Title: Summit 2005
1Speaking the same languageThe way forward in
tracking industrial Energy efficiency and CO2
EmissionsMarco MensinkIEA, Paris, 1st and 2nd
of October 2007
2ICFPA
- The organization of the world's forest and paper
industry associations
- 19 members from all over the world representing
90 of global pulp and paper capacity and 50 of
woodworking capacity
- A forum of global dialogue, coordination and
cooperation
- Today speaking for the pulp and paper industry.
3ICFPA and Climate change
- The global forest products industry is strongly
committed to meeting the challenges of climate
change.
- Trees, wood and paper products are uniquely
renewable and recyclable resources that help
reduce greenhouse gasses by storing CO2 from the
atmosphere. - Fibre from sustainably managed forests makes a
positive contribution to the worlds future
energy supply.
- The industry is committed to innovative energy
solutions that will increase efficiency, reduce
reliance on fossil fuel and expand the use of
renewable energy sources.
4The sector in summary
- The global pulp and paper industry consists of
about 5000 pulp and paper mills.
- Although there are many international and global
companies, a large part of the sector is also
made up of medium and smaller enterprises.
- Pulp and paper are made around the world and
there is an active global trade both in resources
and final products. It is a globally competing
sector. - Pulp and paper are umbrella words for many
different products and grades, from business to
business to direct consumer products.
5Pulp Production by Region in 2005
Total 189.0 Million Tonnes
6Pulp Consumption by Region in 2005
Total 188.5 Million Tonnes
7Paper Production by Region in 2005
Total 367.0 Million Tonnes
8Paper Consumption by Region in 2005
Total 366.3 Million Tonnes
9Recovered Paper Balance (2005)
10Grades Miladys Fan
PAPER AND PAPERBOARD PRODUCTION INWESTERN EUROPE
Degree of fossil CO2 emitted during production
High
End products - Substitution
High growth
3
Medium high
Medium growth
1.75 - 3
Household
Envelope paper
Medium low
Low/No growth
.
t
Stationary
Sanitary
r
e
v
d
a
Copy papers
Products
Low
y
t
i
l
a
T
u
r
q
a
n
h
s
g
i
p
s
s
Substitution ranges
H
r
o
C
e
o
e
r
p
r
t
r
Catalogues
a
n
u
P
g
Brochures
P
a
a
i
t
c
g
i
Tissue
k
z
n
n
a
i
g
Kraftliner
a
g
t
M
i
i
a
g
n
Uncoated Woodfree
r
t
Testliner
g
e
W
a
s
r
i
Coated Woodfree
e
d
a
M
i
l
r
n
s
o
a
Coated Mechanical
t
Fluting Medium
c
s
Inserts
g
r
e
Consumer
e
Packaging
SBS
r
n
p
i
a
Carton-
Uncoated Mechanical
i
boards
FBB
D
p
t
s
WLC
w
n
Food
e
Packaging
i
LPB
N
r
Sackkraft
Sacks
Bags
P
Misc.
Newsprint
Other
Total 70 million tons
11Energy in pulp and paper production
12IEA key findings in tracking
- The pulp, paper and printing industry consumed
6.45 EJ of final energy in 2004, accounting for
5.7 of total industry energy use. Printing
represents a small share of the industry's energy
demand. - In pulp and paper production, the industry
generates about half of its own energy needs from
biomass residues and makes extensive use of
combined heat and power (CHP) technology,
13IEA key findings in tracking (2)
- There are notable differences in energy use for
pulp and paper production between countries, due
to a range of factors such as product mix,
processes used, plant size, technology, technical
age, feedstock quality, fuel prices and
management attention to energy efficiency.
14IEA key findings in tracking (3)
- Energy efficiency gains can be achieved if
existing mills are retrofitted with current
energy efficient technology, but investment costs
and competitiveness are key determinants. - There is potential for more use of heat recovery.
Putting excess heat to use in a more effective
way could provide savings, but the economic
viability depends on the need for low grade
heat.
15IEA key findings in tracking (4)
- Increased paper recycling and recovered paper use
could help reduce energy consumption in the
industry.
- While Europe, Japan and Korea appear to be close
to the practical limits for paper recycling,
North America and parts of Asia could benefit
from more effective policies on waste disposal to
encourage higher rates of paper recycling.
16On the IEA methodology
- An indicator method is developed in this study
that compares a theoretical sector energy use if
best available technology (BAT) were applied with
actual energy use according to IEA statistics. - The method discerns energy use for mechanical and
chemical pulp, pulp from recovered paper and
various paper qualities. These indicators are
suited to identify areas where further analysis
is warranted. - This indicators analysis raises a number of
issues concerning data quality which requires
further discussion on the availability, quality
and consistency of data across countries.
17But a firm conclusion
- Based on country comparisons, the remaining
energy efficiency potential in the pulp and paper
industry is estimated to be 1.0 EJ per year of
final energy, or 1.3 to 1.5 EJ in primary energy
terms, depending on the efficiency for power and
steam generation. - If higher recycling rates and CHP were also
considered, the total final savings potential
would be 2.1 to 2.4 EJ of final energy per year.
- ?
18Feedback (1)
- IEA has done a tremendous effort and
groundbraking work. Our compliments.
- but
- These seem to be huge and important conclusions
compared to the issues remaining in the
methodology and data collection.
19Speaking the same language
- IEA statistics still do not match the definitions
and categories of the international pulp and
paper industry federations, or for example the EU
ETS. - A crucial issue is the treatment of CHP in the
statistics. Also printing should be removed, or
we should go down one statistical class.
- We have now worked on global definitions of
energy use in the Pulp and paper industry (IEA
Paprican project), so that industry speaks the
same language. - But that does not mean the same language as IEA
yet. CHP is one example, subdividing in G8 a
second.
20An outlook to the future
- The global pulp and paper industry within the
forest based sector cluster can be a solution in
climate change mitigation.
- Carbon storage in forests and carbon storage in
products are, combined with paper recycling and
energy efficiency, attributes that can take us
there. - A strong effort is needed, indeed, but the
industry can be the enabler for many (bio)
climate targets.
21Improving performance by technology
- Installing latest technology and improving
efficiency is a continous target and process.
- The investment climate determines progress, as
the industry depends on major investments in long
investment cycles.
- The technology race for technologies like black
liquor gassification or biorefineries is not run
yet. Let alone for CCS.
- The step from lab to demo to full scale needs to
be crossed.
22Feedback 2
- Todays workshop with estimates on tracking
industrial emissions and future scenarios for
emissions might be a bit premature.
- Both methodology and data collection still need
work, before we in turn can assess the estimates
of IEA in a proper way.
- Also energy data have a clear competition law
element and global management needs to be
organised.
23Summary
- We clearly recognise the urgent need and
challenges.
- We need a joint industry and government approach
to jump the hurdles described.
- But that is not the debate if there will be CCS
by 2015, but on how to bring 5000 companies
together in a single approach.
- We look forward to this debate.
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