Title: Biofuels: Environmental Friend or Foe?
1Biofuels Environmental Friend or Foe?
- Presentation to 1st Year
- Environmental Engineering Students
- Deniz Karman
2- What are biofuels?
- Why biofuels?
- Why not biofuels?
- Life-cycle analysis
3- Primary energy sources
- Coal
- Oil
- Natural gas
- Hydro
- Nuclear
- Solar
- Wind
- Biomass
Fossil fuels
- Energy carriers
- Electricity
- Hydrogen
- Energy conversion systems for transportation
- IC engines
- Electric vehicles (EV)
- IC-electric hybrids
- Fuel cell vehicles (FCV)
- FCV hybrids
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10Grain
Corn
Ethanol C2H5OH
SugarCane
Cellulosic Material
11- Biodiesel feedstocks
- Oilseeds
- soybean, canola (rapeseed)
- - Waste oil
- - Animal sources
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13Biofuels
- Can we quantify the positive and negative impacts
to make an overall assessment? - Some easier than others, e.g.
- CO2 emissions vs biodiversity
- or,
- Socio-economic factors
- Case study CO2 reductions how much?
14(Oxburgh 2008)
15 16- How are the CO2 emissions per unit energy in the
previous chart calculated? - The combustion of ethanol emits the same quantity
of CO2 per unit energy regardless of the sources
of the ethanol. - If the C in the ethanol comes from biomass, it
was captured from the atmosphere and does not
represent a net emission - The difference in the emissions results from the
energy use during the cultivation and processing
of the feedstock to obtain the ethanol - Thus we cannot look at just the emissions during
combustion and must do a life-cycle analysis to
quantify the CO2 emissions
17- The phases in the life of a product
- We can identify the energy requirements and
environmental emissions associated with each
phase. - Life-cycle analysis aims to quantify these.
-
- Recycling avoids some (but not all) of these
energy requirements and emissions.
18- The life-cycle of a paper grocery bag.
- Recycling paper avoids some (but not all) of
these energy requirements and emissions. - Alternatively, plastic (polyethylene) grocery
bags can be used. - To compare the two options we need to complete a
life-cycle analysis for both products.
19Life-cycle analysis for motor vehicles
Vehicle Cycle
Objective and quantitative evaluation of
environmental performance for fuel/vehicle
technologies
Pre-operation Material production, component
fabrication and vehicle assembly
New vehicles
Upstream operations Feedstock and Fuel
production, transportation, storage, and
distribution
Vehicle operation energy conversion and
emissions from combustion
FUEL
Old vehicles
There are energy requirements and pollutant
emissions associated with each of these stages
Post-operation Vehicle disposal and recycling
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21- Figure 2 Comparison of the greenhouse gases
emitted by biofuels in comparison to those
emitted by fossil fuels (petrol and diesel,
EURO3). The emissions are broken down into the
individual process of the value chain.
22- How can we try to capture some of the other
factors that are relevant for comparing the
environmental performance of alternative fuels? - One example follows.
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24- Figure 3
- Comparison of aggregated environmental impact
(method of ecological scarcity, UBP 06) of bio
fuels in comparison with fossil fuels (petrol,
diesel and natural gas). The environmental impact
is broken down by individual processes of value
chain.
25- The method of ecological scarcity (UBP 06). . .
estimates the total environmental impact from the
difference between emission values and the legal
limits.
26Conclusions
- Not all biofuels are the same in terms of their
positive and negative effects. - The motivation for and the effects of biofuels
differ among different regions of the World - Life cycle analysis is a MUST in assessing the
environmental impacts of biofuels but may not
give all the answers - apples and oranges may need to be compared