Title: DEVELOPING SUSTAINABLE BIORESOURCES FROM LANDBASED INDUSTRY: A UK PERSPECTIVE
1DEVELOPING SUSTAINABLE BIORESOURCES FROM
LAND-BASED INDUSTRY A UK PERSPECTIVE
- Melvyn F. Askew
- Founder of Census-Bio
- Visiting Professor at Harper Adams University
College - Fellow of Central Science Laboratory
2DEFINITIONS
- Sustainable f(econs, environment,social/cultural
aspects). - Bioresources non-food products from land based
industry. - Biofuel liquid fuel from biomass resources.
- Bioenergy heat/electricity from biomass
resources.
3WHAT ARE OR SHOULD BE OUR PRIORITIES?
- Adding value to the rural economy/land-based
industry. - Improving the environment thorough mitigating the
effects of greenhouse gases. - Creating new and diverse production from
land-based industry.
4LET US LOOK AT BIOENERGY/BIOFUELS FIRST
5European Union strategies for biorenewables
- Heat Energy for the Future Resources of Energy
- Liquid biofuels A Strategy for Security of
Energy Suppl
6Bioheat/electricity
- Whilst there appears to be less emphasis on this
area at present it is the area with most
potential to save energy and reduce GHGs. - UK has strong potential in this area as a
provider of systems and equipment. These include
CHP units and novel low energy buildings.
7Hemp Lime Construction.
8Liquid Biofuels in UK
- UK already produces biodiesel from vegetable
oils. Operational capacity is lt500,000 tpa. - UK will produce bioethanol from simple sugars (
grain sugar beet) soon. - UK is likely to import some of its biofuel
feedstocks or in the case of bioethanol, finished
product e.g. From Brazil
9THE UK MARKET FOR VEHICLE FUELS
- UK uses approximately 20 million tonnes per annum
each of diesel and gasoline - NB The dieselgasoline split in private motoring
in UK and wider EU is quite different from that
of North America
10First Generation (Conventional) Biofuels.
11Imports of Biofuels to UK
- Currently primarily from Brazil
- In future
- Bioethanol from southern Africa
- Biodiesel ( from Jatropha) from for
example India
12Jatropha species
13A WORD ON BIOBUTANOL
- More energy content than ethanol.
- Mixes easily with gasoline.
- Does not absorb significant amounts of water.
- Requires lower investment per tonne of capacity
provided pipeline distribution is used
14PRODUCTION OUTSIDE OF UK
- It is imperative that we use our skills and
capabilities to assist in the development of
produce from outwith UK eg bioethanol from South
America or Mozambique.
15The UK Arable Cropping Area
- UK arable area is relatively small at a little
more than 5 million hectares - Reaching EU targets of 5 biofuels for 2010 and
that of 10 for 2020 will be challenging - The food v. fuel debate is emerging
16Technology roadmap vision for biofuels for 2030.
A European Vision.
2005 1st Generation, e.g. biodiesel
2010/2020 2nd Generation, e.g. bioethanol and
sunfuel
2030 and 2030 Integrated biorefineries
17Second Generation Biofuels.
18Trees and Grassland.
19Second Generation Biofuels in UK
- Will not be commercialised until 2020 ?
- Will add value to the rural economy through the
use of low level wastes. - Could cause market conflicts with bio-heat.
- Will eventually lead to the introduction and
commercialisation of fully integrated
biorefining. - Could help save uplands agriculture.
20THE MOTOR INDUSTRY IS CHANGING ITS FOCUS
- We need to be aware of what is going on !!
- -New power trains which demand synthetic fuels
(BtL) - -Biofuel vehicles eg (Ford and Saab E-85)
- -Lighter weight (lean) vehicles with lower fuel
demands
21THE FUTURE
- If our target is to reduce fossil fuel demand
reduce net CO2emissions/environmental impact of
vehicles, then we must integrate our approaches
and prioritise demands for land use.
22Optimising Use of Bio-Resources.
23Current Uses
24Reduced speed Reduced fuel consumption
25Non-food and non-energy markets
- These are significant and very diverse.
- Some overlap with biofuels eg biosolvents.
- Some may give better benefits to the environment
than first generation biofuels. - We need some integrated forward thinking.
26INTEGRATING OUR APPROACHES
- This will offer maximum exploitation of biomass
resources. - It will have maximum beneficial impact on the
environment? - It will probably create most jobs in the rural
economy. - Should we focus on the development of integrated
biorefineries for the future?
27MY VIEW FOR UK
- Integrated biorefineries focussing on the most
sustainable products from biomass. - Provision of public goods (eg water management)
being integrated into the production systems. - Integrated approaches for development of land
use strategies.
28Environmental Business Opportunities programme
(EBOP)Biofuels Special Interest Group
Participants
- SMEs
- Frome Valley Biofuels
- GB Waste Care
- Green Biodiesel
- BHR Biofuels
- Greener Fuels
- Harvest Biofuels
- Longma Biofuels
- West Midlands Biofuels
- SD Environmental
- Greenwatt Ltd
- TIN Technology
- ASR Electrical
- Brindley Biofuels
- Black Country Housing
- Ecotec Resources
- CLA West Midlands
- Marches Energy Agency
- Sunrise Biodiesel
- Larger Organisations
- Birmingham City Council
- Worcestershire County Council
- Staffordshire County Council
- Environment Agency
- Wardell Armstrong
- Balfour Beatty Power Networks
- Grace Davidson
- Harper Adams University College
- Aston University
- Cranfield University
- Staffordshire University
- Advantage West Midlands
- Nu-way Ltd
- Riello Burners Ltd
- CLA West Midlands
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