Title: A brief overview
1Sun Grant the West
- A brief overview
- Jan Auyong, College of Agricultural Sciences
- March 28, 2007
2Content
- Demand and Supply
- A overview of biofuel/bioproduct opportunities
- The Sun Grant Initiative
- Some contacts and sources for more information
3U.S. Energy Availability Security
- Report of the National Energy Policy Development
Group
4Meeting Demand
- Can we replace petroleum
- with biofuels?
- For example, in Oregon
- gasoline consumption estimate is
- 8.0 gal gas / wk x 2.5 M people
- 20M gal/wk or about 1,000 M gal/yr
- Starch-based 176/20M gal per week 9 weeks
- Cellulosic-based 229/20M gal per week 11.5
weeks - diesel consumption is about 500 M gallon/yr
- About 3000 acres of canola/some mustard
currently being grown 240-500 K gal - Note a 42-gal barrel of oil produces about
19.5 gallons of gasoline, - 7 gallons of diesel.
5The 1.3 Billion Ton Biomass Goal, USDOE
Billion Barrel of Oil Equivalents
DOE/EERE, 2004
6Big Picture Ethanol Biobutanol, Methanol
- Alcohols made from
- Sugar (e.g., cane and beet sugar), directly
ferment and distill off alcohol - Starches (e.g., grains) require conversion to
sugar first - Celluloses require conversion to starch then
sugar (e.g., ag residues, wood, switchgrass) - Biomass gasification/catalysis
7Ethanol
- Targeted to replace 25-30 of domestic gas
consumption within 25-30 yrs - Currently primarily from corn
- distillers dried grains are the byproduct
- _at_4.5 gal per 100 pounds of corn (60 lb bu)
- 100 M gal per year plant 37M bu
- An opportunity area is cellulosic ethanol (65-90
gal/ton of biomass) - Issues transportation, lack of E85 (flexfuel)
cars, debate over net energy of ethanol (75-80
that of gas), cost
8Biobutanol
- production could use the same feedstocks as for
ethanol - energy crops such as sugar beets, corn
grain, wheat, as well as agricultural byproducts
such as straw. - produced through a fermentation process
- may be used as a biofuel and is in several ways
more similar to gasoline than ethanol - same energy equivalency as gasoline
- has been demonstrated to work in some gasoline
powered vehicles without any modification - doesnt separate upon storage like gasoline
- military would love to use butanol instead of jet
fuel
9Big Picture - Biodiesel
- A diesel replacement fuel manufactured from
vegetable oils, animal fats, or recycled cooking
greases or oils. - Any oil or fat can be used but oils and fats have
different properties and result in end products
with slightly different physical characteristics,
primarily in terms of viscosity at lower temps - Biodiesel can reduce tailpipe emissions but has
8 less energy/gal than diesel
10Big Picture - Syngas
- Synthetic gas produced by gasification.
- Gasification relies on chemical processes at
elevated temperatures 700C, contrary to
biological processes such as anaerobic digestion
that produce biogas. - The basic process was originally developed in the
1800s to produce town lighting and cooking, and
has been utilized for the production of synthetic
chemicals and fuels since the 1920s. - It is now recognized that gasification has wider
applications in particular the production of
electricity, ammonia and liquid fuels (oil), with
the possibility of producing methane and hydrogen
for fuel cells
11Feedstocks for Syngas
- Carbon based (carbonaceous) materials, such as
coal, petroleum or biomass - Even waste products are now potential feedstocks
Wood gasifier on a Ford truck converted to a
tractor (an EPA tractor).
12Big Picture BioProducts
- Biofuel feedstocks can be grown in the West
- Yet, we are unlikely to grow enough biomass
locally, or nationally, given current technology,
to replace a significant amount of fossil fuels
with biofuels - Biofuels can be valuable in rural economic
development, farm sustainability and achieving
some level of energy independence - But food to fuel debate may affect the amount of
crops diverted for biofuels - It makes more sense for the West to focus on
higher value bioproduct use of crops
Biomass
BioProducts processing/conversion
13BioProduct Examples
14A Mussel-based Adhesive
Soy Plant
Kaichang Li - Wood Science And Engineering
Wood composites made with environmentally
friendly soy-based wood adhesives
Soybean
15Bioplastics
What do you get when you cross a crabshell with
food and agricultural residues?
coating fresh strawberries with thin,
antimicrobial film
Yanyun Zhao, Food Science Technology
biodegradable horticultural pots
16Energy Recovery from Wastewater
- Methane generation by anaerobic digestion
- Electricity generation using microbial fuel cells
Hydrogen generation by bio-electrolysis
17Wastewater as a crop
- Municipal wastewater has 9.3 more energy than
treatment consumes (ShizasBagley, Univ. Toronto) - With about 10 recovery of that potential energy
into electricity, the wastewater treatment
plants could produce enough electricity for their
own operation - Energy in food processing wastewater Energy in
domestic wastewater - Energy in animal wastes 3 Energy in domestic
wastewater - 33 billion gallons of domestic wastewater is
treated each day in the US at annual cost of over
25 billion, about 45 billion is needed for
infrastructure improvement over the next 20 years
18The Sun Grant Initiative
An Integrative Role for University
Research and Education
Science
Contact Jan Auyong, OSU College of Agricultural
Sciences
19Mission
Western Region Oregon State University
- Develop, distribute and implement biobased
technologies to - Enhance Americas national energy security
- Promote agricultural diversification and
environmental sustainability - Promote opportunities for economic
diversification in rural communities. - Enhance efficiency of research by partnering with
federal and state agencies and laboratories,
industry and others.
20Five Regional University Centers
- Based at Land-Grant Universities (LGU)
- Facilitate coordination and communication at the
regional level - In partnership with state and federal
laboratories and agencies
www.sungrant.org
Western Regional Sun Grant Center http//sungrant.
oregonstate.edu/
21Funding Parameters- Western Region
Western Region Oregon State University
Western Region Oregon State University
- Biomass conversion, including mixed biomass
- Specialty crops and bioproducts for value-added
production - Enhancing efficiencies in existing technologies,
and utilizing waste stream feedstocks - Economic analyses for production decision-making
and economies of scale - Paradigm shift from centralized to distributed
fuel production
22Some Sun Grant activities
- Competitive USDOT funded grant program,
900K/year for four years - Biomass Partnership workshops with USDOE and
Governors Associations - regional workshops to examine biomass potential
and evaluate billion ton goal - USDOE collaboration beginning
- resource assessement (GIS)
- crop productivity and enhancement
- communications outreach (bio-Web)
23Roles for Extension
- The Sun Grant Initiative expects to utilize the
three Land Grant University mission areas
research, extension, and education - The Western Region seeks integrated projects, not
just research projects - The Regional Center will look for projects that
include extension and users in the planning and
execution of projects, as well as the
dissemination of findings
24Roles for Extension
- Biomass programs seek to identify where and how
much biomass is available locally and regionally - For example, DOE has proposed a resource
assessment, including a GIS-based tool to collect
data - USDA and agricultural scientists have begun
collecting data that could be used in this GIS
tool, which could assist growers and energy
producers choose the best varieties and locations
for energy crops - Extension faculty often are repositories of data
on production efficiencies and soil-climate-crop
relationships
25Roles for Extension
- Extension faculty can help
- change attitudes about directions
- stakeholders better utilize informational
repositories - agencies and researchers better deliver
information - create linkages between users and researchers
and agencies - identify informational gaps and misconceptions
- create opportunities for dialogue
26Roles for Extension
- eXtension
- is one potential tool what will it take to
create a community of practice? - What other Extension tools or strategies might
foster interactions? - What audiences need to be targeted and how?
- What tactics are needed to bring the Western
region up to speed with other regions, for
example, the MidWest about biofuels, bioenergy,
bioproducts?
27Discussion
- How does the West fit into a biobased economy?
- What information is needed? In what form or
media? What kinds of activities are needed? - What staffing development is needed long-term?
- What additional mechanisms are needed to provide
clarity on this topic and the role for the LGUs
and Extension?
28Some Information Sources
- Feedstock Assessments
- Dept. of Energys Biomass Program
http//www1.eere.energy.gov/biomass/ - Dept. of Energys Energy Information
Administration http//www.eia.doe.gov/ - Biofuels
- Pacific Biomass Biodiesel Oilseed Crops in the
PNW Studies, factsheets, reports
http//www.pacificbiomass.org/ - State Departments of Agriculture, Energy and
Forestry
29Western Region Oregon State University
Western Region Oregon State University
Thank you for your attention