Title: Biofuels, Biopower, and Biobased Products
1Biofuels, Biopower, and Bio-based Products
- By
- Jack Werner
- Joint Energy Interim Committee, Arkansas General
Assembly - February 27-28, 2006
2National Energy Issues
- U.S. dependence on foreign oil is increasing
- Growing world demand for limited oil supply
- Crude oil price increases could continue upward
- Growing need for U.S. to identify sustainable
source of domestically produced energy supply - Energy is connected to economic development,
environmental health and safety, and homeland
security
3Potential of Biomass Future Use
The Billion Ton Study, a joint publication of
USDA and DOE, concluded that the land resources
of the US can produce a sustainable supply of
biomass sufficient to displace at least 30
percent or more of the countrys current
petroleum consumption. The study found that 1.3
billion dry tons of biomass are available in the
US annually.
4Administrations DOE Budget FY07
- Biomass Biorefinery Systems RD FYO7 Proposed
Budget 150 mil - FY06 Biomass Program Appropriation 91 mil (57
earmarked) - EPACT of 2005 Some Major Biomass Authorizations
- Grants to improve the commercial value of forest
biomass for electric energy, useful heat,
transportation fuels, and other commercial
purposes (Sec. 210) 50 mil - Integrated Biorefinery (Sec. 932(d)) 100 mil
- Production Incentives for Cellulosic Biofuels
reverse auction (Sec. 942) 250 mil - Renewable Fuel (Sec. 1511) 429 mil
5Administrations Proposed FY07 Budget(millions )
62002 Farm Bill (P.L. 107-171) Energy Title
- Sec. 9002 Procurement of Biobased Products (1
mil/yr) - Sec. 9003 Biorefinery Development Grants
- Sec. 9004 Biodiesel Fuel Education Program (1
mil/yr) - Sec. 9005 Energy Audit and Renewable Energy
Development Program - Sec. 9006 RE/EE Improvements (23 mil/yr)
- Sec. 9007 Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technologies
- Sec. 9008 Biomass RD Act of 2000 (63 mil/yr)
- Sec. 9009 Carbon Sequestration Research
- Sec. 9010 CCC Bioenergy Program (150 mil/yr)
7Farm Bill Other important programs
- Rural Development (VI)
- Sec. 6401 Value-Added Agricultural Market Product
Development Grants Program (40 mil/yr FY02-07) - Conservation Programs (Title II)
- Sec. 2301 Environmental Quality Incentives
Program (EQUIP) - Sec. 2101 Conservation Reserve Program (CRP)
- Sec. 2001 Conservation Security Program (CSP)
8Reports Energy Balance
Key reports find that ethanol has a positive
energy balance
- The 2001 Net Energy Balance of Corn-Ethanol.
Shapouri, Duffield, McAloon, Wang. (USDA
Argonne National Lab, 2004 ) - The Energy Balance of Ethanol An Update. Wang,
Shapouri, Duffield. (USDA, 2002) - Allocation Procedure in Ethanol Production System
from Corn Grain. Seungdo, Dale. (Michigan State
University, 2002 ) - A Rebuttal to "Ethanol Fuels Energy, Economic
and Environmental Impacts" by D. Pimental.
Graboski, McCleeland. (Colorado School of Mines
National Corn Growers Association, 2002) - Effects of Fuel Ethanol Use on Fuel-Cycle Energy
and Greenhouse Gas Emissions. Wang, Saricks,
Santini. (Argonne National Laboratory 1999)
9Changing Policy Landscape Local and State
Actions on biofuels (more than 45 policies)
- 1 Arkansas AR S.B. 363
- 2 Hawaii HI S.B. 2221 HI S.B. 3207
- 3 Illinois P.L. Act No. 93-724 04, P.L. Act
No. 94-62 05 P.L. Act No. 94-346 05 - 1 Indiana P.L. No. 6 - 2005
- 3 Minnesota MN S.B. 1495, MN H.B. 2633 MN S.B.
4 - 2 Montana MT H.B. 362, MT H.B. 644
- 3 Maine P.L. No. 474 1999, P.L. No. 698 2003
P.L. No. 266 2003 - 1 Michigan Public Act No. 5 - 2003
- 1 Mississippi MS H.B. 928
- 4 Nebraska (Signed by Governor) L.B. 605, NE
L.B. 479, NE L.B. 983 NE L.B. 1065 - 5 North Dakota (Signed by Governor) ND H.B.
1390, ND S.B. 2019, ND S.B. 245, (Filled) ND H.B.
1309, ND S.B. 2222 - 1 New Jersey NJ S.B. 2313
- 4 Oklahoma (Signed by Governor) OK S.B. 878, OK
H.B. 1398, OK H.B. 1556, (filled) OK S.B. 429 - 1 Rhode Island P.L. No. 484 2004
- 3 South Dakota SD H.B. 1279, SD S.B. 162 SD
S.B. 31 - 2 Tennessee TN H.B. 3067 TN H.B. 1740
- 4 Washington WA H.B. 1240, WA H.B. 1241, WA H.B.
1242 WA H.B. 1243 - 3 Wisconsin (Signed by Governor) WI S.B. 378,
(filled) WI S.B. 39, WI S.B. 41 - 1 Wyoming WY H.B. 5
10State Actions on Biomass
- Governor Pataki (R-NY)
- Renewable fuels available at service stations all
across the state - Renewable fuel tax-free
- Incentives for biorefineries
- Increased use of hybrid vehicles including
plug-ins - Renewable Fuel Standards
- Hawaii - 85 of gasoline to contain 10 ethanol
(starting in 06) - Minnesota - 20 of its transportation fuels must
be renewable by 2012 - Montana - 10 after in-state production of 40
million - California - 10 of fuel should be ethanol by
2007 - 21 States have Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS)
11State Biomass Incentives
Incentives Available
Biomass Applications
Credit/Exemptions /Rebates
Electricity
Grants/Loans
Heating
Both Incentives
Multiple Biomass Applications
12What needs to happen?
- Research on
- Feedstocks and Co-products
- Cellulosic Technologies
- Sustainable Harvesting
- Incentives for
- Production
- Consumption
- Infrastructure
- Education for
- Policymakers
- Universities
- Farmers
- Environmental Groups
- Health Organizations
13Land Grant Universities
- More funding for agricultural practices for
energy crops and related residues - What are the appropriate feedstocks for different
regions of the country? - Need state/regional biomass inventories
- Appropriate Technologies
- Assistance on sustainable and rural development
- Factors that need to be considered
- Climate
- Soil
- Native Species
- Natural Pests
- Farmer/community equity
14Federal Agency Collaboration
- Healthy Forest Restoration Act of 2003, Title II
- Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) for Woody
Biomass Utilization - (DOE/USDA/DOI)
- Biomass Research and Development Act of 2000
- Biomass RD Technical Advisory Committee
- Vision for Bioenergy Biobased Products in the
US - Roadmap for Bioenergy Biobased Products in the
US - Biomass RD Board
- Farm Bill 2002, Title IX
- Federal Procurement of Biobased Products (Section
9002) - Renewable Energy Systems and Energy Efficiency
Improvements (Section 9006) - Biomass Research and Development (Section 9008)
- Joint DOE/USDA Solicitation for FY 02, FY 03,
FY04 - Continuation of the Bioenergy Program (Section
9010) - Energy Policy Act of 2005
15The New Industrial Biorefinery
- USES
- Fuels
- Ethanol
- Renewable Diesel
- Hydrogen
- Power
- Electricity
- Heat
- Chemicals
- Plastics
- Solvents
- Chemical Intermediates
- Phenolics
- Adhesives
- Furfural
- Fatty acids
Biomass Feedstock
Conversion Processes
- Trees
- Grasses
- Agricultural Crops
- Agricultural Residues
- Animal Wastes
- Municipal Solid Waste
- Enzymatic Fermentation - Gas/liquid
Fermentation - Acid Hydrolysis/Fermentation -
Gasification - Combustion - Co-firing
16Lessons Learned
- Use of an abundant existing crop can facilitate
strong state support and commercialization - Corn for ethanol in Iowa and Illinois
- Sugarcane in Hawaii
- State RPS programs tend to foster wind and not
biomass may need biomass sub-targets in RPS - Wind has strong federal tax credit, and lower
capital costs - Landfill gas is typically the only biomass supply
chosen - NY, CA and other states have seen biomass do
poorly vs. wind - Need to credit base load supply, farmer benefits,
resource diversity
17Lessons Learned Contd
- Incentives that facilitate long-term contracts
(e.g., 20 or 30 yrs) can foster a large industry - California Standard Offer 4 power sales
contracts fostered over 49 biopower plants with
over 830 MW of capacity - Oregon forest thinning potential and problems
- Long-term incentives may need flexible features
for changing markets, to avoid boom/bust cycles - California SO4 contracts, utility buy-outs,
shrinking industry - Oregon Business Energy Tax Credit (BETC) pass
through to entities with tax liability
18Lessons Learned Contd
- Bioenergy project financing assistance can
effectively target economic development needs - NE financed ethanol plants in areas that raised
salaries - MN Job Opportunity Building Zones (JOBZ) program
- States can facilitate innovative local
incentives, like skip zoning approaches - NE allowed smaller cities to collect property
taxes from nearby plants, then use these dollars
to help with project financing
19Lessons Learned Contd
- State fuel production incentives can be more
effective than fuel sales taxes in fostering new
in-state capacity - MN and NE initially tried ethanol sales taxes ,
which fostered increased use of ethanol from
other states - When MN NE added ethanol production incentives
they succeeded in getting new in-state facilities
built
20Lessons Learned Contd
- Public benefit funds financed by fees on electric
utility bills typically must be used for electric
power applications (CA, NY, OR, etc.), a
potential drawback for biomass - Biomass may be most competitive for
non-electricity uses, like transportation fuels,
heating, and bio-products - Funds financed by state bonds (PA), taxes on gas
(NY) and/or fertilizer sales (NE) can target
non-electricity applications for biomass
21Lessons Learned Contd
- Pro-active multi-agency approaches and
collaboration can be very effective - MN Dept. of Commerce and Dept. of Agriculture
efforts and MN Lung Association helped achieve
strong ethanol and biodiesel growth - California is developing a strategic biomass plan
with multi-agency collaboration - IL labor agreement requirements
22Summary
- Federal tax incentives tend to favor seed-row
crops - Biopower cannot compete with wind to take
advantage of Regulatory (RPS) and Tax Incentives - Educational Programs targeted to specific
audiences are essential to develop a biomass
program
23Summary cont.
- A biomass resource assessment is important but
should be linked to an economic development plan - Production incentives need to be linked with
marketing incentives - Need a Champion and often it is the
agricultural community