Title: Realizing the potential of gasified biomass in the EU
1Realizing the potential of gasified biomass in
the EU
Policy challenges in shifting from pilot/demo
plant phase to commercial phase
- Hans Hellsmark
- Staffan Jacobsson
- Energy and Environment/ESA
- Chalmers Technical University
- 031 772 8602
- hans.hellsmark_at_chalmers.se
- staffan.jacobsson_at_chalmers.se
2Outline
- Introduction and purpose
- Case studies
- Cost to absorb technical risk
- Financial magnitude of market risk
- Contextual factors and policy options
3Introduction (1)
- Strong push towards developing fossil and biomass
based alternative liquid fuels to substitute
conventional oil - Security of supply
- Higher oil price
- Peak oil
- Incentives to reduce GHG emissions
- (1)-(3) primarily benefit fossil alternatives,
such as coal to liquids (CtL) with higher GHG
emissions than oil - Gasification of biomass is the 2nd gen biofuel
(..) and is a desirable process as - it has high resource utilization,
- no or small contributions of GHG emissions
- does not directly compete with food production
4Introduction (2)
- With the EU directive 2003/30/EC a substantial
market has been created for biofuels, 5.75 2010,
and with a suggestion of 10 by 2020 - The purposes of this project are to
- analyze the emergence of an industry with the
capacity of realizing gasified biomass in Sweden,
Finland, Germany and Austria - draw policy lessons from the historic development
of the technology field and - specify the current and future policy challenges
for realizing the technology on an industrial
scale
5Case studies
Status Start, March 2007 Finish June 2010 4
countries Interviews 70 of 80
Black Liquor, HT-EF, DME
Chemrec/Haldor Topsoe
Stora Enso/Foster Wheeler/Neste Oil
Forest residues LT-FB, FT-Diesel
Forest residues, LT-FICFB, BioSNG
UPM/AndritzCarbona
GE/Eon/Repotec Chalmers
Värnamo -
Forest Residues, LT-FB, FT-wax /DME
Farm residues, LT-FB, FT-D/BioSNG
CUTEC
Forest Residues, LT-cross draft HT-EF, FT-Diesel
Choren/Shell/Daimler/VW
FZK/Lurgi
Farm residues, LT pyrolysis HT-EF, MtG
ZSW/EVF
Repotec/Gussing
Forest Residues, LT-FICFB, El, heat, BioSNG
Forest Residues, LT-FICFB, BioSNG
6Pilot and demo Cost to absorb technical risk
- Pilot phase completed
- Demonstration is under construction or ongoing
and all projects but Värnamo are currently fully
financed - Costgt246M (200M is secured)
Pilot Pilot Pilot Demo Demo Demo
Year Size Cost Year Size Cost
TU-Vienna/Repotec 1995 0,1MW ? 2001 81MW 10?
Chalmers/Metso 2008 6MW 1,1 2008 6MW 1,1?
Chemrec 2005 5MW 7 2010 5MW/1.5kt 28
Värnamo/Chrisgas X 18MW 45
Carbona/UPM 2005 6MW 10
FW/SE/Nesté 2007 5MW 40
Choren 1998 1MW NA 2009? 45MW/15kt 100
FZK/Lurgi 2005 0,1 2008 5MW/0,5thr 4
7Commercial (demo) Cost to absorb technical risk
- Instruments
- Direct subsidies (losses are reduced but risk
remains) - Soft loans
- Bank guaranties
- The instruments are there to absorb the technical
risk but - how much are financing agencies ready to risk in
one or two projects? - national or EU level funding?
- how much will be allowed by the EU?
Pre-Commercial Demo Pre-Commercial Demo Pre-Commercial Demo Commercial size Commercial size Commercial size
Year Size Cost (M) Year Size Cost
TU-Vienna/Repotec 2010 30MW 75
Chalmers/Metso 100 MW 150
Chemrec 2012/13 0,07Mt 140 2015 0,21Mt 400
Värnamo/Chrisgas ? 0,2Mt 400
Carbona/UPM 2011-12? 0,2Mt 400 2015 0,2Mt 500
FW/SE/Nesté 2011-12? 0,1Mt NA/est.400 2015 0,2Mt 500
Choren 2015 0,2Mt 800
FZK/Lurgi 2011 5MW NA/est. 70 2015 1Mt 520
- Technical risk sharing
- Pre-commercial demo gt1085M
- Commercial demo gt 3270M
8Assessment of market risk for commercial size
plants
- The first seven commercial size plants gt2015
- 3270M investment
- 2,1Mtons production capacity (need 30Mt to reach
10 target (lt1)) - 150 plants required (0.2 Mt, 4-800M) to realize
10 market share (60-120 000M in total
investment cost)
9Assessment of market risk for commercial size
plants- Annual cost of realizing a BtL market
(10 BtL fuels by 2030) (M)
Oil price, average (76-08) - 29/bbl
IEA ref price, 2030 - 62 /bbl
EIA ref price 2030 - 131 /bbl
EIA high price 2030 - 200 /bbl
10Contextual factors when designing an instrument
for absorbing the market risk
- Time scale for transformation of the transport
sector is short - Rapidly increasing emissions from the transport
sector and limited time frame for transforming
the transport sector (peak by about 2015 and
major reduction 2050) - Long time scale to go through pilot/demo to
commercial plants for each trajectory - Long time scale to go from 7 to 150 plants (10
of market by 2030?) - gtall policies must be assessed with respect to
their ability to deliver within a specified time
frame (impossible to speak of efficiency without
effectiveness) - To be effective, several alternative technologies
that vary in scale, cost, feed-stock, products
need to be developed and coexist - Good policy is
designed to create markets for renewable
technologies that out-compete fossil alternatives
and not each other - Given large cost differences, a potential
intra-EU trade in fuel may impact on policy
choice and incentives to invest
11Policy alternatives for 2nd generation (1)
- CO2 trade is not sufficient since income streams
can not be calculated price risk remains with
respect to fossil fuel - Quota induces expansion in 1st generation.
- Proposed double counting of BtL is not enough
since the price risk is still there (price risk
with respect to 1st generation) - gtEffectiveness criteria excludes CO2 trade and
quota, at best it induces sequential development
12Policy alternatives for 2nd generation (2)
- BtL blending quotas
- Will take the cheapest Btl (Finland) if trade is
allowed - Price levels will equalize (and approach the most
expensive) - But if suppliers pursue aggressive pricing
strategies out compete others leads to
sequential development - To be effective, there is not time for sequential
development - May be resolved though a very high quota (but
very high consumer cost) - gtBTL blending quota possible but risky for
variety, effectiveness and consumer costs
13Policy alternatives for 2nd generation (3)
- Feed-in with cost covering payment may lead to
diversity and effectiveness - may need to adjust for feed-stock prices
- may link policy to CO2 reduction performance
(i.e. opens up for higher prices for more costly
but higher performance fuels) - scope for SNG! Biogas feed-in law easy to
implement (many plants) - But,
- Variety requires one tariff for each
trajectory-manageable but need experience with
full size commercial plants to calculate costs? - The first seven commercial size plants around
2015 feed-in for 7 plants is it meaningful
especially when there is yet no competition in
the capital goods sector within each trajectory? - gt BtL blending quota is more attractive
14Possible solution for the first seven plants?
- Tax exemptions and guaranteed off-take price from
public sector customer (Bonn, Berlin, Göteborg,
Ministry of Defense) or trader or petrochemical
firm - Experience generated to base further policy on