Title: Getting It Right
1Getting It Right The Path to a Sustainable
Bioeconomy4th National 25x25 Renewable Energy
SummitOmaha, March 12th, 2008
- Melinda Kimble
- Senior Vice-President
2UN Foundation Overview
- Public charity, created in 1998 with Ted Turners
historic 1 billion gift to support UN causes - Builds and implements public-private partnerships
to address the worlds most pressing problems - Strengthens and supports the UN and its causes
through a blend of advocacy, grant making, and
partnerships - Priority areas include environment childrens
health, technology and women and population. - Within the environmental area, priority given to
sustainable development and climate change with a
focus on RE/EE - UNF has given particular attention to the
Caribbean and Central American nations (CA/CAR) - West African bioenergy assessment now underway
3UN Foundation and Bio-Energy
- UN International Bioenergy Initiative
- UN Energy
- Global Bioenergy Partnership (GBEP)
- Global Sustainable Energy Islands Initiative
- Biofuels Partnership with the Italian Ministry of
Environment - Support to AOSIS member countries on adaptation
and mitigation, including bio-energy - Interamerican Development Bank (IDB)
- Organization of American States (OAS)
- Roundtable On Sustainable Biofuels (RSB)
- Harvard University
- Bioenergy wiki
- UNF is also a partner in the in the US-Brazil
Biofuels Initiative
4World Markets and Export Opportunities
Cereal Imports of Developing Countries
1970-2030
Historical Development
Projections
240
East Asia
190
South Asia
Near East/North Africa
Latin America
140
s.S.Africa
million tonnes
90
40
-10
1970
1980
1990
2000
2015
2030
5Biomass Trade Flows
Source adapted from IEA (2007).
6Trade Scenarios Restricted Trade
- Policies that block or distort trade will change
where biomass is produced - Almost all regions of the world will produce
bioenergy. Main producers Latin America, USA,
Africa and Europe - The level of global bioenergy production is lower
in comparison to unrestricted trade
7Trade Scenarios Unrestricted Trade
- Largest biofuel producers Latin America, Africa
and US because of low land prices and high
biomass productivity - Global demand will be supplied by those regions
with the lowest cost of production - Production expands in other regions only when the
cost of biofuels rises in a low cost region due
to the rise of land prices - Bioenergy exports are around 18 EJ/year in 2050
and around 125 EJ/year in 2100
8Bioenergy and Food - Crop Prices
9Pricing Agriculture through the Energy Markets
P,S, EP-EQ
Maize, US
Subsidies
Energy prices
Sugar, BRA
Lack of market integration
Growing market integration should take
competitive feedstocks to their energy price
equivalent, subsidies can keep them above that
level
T, t
10Biofuels Took-off when World Inventories Were
Declining
11Why Bioenergy?
- Potential for energy access in underserved areas
urban poor, rural off-grid communities - Potential to contribute to climate change
mitigation - Only current alternative fuel for transport sector
12Bioenergy Development Options
13The Present Market
- Ethanol growing rapidly, from 0.4 EJ in 2000 to
0.8 EJ in 2005 - Sugar cane ethanol in Brazil corn ethanol in US
rapeseed biodiesel in Europe - Biofuel production and use stimulated by
mandatory targets and subsidies - In US ethanol is used mostly as fuel additive
- 1 of total road transport fuel in energy terms,
but impact on food prices and environmental
consequences - Limits of present technology
14- Climate and Energy Package for 2020 (EU)
- 20 reduction in GHG emissions (30 with
international agreement) - 20 improvement in energy efficiency
- 20 overall share of renewable energy
- 10 share of renewable energy in transport
15EU Setting Guidelines
- Biofuels have to be 35 better than fossil fuels
from GHG perspective. - Methodologies must be consistent across the board
- Germany, UK and the Netherlands adopting internal
methodologies that may differ from EC - Major public issue is land use, land use change
and forestry.
16Indicative ranges of greenhouse gas abatement
potential from biofuels
Wide ranges are partly due to varying LCA
assumptions and methodologies.
17From Corn to Sugar Cane to Cellulosic Biomass,
Ethanol GHG Emission Reductions Are Increased
GHG Emission Reductions by Ethanol Relative to
Gasoline (per Energy Unit Basis)
Corn Ethanol
18Consideration of land use change
Direct LUC is applied. Conservative presumption
carbon-rich, regional typical land cover (forest,
grassland) is replaced C-balance including
above/below biomass, SOCdifference divided by 20
years (amortization)
Indirect LUC the Federal Government plans to
continue promoting further study of the indirect
effects of land utilization changes vigorously in
order to amend Annex 2 accordingly as soon as
possible, thereby contributing to the discussion
within the EU. (BSO, special notes) Risk
Adder has been a tremendous issue - and again
is!
19System boundary
Land use change
e.g. natural forest to short rotation forest
Co-products? allocation or substitution
Production of biomass (forestry, agriculture)
Starting point if biomass is waste
Transport of biomass
Co-products? allocation or substitution
Conversion process (where required)
Transport of converted / processed biomass
Use phase(which way, which efficiency)
Requirements for replaced reference system
power heat
20German Estimates of GHG Emissions with Indirect
Land Use Change
hydr. Oil
Bioethanol
straight Oil
FAME
200
180
160
140
120
100
Reference systems
kg CO2-e per GJ Biofuel
80
60
30 saving
40
20
0
Wheat (EU)
Corn (N.Am.)
rapeseed (EU)
soybean (N.Am.)
rapeseed (EU)
soybean (N.Am.)
rapeseed (EU)
soybean (N.Am.)
soybean (L.Am.)
Palm oil (SE.As.)
soybean (L.Am.)
Palm oil (SE.As.)
soybean (L.Am.)
Palm oil (SE.As.)
sugarbeet (EU)
sugarcane (L.Am.)
21Production Scenario No Climate Policy
- Strongly growing production of biofuels beginning
after 2020 driven primarily by high oil price
(oil price in 2100 over 4.5 times price in 2000) - In 2050 global biofuels production reaches 30-40
EJ/year (0.8 EJ/year in 2005). 5 of global
primary energy use - In 2100 global biofuels production reaches
180-260 EJ/year. 15 of global primary energy use
- Global land area required for bioenergy
production in 2100 700 million hectares
22Production ScenarioClimate-Related Constraints
- Carbon policies will result in an increase in
energy prices and in demand for carbon-free fuels
- Limited alternatives to power vehicles
- Bioenergy will be more competitive, but the entry
depends on the relative price of fossil fuels and
biofuels - The potential of bioenergy is limited by land
availability - Global land area required for bioenergy in 2100
1 billion hectares - Biofuels production of 90-130 EJ/year by 2050
and 250-370 EJ/year by 2100. 30 of global energy
needs - Change in energy-producing countries (from fossil
fuels to bioenergy) ? potential redistribution of
wealth, with negative impacts on the Middle East
and Russia and the most positive impacts on Latin
America and Africa
23What is the Potential for Biofuels?
- IEA analyses show
- double current 58 billion litres by 2012 but
less than installed plant capacity due to high
feedstock costs (Medium Term Oil market report) - Ninefold increase by 2030, but still only 6 of
world transport fuels by 2030 (WEO, 2007) - 13-25 by 2050 (ETP, 2006).
- Biofuels for rail, marine, aviation and heavy
freight transport perhaps more long term
potential than for small road vehicles that might
use electric or hydrogen propulsion. - Improved energy efficiency of vehicles most
important whether there is increased demand for
biofuels or not.
24Roundtable on Sustainable Biofuels
- One Steering Board composed of international
stakeholders from UN Foundation, UNEP, UNCTAD,
Shell, WWF, BP, Petrobras, Toyota, TERI India,
Mali Folkecenter, Bunge, and others. - One secretariat based at Ecole Polytechnique
Federale de Lausanne (EPFL) - Four Working Groups (GHG, Environment, Social,
and Implementation) smaller Expert Advisory
Groups to make recommendations to the Steering
Board. 180 participants from international
organisations, NGOs, private sector and academic
institutions have signed up for one or more
Working Groups. - Global stakeholder feedback at every step (blogs,
meetings, wiki technology, pilot projects,
regional outreaches) - Innovative transparent standard-setting using
www.BioenergyWiki.net, to share background
information and share comments with other
participants.
25RSB Principles
- Seven draft principles for policies
- Legal and transparent
- Contribute to climate stabilization
- Protect human rights and labor standards
- Contribute to social and economic development of
rural/indigenous communities - Enhance food security and biodiversity
- IADB accepted principles last week
26THANK YOU! mkimble_at_unfoundation.org