scaling bioenergy to a cubic mile of oil · australi a, china (north), middle east, west coast of...
TRANSCRIPT
Scaling Bioenergy to A Cubic Mile of Oil
Ripudaman Malhotra, Ph.D. SRI International Menlo Park Washington, DC August 14, 2012
Energy Challenge: Tough Choices Ahead Time to reframe the debate about energy supply
• Current practices of energy production and consumption are unsustainable
• Energy use is central to our way of life and essential to reducing poverty
– 16,000 children die each day as a result of poverty
• Quadrupling of energy consumption between 1981 and 2005 allowed China to lift over 400 million people out of poverty
• Tension between protecting the environment and social justice
• A comprehensive energy policy must acknowledge the magnitude of the problem
How Much Energy Do We Use? A good question to ask, but we confront a tower of Babel
• We get energy from many sources: oil, coal, natural gas, nuclear…
• We use different units for different sources
– Gallons or barrels for oil
– Tons or BTUs for coal
– SCFs for natural gas
– kWh for electrical energy
• Lack of uniform units
– Presents a serious impediment to meaningful discussion
– Creates confusion: millions, billions, trillions, quadrillions!!!
A Cubic Mile of Oil – CMO Understandable unit: mental image
CMO is a unit of energy coined by SRI’s Hew Crane in the 1970s while waiting in line to buy gasoline. His realization: annual global oil consumption was then approaching one cubic mile!
Statue of Liberty
Oil 1.06
Coal
0.81
Natural gas 0.61
Hydroelectric 0.17
Biomass 0.19
Wind + Photovoltaic +
Solar Thermal <0.03
Geothermal <0.01
Nuclear 0.15
Annual Global Energy Consumption We are living off our inheritance – how long will it last?
2006 Data
Total 3.0 CMO/yr
0.00
1.00
2.00
3.00
4.00
5.00
6.00
7.00
8.00
9.00
10.00
1990 2000 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050 2060
En
erg
y D
em
an
d:
CM
O
Year
2.6%
1.8%
0.8%
Projected Energy Demand by 2050 Energy needed to support the world’s 5.5% GDP growth rate
3.0 CMO/yr today 9.0 CMO/yr in 2050?
270 CMO
214 CMO
163 CMO
179 CMO
Σ
Variable profile
The Sun Offers 23,000 CMO/yr And we are looking for just a few CMO per year, but…
Questions to Consider
• Does the source have CMO-scale potential to supply energy?
• What infrastructure is required for large-scale CMO use?
– Is it plug-and-play?
– New pipelines and transmission structure?
• What is its environmental footprint?
– Energy return on fossil energy invested?
– Competing land use issues?
– Biodiversity, habitat destruction?
• Can it compete with oil at $50/bbl, the cost of producing deep oil?
– If not today, in the foreseeable future?
8
Competition for green energy comes from cheap fossil
sources, not other green sources
Producing 1 CMO Per Year from Various Sources Enormous task requiring trillions of dollars
• Hydro: 200 dams • 1 every quarter for 50 years 18 GW with 50% availability (3 Gorges Dam)
• Nuclear: 2,500 plants 1 a week for 50 years 900 MW with 90% av.
• Solar CSP: 7,700 solar parks 3 a week for 50 years 900 MW with 25% av.
• Windmills: 3 million 1200 a week for 50 years 1.65 MW with 35% av.
• Solar Roofs: 4.2 billion 250k roofs a day for 50 years 2.1 kW with 20% av.
Biomass Resource Potential
• IEA Biofuels Roadmap’s 3500 Mtoe = 147 EJ
• World energy use today (primary energy) = 500 EJ, of which 50 EJ is biomass (IEA Bioenergy Report of 2009)
• Double world energy by 2050 would be 1000 EJ, and 3x is “business as usual” but GHG con-cerns will increase conservation/efficiency
• Consider 300 EJ as the biomass potential
10
Oil Equivalents:
36.0 MMBtu/ton (short ton, oil)
44.4 lbsC / MMBtu
1598 lbsC / ton (short)
162.8 lbs CO2 / MMBtu
1055 J / Btu
41.9 GJ/tonne (metric ton)
3500 Mtoe = 147 EJ
760 Mtoe = 32 EJ
11
Bioenergy Growth to 2050
Biomass Source/Technology EJ in EJ in
2006 2050
Traditional --> modern 36.50 50
Modern biomass (5%, 40 y) 7.50 100
MSW (municipal solids) 1.50 8
"biogas" (LFG, wet wastes) 3.00 12
Algae (aquaculture) 0.04 10
Energy crops (agriculture) 1.50 120
------- -------
Totals 50.04 300
12
Flaws and Limits
• Biomass is limited, only a 15%-25% source.
– wastes (MSW, etc.) only a 2%-5% source
– arable land competes with food/feed
– requires large amounts of water (sunlight + CO2 + H2O) and irrigation is expensive
• Low energy density (especially per m3 or ft3 , and this makes transport and size an issue)
• Never as clean as natural gas
• Expensive compared to coal
• Technical: moisture, tars and alkali content
13
Feedstock/Technology Paths
• Wood: handling, drying, combustion, gasification, pulping, hydrolysis, enzyme treatment, tar reforming, refining, syngas & liquid upgrading, hydrotreat, etc.
• Ligno-cellulosics (straw, stalks, leaves, etc.): same
• Herbaceous crops (miscanthus, switchgrass, grasses, etc.): similar list to wood and lignocellulosics
• Food processing residues and waste waters: biogas via anaerobic digestion (AD), and fermentation
• Other categories: municipal solid wastes (MSW), wastewater treatment streams (sludge, biosolids), industrial solid and liquid wastes (e.g., black liquor), and more
14
Changes in Global Energy Mix Have Occurred Before Transitions take scores of years
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
1850 1870 1890 1910 1930 1950 1970 1990 2010
Per
cen
t To
tal P
rim
ary
Ener
gy f
rom
Var
iou
s R
eso
urc
es
Year
Wood/Biomass
Oil
Gas
Hydro
Coal
Nuclear
Wood/Biomass
Oil
Coal
~1880
~1940
~1960
Biomass The only renewable that produces storable fuel • Lots of hope and hype
• Global potential: 0.5 to 2 CMO/yr
• May not reduce greenhouse gases
– Some options release more greenhouse gases than direct use of fossil fuels
• Can strain water supplies
• Can disrupt food supply and result in undesirable land-use practices
Broad range of biomass feedstock and process options
Source E4Tech, 2009, Ref 14
Broad range of biomass and process options
Source: IEA Good Practice Guidelines: Bioenergy Project Development & Biomass Supply. 2007.
Water footprint of biofuels
Dominguez-Faus, et al., Environ. Sci. Technol. 2009, 43 (9), 3005-10.
What About Greenhouse Gas Emissions?
• Differentiated response
– Societies at different stages of development will make different choices
• Focus on items that can make the most impact
– Minimize natural gas emissions
– Replace wood burning with natural gas or LPG: it improves quality of life and reduces GHG emissions
• Fewer “Black Carbon” emissions, and
• Maintains natural forests
– Reduce red-meat from diet
– Improve efficiency of fertilizer use: its a two-fer
• Cuts energy use in fertilizer production
• Reduces water pollution and subsequent NOx emissions
– Focus on gallons consumed; not miles per gallon
– Promote mass-transit and car-pooling
20
What Is the Path Forward? Innovation is needed on all fronts to meet future energy demand
• Reducing demand from 9 to 6 CMO will be a major international effort requiring new technologies
• Our planning cycle needs to
– Last for 40 years not four
– Transcend the prevailing price of oil
• We need a family of innovations
– Short term: public education, efficiency, conservation, nuclear, CSP
– Intermediate term: Unconventional hydrocarbons, new engines, biofuels, electrify transportation
– Long term: Thin-film PV, nuclear fusion,???
• “AND” is the operative conjunction
– To make an impact, we need all technology options:
• Efficiency AND conservation, AND nuclear AND solar AND wind AND…
21
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Thank You
Don’t waste Be informed Get involved
cmo-ripu.blogspot.com
Plant a Tree Urgent because we are late
The great French marshal Lyautey once asked his gardener to plant a tree. The gardener objected that the tree was slow growing and would not reach maturity for 100 years. The marshal replied, “In that case, there is no time to lose; plant it this afternoon!”
IEA Roadmap envisions a substantial increase in the production of biofuels
• Significant contribution of 1st generation biofuels means improved efficiencies in their production will also have a significant impact
• From 750 Mlge* in 2009 to 7.5 Blge in 2015 mostly from 1st generation biofuels
• To 300 Blge by 2030, mostly from 2nd generation biofuels
* lge = Liters gasoline equivalent
25
Water Scarcity
Physical water scarcity
Australi a, China (north), Middle East, West Coast of
the United States
Economic water scarcity
Mid-Africa, South Asia, West South America
Source: Scientific American, August 2008
70 % of Total water demand
is for Agriculture
26
New on-site Biomass Drying Method
Advanced sheet can reduce water content down to <20% !
Harvesting,
Baling after drying
in the sun
Storing bale covered
with moisture permeable
and water-proof sheet 0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
Hokkaido Niigata Fukuoka
Water content (%)
Just afterharvesting
After drying inthe sun
After 6 m onthsstorage w ithsheets
pore diameter
< 0.2 μm
water ⇒ impermeable
vapor 0.0004μm ⇒ permeable
27
28
Slow-release Coated Fertilizer
Ammonium Sulfate
& Urea Coated Fertilizer
(Coated Urea)
ca ca Utilization
(%)
29
Feedstock augmentation (e.g. soil amendments)
• Biochar
– Preliminary results in a greenhouse study: biochar plus fertilizer outperformed fertilizer alone by 60%
– Biochar co-produces a soil amendment and energy
– Total benefit would be equivalent to removing about 1.2 billion tpy carbon from the atmosphere
Status: Pre-commercial scale In Boulder Co, Biochar Engineering Corp building portable $50,000 pyrolyzers that researchers will use to produce 1–2 tons biochar per week. Larger units that could be trucked into position are planned. Pyrolysis units located near the biomass source are economically preferable to larger, centrally located facilities, even when the units reach commercial scale
http://nextbigfuture.com/2009/02/major-co2-mitigation-methods-carbon.html
SRI Proprietary
Factors enabling expanded biofuels production and use
• High crop yields (Mt/Ha-yr) from the limited available land area to grow such crops are needed to yields make possible $3/GJ, rather than the $6-$9/GJ from low-yield crops
– Continued development of soil management such as sustainable amendments, crop-targeted fertilizers, slow release fertilizers
– Land and water ultimately constrain the role of biomass, a resource than could
someday supply 10 – 20% of global energy needs
• Develop high-yield energy crops and crop strains for use on less arable areas
• Purify water for re-use and or desalinate
• Improve efficiency of processes for biofuels production
Many barriers to expanding biofuels production
• High moisture content of biomass requires energy inputs for drying
• Low energy density and periodic availability of biomass requires large storage facilities and raises cost
• Cost of cellulase enzymes to hydrolyze cellulose to fermentable sugars is high
• Distillation of ethanol from the dilute fermentation broth is energy intensive
• Low value of animal feed or soil amendment co-products
Chemical industry know-how can help overcome these barriers
32
Technology developed by Mebiol
Water and Food
“Hydromembrane” (water absorbent film)
Ground
Strong point
(1)All of the water and nutrients are
assimilated by the plant.
low cost and ecological
(2)Separate from the ground
”Possible at any place”
no problem of continuous culture,
residual chemicals, soil quality
(pollution, salts etc).
Hydromembrane OH
OH
OH OH
OH
OH
OH
OH PVA film cross-linked
by micro-crystalline
Water & Nutrients
土壌使用量 液肥使用量 設備コスト
(L/株) (L/株、日) (万円/反)
アイメック 0.8 0.2 300
養液土耕 2.0 150
水耕 0 0.8~0.9 2,000
栽培法
Drip Tube on “Hydromembrane”
(Water+Nutrients)
Non-Woven
Fabrics
Waterproof
Sheet
Drip Tube beneath
“Hydromembrane”
(Water+Nutrients)
Methods Soil Volume
(L/plant)
Medium volume
(L/plant・Day)
Equipment cost (million yen
/tan(992m2))
Imec 0.8 0.2 300
Drop Soil
culture
40 2.0 150
Hydroponic 0 0.8 2000
Chemical industry brings critical expertise for expanded biofuels use
Sector Representative examples Core competencies
Commodity chemicals Dow, DuPont, BASF, Mitsubishi Chemical, Solutia, Mitsui Chemicals
Chemicals, materials, process engineering, catalysis
Specialty Chemicals Rohm and Haas, Lubrizol, Kuraray, Celanese, Arkema, Akzo, Albemarle, Cognis, Toray
Catalyst, process chemistry
Pharmaceuticals Novartis, Pfizer, Sanofi-Aventis, Takeda Drug discovery, synthesis, formulation, chemical processing
Biopharmaceuticals Genentech, Amgen, Novo-Nordisk, Genetic engineering
Biotechnology Monsanto, Codexis, Genencor, Amyris, Ineos, Nippon Shokubai,
Genetic engineering, chemical processing
Industrial gases Air Products, Air Liquide, Praxair Gas purification
Oil and Gas Exxon-Mobil, BP, Royal Dutch Shell, Nippon Oil, Total, Repsol, Neste Oil
Resource development, fuels processing
Petrochemicals Braskem, Eastman, Honam, Ube, Tosoh Catalysis, process development, co-products
Chemical technology options for improving the efficacy of 1st generation biofuels
• Bioethanol
– Improve feedstock production and handling
– Reduce energy for recovering ethanol from fermentation broth
• Develop yeast strains with increased tolerance to ethanol
• Develop membrane processing to improve the energy efficiency of product recovery
• Biodiesel
– Develop more efficient technology for extracting vegetable oil
– Enable efficient removal of phospholipids and other impurities
– Develop better catalysts for trans-esterification
– Use glycerol for other value-added co-products
Managing the Demand Side Low-hanging fruit
• Efficiency: Using less energy to do what we do
– Easiest and most economical path
– Does not go all the way
– Historically, we end up increasing total consumption!
• Conservation: Avoid what we need not do
– Tough to change lifestyles
– Switch to high-density urban living and mass transit anyone? Vegetarian diet?
– Can have a substantial impact
1 CMO ≅ 100 billion CFLs!
Energy and Economic Growth Correlation but not a destiny
China Ireland
60
40
20
0
Ene
rgy
pe
r C
apit
a in
Gal
lon
s o
f O
il
0 $10k $20k $30k $40k
GDP per Capita
• • • • • •
USA from 1985 to 2005
Reserves Depend on Technology and Price Additional resources become viable at higher prices
Their continued use increases atmospheric CO2 levels They will be needed while we switch to other sources
How Much Oil, Gas, and Coal Do We Have Left? We have plenty of fossil fuels, but mostly in unconventional sources
46 42
120 Reserves
94 Additional
Resource
66 Additional
Resource
400 Unconventional
Tar sands, oil shales
5,000 Unconventional
Gas hydrates
1500 Additional
Resource
Reserves
Oil Gas Coal
Nuclear Power An option we cannot ignore
• Opportunity – Established scalable technology
– Low footprint
– Ample reserves
• Risks – Fears
• Radiation Exposure
• Explosions
– Political Challenges
• Nuclear proliferation
• Terrorism
– Technical
• Long-term storage
– Cost (in part fed by fears)
• Nuclear fusion, if realized, would ameliorate these risks
NPR, 3/15/11
Boiling-water reactor
Direct Solar Storage systems are needed
• Cost
– PV about 35 cents/kWh
– Concentrating Solar Power competitively priced
• Intermittency
– Reduces availability to 20%
– Need > 4 times the installed capacity
• Location
– Solar homes and offices (PV): close to use, but not enough
– Utility scale systems: remote from population centers
– Electricity transmission limited to < 1000 km
Wind Power Runs up against NIMBY
• Pluses
– Huge potential: several CMO per year
– Relatively low cost
• Minuses
– Intermittent: 25-30% availability; needs gas backup and/or storage
– Dilute: 8-10 MW/sq. mile
– Whose land? Habitat?
– Often remote from energy consuming centers
CMO: Cubic Mile of Oil Equivalent A unit appropriate for global energy flows
– 1 CMO ≅ 1.1 trillion gallons of oil 26 Billion (109) bbl oil
• 1 CMO ≅ current annual worldwide oil consumption
• 1 CMO is equivalent to:
– 153 Quadrillion (1015) Btu (Quads)
– 6.4 Billion (109) tons of hard coal
– 15.3 Trillion (1012) kWh electricity (At 10,000 Btu/kWh; not 3412 Btu/kWh)
8 hours of cardio ≅ 1kWh ≅ 0.1 gal of oil
1 Btu ≅ the energy from a
burning match
Transportation 29%
Industrial 32%
Commercial/Residential 39%
Distribution after apportioning the energy for electricity into sectors that use it
Transportation 29%
Industrial 22%
Electricity 36%
Commercial/Residential 13%
More than a third of primary energy goes into producing electricity, which is then used in other sectors
How Do We Use Energy?
What Drives Energy Consumption? Standard of living, not population alone, drives energy use
0
200
400
600
800
1000
1200
1400
1600
1800
2000
0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000 7000
Per
Cap
ita
An
nu
al E
ner
gy C
on
sum
pti
on
(G
O)
Population (Millions)
Cen
tral
/So
uth
A
mer
ica
Ru
ssia
n G
rou
p (
0.2
6)
Asia/Pacific (0.94)
Euro
pe
(0.5
1)
Mid
-Eas
t/N
ort
h A
fric
a
No
rth
Am
eric
a (0
.72
)
Sub-Saharan Africa (0.06)
Additional 1.48 CMO
Additional 0.68 CMO
Global Average
Where Is Energy Produced and Consumed? Asia Pacific and North America produce more energy than the Middle East Region; they also consume more!
0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.9
1
North America
Central/South America
Europe Russian Group
Asian/Pacific Middle East/ North Africa
Sub-Saharan Africa
CM
O
Oil
Hydropower
Gas
Coal
Nuclear Power
1.0
0.9
0.8
0.7
0.6
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
Why So Long to Get to Scale? Many roadblocks along the way
• Expansion slowed by
– Inertia of the incumbent system (sheer size)
– Market acceptability (cost)
– Infrastructure requirements
– Lack of trained personnel
– NIMBY, NOPE, and BANANA*
• More rapid penetration possible when aided by
– Strategic importance to military
– High-value products for niche markets
47
Jimmy Margulies, The Record, New Jersey, 2006
* Not in my backyard
Not on planet earth
Build absolutely nothing, anywhere near anything!
Value Added per Unit Energy Consumed in the U.S. Industrial Sector, 1985–2005
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
1985 1987 1989 1991 1993 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005
Val
ue
Ad
ded
(d
olla
rs/G
O)
Year
Manufacturing
Nonmanufacturing
Combined
Biomass The only renewable that produces storable fuel • Lots of hope and hype
• Global potential: 0.5 to 2 CMO
• May not reduce greenhouse gases
– Some options release more greenhouse gases than direct use of fossil fuels
• Can strain water supplies
• Can disrupt food supply and result in undesirable land-use practices
Residential and Commercial Buildings Low-cost options abound
• Consumes about 51% of primary energy – 39% in operations: HVAC, lighting, appliances
– 12% in materials: steel, concrete, glass, sheetrock
• Energy saving practices can pay off – Better insulation, efficient lighting, efficient heating
• Smart grid – Allows for added savings and increased use of wind and solar sources
• Green construction materials
50
Commercial Residential
The Cost Challenge Meeting the Chindia Price
• Opportunity in developed countries
– Over $500 billion in renovations in the US
– Impact of adopting green practices is ~0.1 CMO/yr
• Bigger opportunity in developing nations
– New construction equivalent to the entire US is projected for China/India over the next 10 years
– Several trillion dollars
• Potential impact of adopting green practices
– Ca. 2 CMO/yr
– Cost of using green materials in construction is prohibitive
51
CHINDIA
Major innovations needed to produce cost effective solutions
Comparing Conventional & SRI Coal-to-Liquids Processes
52
ASU Capital Cost: $6,790/daily bbl
SRI Approach: $0/daily bbl
Gasifier Capital Cost: $29,890/daily bbl
SRI Approach: $13,200/daily bbl
Gas Cleanup Capital Cost:
$3,220/daily bbl
SRI Approach: $3,400/daily bbl
Synthesis Capital Cost:
$7,630/daily bbl
SRI Approach: $7,070/daily bbl
Product Upgrading Capital Cost:
$2,730/daily bbl
SRI Approach: $820/daily bbl
Total CO2 Emissions: 1,550 lbCO2/bblJP-8
SRI Approach: 0.0 lbCO2/bblJP-8
Offsite Capital Cost: $19,740/daily bbl
SRI Approach: $7,300/daily bbl
Total Capital Cost: $70,000/daily bbl
SRI Approach: $32,000/daily bbl
Breakthrough Ideas… Real-World Solutions
© 2011 SRI International - Company Confidential and Proprietary Information
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1 cubic mile = 1,000 sports arenas
Visualizing a Cubic Mile of Oil