Title: Transport Fuels for the Future
1Inland Transport Committee Round Table, 20
February 2002, Geneva
- Transport Fuels for the Future
- Neville Thompson,
- David Rickeard
- CONCAWE
2TRANSPORT FUELS FOR THE FUTURE
- Achievements to date, future challenges
- Drivers for changes to fuels
- Fuels for advanced conventional vehicles
- Fuel requirements of longer term vehicle options
- CONCAWE activities
- Conclusions
3DRAMATIC REDUCTION IN REGULATED EMISSIONS
4ROAD TRANSPORT EMISSIONS CONTRIBUTION DECLINING
Source European Commission
5NEW FOCUS ON GREENHOUSE GASES
Future challenge Reduce CO2 while maintaining
low regulated emissions
6MAJOR IMPROVEMENTS IN FUEL QUALITY ACHIEVED
- Real benefits when fuel change enables a step
change in engine / after-treatment technology
7TRANSPORT FUELS FOR THE FUTURE
- Achievements to date, future challenges
- Drivers for changes to fuels
- Fuels for advanced conventional vehicles
- Fuel requirements of longer term vehicle options
- CONCAWE activities
- Conclusions
8FUTURE FUEL NEEDS DEPEND ON VEHICLE TECHNOLOGY
- Conventional vehicle developments
- Advanced gasoline engines
- Direct Injection, Variable Valve Actuation,
Downsizing - Improved diesel engines
- Multiple high pressure injections, Exhaust gas
recirculation - Advanced after-treatment
- Lean NOx converters, PM traps, Improved TWC
- Hybrids
- gt Sulphur-free fuels meet the needs of all
these vehicles - Novel combustion systems e.g. HCCI need more
study - Hydrogen fuel cell vehicles
- Best way to deliver hydrogen to the vehicle still
unclear - Gasoline-type, methanol, direct hydrogen ?
- gt New fuels will be required, but more work
needed
9CONVENTIONAL VEHICLES DOMINATE FUTURE MARKET
Source EUCAR
- Changes will be gradual as new vehicles enter the
fleet - Increased diesel / reduced gasoline demand
expected - Slow penetration of new technologies, e.g. fuel
cell vehicles
10TRANSPORT FUELS FOR THE FUTURE
- Achievements to date, future challenges
- Drivers for changes to fuels
- Fuels for advanced conventional vehicles
- Fuel requirements of longer term vehicle options
- CONCAWE activities
- Conclusions
11LOWER SULPHUR FUELS ENABLE ADVANCED VEHICLES
- Advanced engines and after-treatment systems can
achieve very low emissions with low Sulphur fuels
LD Diesel NEDC emissions
Source DETR/SMMT/CONCAWE Particulates
programme and AECC
- Influence of other fuel properties becomes small
12REFINERY CO2 INCREASES WITH FUEL CHANGES
Refinery CO2 Emissions, EU-15
Source CONCAWE
- Future fuel changes need careful evaluation on a
well-to-wheels basis
13GHG EMISSIONS NEED WELL-TO-WHEELS APPROACH
- Conventional fuels require a relatively small
proportion of energy for their manufacture - Reducing C/H ratio by hydrogenation is always CO2
negative - Energy use and GHG emissions in production of
alternative fuels can be substantial - Well-to-wheels approach is needed to identify the
best options - Definitive answers not easy
- Results very sensitive to the input assumptions
- Ongoing research effort needed
- CONCAWE actively involved
14ALTERNATIVE FUELS FOR IC ENGINES
Source Shell, SAE Paper 2001-01-1343
- No clear advantage for alternative fuels in
Internal Combustion Engines - Hybrid vehicles show promise
15BIOFUELS PROVIDE LIMITED OVERALL ENERGY CREDIT
Net Energy Saved
Probably achievable
Better
Source CONCAWE
- Benefits highly dependent on assumptions on use
of co-products - Use of all set-aside land in EU-15 would replace
lt 2 of road transport fuels on an energy basis
16BIOFUELS PROVIDE LIMITED OVERALL GHG CREDIT
GHG reduction versus conventional fuels
RME, accounting for N2O emissions, refs 45
Better
Source CONCAWE
- Assumptions on agricultural N2O emissions are
critical - Other measures to reduce CO2 emissions are more
cost effective
17TRANSPORT FUELS FOR THE FUTURE
- Achievements to date, future challenges
- Drivers for changes to fuels
- Fuels for advanced conventional vehicles
- Fuel requirements of longer term vehicle options
- CONCAWE activities
- Conclusions
18WHY ARE FUEL CELL VEHICLES ATTRACTIVE?
- Potential for high vehicle efficiency
- Hence lower CO2 emissions
- Very low or zero regulated pollutant emissions
GM HydroGen 1
TOYOTA FCHV-3
- Cautions Development at an early stage
- Conventional vehicles compete strongly
- Best source of hydrogen not yet clear
19FUEL CELLS NEED CLEAN HYDROGEN
- Free hydrogen does not exist naturally
- Hydrogen is an energy carrier, not a source
- It has to be generated from naturally occurring
compounds - Implies energy use and hence GHG emissions
- Hydrogen can be delivered to the vehicle in two
ways - Direct hydrogen supply to the vehicle
- On-board the vehicle using a hydrogen containing
fluid - More work is needed on production, supply and
storage issues - Codes and standards for safe use also important
20RENEWABLE HYDROGEN HAS LONG TERM POTENTIAL
- A renewable source of hydrogen would avoid carbon
emissions
- Large scale renewable hydrogen remains a long way
off - Currently high cost, small volumes
- Lack of hydrogen storage/distribution
infrastructure - Near term options still being developed
- direct hydrogen
- on-board reforming of liquid fuels
21FUEL CELL FUELS - THE OPTIONS
Challenges
Fuel Supplied to Vehicle
Benefits
- Simplest vehicle system
- No emissions on the vehicle
- Higher energy density
- Low emissions
- Highest energy density
- Provides highest well to wheel efficiency
- Infrastructure exists
- Low emissions
- Efficient/safe storage solution
- Emissions from hydrogen production
- Low energy density
- Infrastructure development
- Requires on-board processor
- Fuel is toxic and water soluble
- Infrastructure development
- Requires on-board processor
- Hydrogen
- Methanol
- Liquid Hydrocarbons, e.g. gasoline
On-board reforming of hydrocarbon fuels appears
the best near term option
22FUEL CELLS AND HYBRIDS OFFER CO2 IMPROVEMENTS
Source GM-Argonne study based on US
data. European study underway
- Hydrogen from electrolysis is inefficient with
conventional electricity - Renewable or nuclear electricity would change the
balance
23RENEWABLE ELECTRICITY TO HYDROGEN ?
- Renewable electricity is a limited resource
- Can be used in different ways
- Producing hydrogen for fuel cell vehicles does
not maximise the overall GHG benefit
24TRANSPORT FUELS FOR THE FUTURE
- Achievements to date, future challenges
- Drivers for changes to fuels
- Fuels for advanced conventional vehicles
- Fuel requirements of longer term vehicle options
- CONCAWE activities
- Conclusions
25CONCAWE ACTIVITIES
- CONCAWE committed to principles that developments
should be based on sound science, transparency
and cost-effectiveness
Technology surveys - emissions legislation, -
fuel qualities, - engines/after-treatment
Fuel requirements of advanced engines - diesel -
gasoline
Technical input on legislative developments
Particulate emissions - DG TREN Consortium - GRPE
programme
Well to wheels analysis on alternate
fuels/vehicles - EUCAR/JRC partnership
26CONCLUSIONS
- Conventional fuels and vehicles will dominate
road transport for the foreseeable future - Lower sulphur maximises the potential of advanced
vehicle emissions systems - Changes to other fuel properties provide little
emissions benefit - Increased application of biofuels needs careful
assessment - Fuel requirements of advanced engines need to be
assessed as the systems are developed - Fuel cell vehicles have promise but remain far
from volume production - Large scale renewable hydrogen remains far off
- On-board reforming of hydrocarbon fuel is a
promising option - Sound well to wheels studies are key to
evaluating future options - CONCAWE actively supporting work in this area