Title: The Bioenergy Conundrum: Biomass, Biogas and Biofuels
1The Bioenergy Conundrum Biomass, Biogas and
Biofuels
- Pierre Dembélé
- Mali-Folkecenter Nyetaa
- International Parliamentary Hearing for West
African Legislators - 20 21 September 2008 in Akosombo, Ghana
2Overviw of Bioenergy
- Biomass include
- residues from agriculture and forestry
(groundnut shells, bagasse, rice stalks, cotton
stems, typha Australis, etc) - municipal solid waste or sewage,
- Energy crops and biofuels,
- Firewood
- The modernization of biomass embraces a range of
differing technologies - Biomass-fired electric power plants/CHP
- Liquid fuels e.g bioethanol and biofuel
- Biogas production technology
3Advantages of Bioenergy for Africa
- Wide availability of the ressources
- Convertible to all the major energy carriers
(electricity, gases, liquil fuel, heat) - Potential to contribute to greenhouse gas
reductions and other environmental objectives - Improve livelihoods of rural peoples (much value
added and income-generation from bioenergy
systems is retained locally and can help to
reduce rural poverty)
4Biogas
- Biogas is energy from anaerobic fermentation of
organic waste - Biogas can be use for
- Lighting and cooking in rural areas
- Electricity production
- Pilot projects have demonstrated small-scale
biogas production for cooking and lighting
purposes but commercial production of biogas has
not taken place
5Cogeneration in Sugar Industry of Mauritius
- Accounts for close to 40 of a 651 MW national
generation capacity (of which 25 bagasse) - Began with smaller installations (1.5MW-5MW,
recently installed 82MW plant - Keys success factors include
- equitable sharing of ownerhip of revenues from
cogeneration which ensures smallest low-income
farmer gets a portion of revenue - Strong consistent policy support (close
collaboration between policy makers, sugar
industry and utility) - Government played key role in power purchace
agreements and setting feed-in tariff which
reduces risk to investors
6Benefits of Cogeneration
- Diversified sources of power thus providing
protection against unsustainable high oil price
increases - Cogeneration offers alternative revenue stream to
Mauritius key economic-sugar industry - Attractive job generation (at the sugar cane
plantation level) and enterprise creation
potential (local technology dev)
7Jatropha Biofuel
8Biofuel projects in Mali
- Jatropha oil was first use in Mali in 1987 by GTZ
to run milling machines - That project stopped in 1996 when comparisons
between jatropha and diesel showed jatropha to be
more expensive - Mutifunctional plaform projects implemented by
UNIDO between 1996-2000 and running on Jatropha
oil - Demonstration of the use of jatropha in transport
sector
9Jatropha-based rural electrification
- 300 kW of gensets, to run on locally produced
Jatropha bio-oil - Jatropha plantation established
- A mini grid of about 15 Km for electricity
distribution - 15 years of clean electricity production will
transform the local economy. - 10 000 peoples will benefit from the project
- Electricity is already catalysing local SME/SMI
development and job creation
UNIDO Biofuels Workshop, Accra, Ghana, Dec 2007
10Impact of the project
- The replacement of diesel by jatropha oil save
money that goes to local people - Collection and selling of seed provide additional
income for local people - The population have access to electricity which
facilitate the processing of their agriculture
products with added value at the village level,
and the local economy is stimulated. - and this can reduce poverty and increase
standards of living for rural peoples
11Main drivers of Biofuel in Mali
- Diversification of energy sources and lower
exposure to the price volatility of the
international oil market - Rural development needs
- Land availability - Mali has huge potential for
biofuel production in terms of land availability
for feedstock cultivation
Source ONAP
12Political support for Jatropha cultivation in the
World
13Commercial Jatropha cultivation in Africa
14Barriers to bioenergy development
- Lack of institutional/policy framework
- Insufficient coordination between actors (even
among various ministries) - Private sector interest limited due to caution
and lack of information on profitability - Lack of finance
- Limited technical skills of rural populations
15Lessons learnt for future action in Africa -
planting the seeds for sustainable development
biofuel projects
16Social considerations
- Avoid competition with food production through
small scale exploitation - Many small scale projects can produce as much
biofuel more sustainably than a few large scale
monoculture projects - Prioritise local use of biofuel to bring maximum
benefits to local population - Maintain existing land ownership and tenure
patterns to avoid social unrest - Rather projects should be designed to benefit
African communities first
17Environmental protection
- Vast monoculture plantations as seen in Latin
America and Asia can devastate the fragile
ecosystems and bring untold social damage - Large irrigated plantations deplete underground
water resources, in times of increased drought
and lack of rain due to climate change - Valorise all sub-products like press cake as
organic fertiliser or animal feed - Explore possibilities for intercropping, which
can improve yields of both food and oil producing
crops
18Creation of favourable policy finance
framework
- Push for bundling of Jatropha plantation projects
for carbon finance (CDM) - Sensitise local regional Financial Institutions
on Jatropha - Create favourable national regional policy to
promote sustainable development (Pricing, Quality
standards , sustainability criteria)
19Aw ni Cé ! Merci ! Thank You!