRED ADDED-VALUE FACTORS IN BROWNFIELDS
BIOECONFIN 2017
There are several site-specific factors that can foster the sustainability of 2G ethanol production on a brownfield site, e.g.
On-site existence of an R&D centre already well developed and experienced due toactivities of another company
Proximity to the local agroresources for decreased transportation cost and highersecurity of supply and quality of feedstock
Potential for market uptake of main products (and by-products)
Suitable on-site capital assets (e.g. building infrastructure, utilities, roads), localexpertise and on-site transport services, mature biomass supply chains
TEMPLATE OF SITE DESCRIPTION – PART ABIOECONFIN 2017
Collection of quantifiable information
→ Comparison against benchmark values and hard requirements provided by BIOSKOH’s consortium
TEMPLATE OF SITE DESCRIPTION – PART BBIOECONFIN 2017
Non-quantifiable assets favouring a large scale biorefinery investment and are site and/or region-specific
Method validated Data collected for 4 benchmark
locations around Europe
STILL IMPORTANT QUESTIONS REMAIN…BIOECONFIN 2017
• What type of agricultural residues are more prevalent within 50 km from each brownfield?
• What type of lignocellulosic crop would be the most promising around each brownfield?
• What other types of 2G biomass exist in the nearby areas?
• What are the most probable cost ranges?
USING S2BIOM’S BIOMASS SUPPLY-COST PLATFORM
BIOECONFIN 2017
Key: S2BIOM provides biomass estimates at regional level (EU broken down to NUTS-3 grid cells)
Delivery of sustainable supply of non-food biomass to support a “resource-efficient” Bioeconomy in Europe
Funded under: FP7-ENERGY2013-2016
S2BIOM’S BIOMASS SUPPLY MODELLING INTERACTIVE TOOL
BIOECONFIN 2017
3 scenarios (2012, 2020, 2030)
Biomass mapping at three different levels moving from larger to smaller territorial units
Spatial and time boundaries
Biomass categories and sub-categories
E.g. Agricultural residues
Straw/Stubbles Cereal straw Maize stover Sugarbeet leaves Sunflower straw, etc.
Different potential types
biomass now and in future
Sustainably supplied biomassTechnical/ Base
EXEMPLARY DATA EXTRACTED FROM S2BIOM
BIOECONFIN 2017
71 kton dm19 euro
64 kton dm19 euro
55 kton dm19 euro
118 kton dm15 euro
114 kton dm15 euro
118 kton dm15 euro
3 kton dm30 euro
2 kton dm30 euro
1 kton dm30 euro
1 kton dm30 euro
1 kton dm30 euro
NUTS HR032 Licko-senjska zupanija
2 kton dm30 euro
Maize stover Cereal straw Miscanthus Switchgrass
2012
2020
2030
IDENTIFYING OPPORTUNITIES FOR DEVELOPING BIOREFINERIES ON BROWNFIELDS: SUMMARY
BIOECONFIN 2017
1 Compilation of a list of brownfield sites
2 Estimation of biomass around site (min-max)
3 Shortlisting sites based on a biomass availability threshold
4 Building a description of the sites’ assets (visits, interviews)
5 Using existing tools to complement already collected info
6 Expand database and reiterate biomass estimation
CONTACT DETAILS
Savvina LoutatidouJunior Grants and Innovation Consultant PNO Consultants (Brussels-EU office)E-mail: [email protected]
Ansa Baykuş-FiazGrants and Innovation Consultant PNO Consultants (NL Office)E-mail: [email protected]
www.innovationplace.eu