Environmental LCA and Financial Analysis to Evaluate the Feasibility of Bio-based Sugar Feedstock Biomass Supply Globally: Part 1. Supply Chain Analysis
Autor: | Ronalds Gonzalez, Stephen S. Kelley, Richard A. Venditti, Jesse Daystar, Carter Reeb, Tyler Hays |
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Rok vydání: | 2015 |
Předmět: |
Engineering
Environmental Engineering Waste management business.industry Delivered cost lcsh:Biotechnology Supply chain analysis food and beverages Biomass Bioengineering Raw material Biorefinery complex mixtures Energy crop Life cycle assessment Bioenergy Cellulosic ethanol lcsh:TP248.13-248.65 Biomass supply feasibility business Bagasse Waste Management and Disposal Life-cycle assessment |
Zdroj: | BioResources, Vol 10, Iss 4, Pp 8098-8134 (2015) |
ISSN: | 1930-2126 |
DOI: | 10.15376/biores.10.4.8098-8134 |
Popis: | Chemical production from crude oil represents a substantial percentage of the yearly fossil fuel use worldwide, and this could be partially offset by renewable feedstocks such as woody biomass and energy crops. Past techno-economic and environmental analyses have been conducted for isolated feedstocks on a regional or national scope. This study encompasses complete supply chain logistics analysis, delivered cost financial analysis, national availability, and environmental life cycle assessment (LCA) for 18 selected cellulosic feedstocks from around the world. A biochemical conversion route to monomeric sugars is assumed for estimated sugar yields and biosugar feedstock cost analysis. US corn grain was determined to have the highest delivered cost, while rice hulls in Indonesia resulted in the lowest cost of the feedstocks studied. Monomeric sugar yields from literature ranged from 358 kg BDMT-1 for US forest residues to 700 kg BDMT-1 for corn syrup. Environmental LCA was conducted in SimaPro using ecoinvent v2.2 data and the TRACI 2 impact assessment method for mid-point impacts cradle-to-incoming biorefinery gate. Carbon absorption during biomass growth contributed most substantially to the reduction of net global warming potential. Rice hulls and switchgrass resulted in the highest global warming potential, followed closely by corn and Thai sugarcane bagasse. Contribution analysis shows that chemical inputs such as fertilizer use contribute substantially to the net environmental impacts for these feedstocks. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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