Biorefinery feedstock availability and price variability : case study of the Peace River region, Alberta

The purpose of this research was to quantify feedstock supply risk over the lifetime of an agricultural residue-based (straw and chaff) biorefinery and to determine the range of delivered prices. The Peace River region of Alberta was used as a case study for analysis, with a geographic information...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Stephen, James Duncan
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/1008
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-1008
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-10082014-03-26T03:34:54Z Biorefinery feedstock availability and price variability : case study of the Peace River region, Alberta Stephen, James Duncan Bioenergy Dynamic modelling The purpose of this research was to quantify feedstock supply risk over the lifetime of an agricultural residue-based (straw and chaff) biorefinery and to determine the range of delivered prices. The Peace River region of Alberta was used as a case study for analysis, with a geographic information system utilized for data analysis. Inter-year availability of crop residues was highly variable over the 20 year period under study, which created significant differences in the delivered price of feedstock between minimum, average, and maximum availability scenarios. At the four primary study sites (Fahler, Grimshaw, Peace River, and Sexsmith), the range was from double the average availability for the maximum scenario to zero biomass available for the minimum scenario. Biomass availability is a function of grain yield, the biomass to grain ratio, the cropping frequency, and residue retention rate used to ensure future crop productivity. Using minimum, average, and maximum supply scenarios, delivered price was determined using the dynamic (time-dependent) Integrated Biomass Supply Analysis and Logistics (IBSAL) simulation model. Five biorefinery capacities, ranging from 50,000 to 500,000 tonnes of feedstock per year, were analyzed. Since no biomass was available to model in true minimum years, a simulated minimum of half the average availability was used. Delivered cost, including harvest and transportation, for the 50,000 t plant ranged from $24.01 t-1 for the maximum availability scenario at the Sexsmith site to $42.63 t-1 for the simulated minimum scenario at the Fahler site. The range for the 500,000 t plant at the Sexsmith site was $41.78 for the maximum availability and $70.98 for the simulated minimum availability. As no biomass is available (and hence the true cost is unknown) in some years, storage strategies must be implemented and alternate feedstock sources identified to supply biorefineries in low-yield years. Since feedstock cost is a large component of total operating cost of a biorefinery, feedstock supply variability and delivered cost inconsistency should be primary decision criteria for any future biorefinery projects. 2008-07-15T20:20:53Z 2008-07-15T20:20:53Z 2008 2008-07-15T20:20:53Z 2008-11 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/1008 eng University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Bioenergy
Dynamic modelling
spellingShingle Bioenergy
Dynamic modelling
Stephen, James Duncan
Biorefinery feedstock availability and price variability : case study of the Peace River region, Alberta
description The purpose of this research was to quantify feedstock supply risk over the lifetime of an agricultural residue-based (straw and chaff) biorefinery and to determine the range of delivered prices. The Peace River region of Alberta was used as a case study for analysis, with a geographic information system utilized for data analysis. Inter-year availability of crop residues was highly variable over the 20 year period under study, which created significant differences in the delivered price of feedstock between minimum, average, and maximum availability scenarios. At the four primary study sites (Fahler, Grimshaw, Peace River, and Sexsmith), the range was from double the average availability for the maximum scenario to zero biomass available for the minimum scenario. Biomass availability is a function of grain yield, the biomass to grain ratio, the cropping frequency, and residue retention rate used to ensure future crop productivity. Using minimum, average, and maximum supply scenarios, delivered price was determined using the dynamic (time-dependent) Integrated Biomass Supply Analysis and Logistics (IBSAL) simulation model. Five biorefinery capacities, ranging from 50,000 to 500,000 tonnes of feedstock per year, were analyzed. Since no biomass was available to model in true minimum years, a simulated minimum of half the average availability was used. Delivered cost, including harvest and transportation, for the 50,000 t plant ranged from $24.01 t-1 for the maximum availability scenario at the Sexsmith site to $42.63 t-1 for the simulated minimum scenario at the Fahler site. The range for the 500,000 t plant at the Sexsmith site was $41.78 for the maximum availability and $70.98 for the simulated minimum availability. As no biomass is available (and hence the true cost is unknown) in some years, storage strategies must be implemented and alternate feedstock sources identified to supply biorefineries in low-yield years. Since feedstock cost is a large component of total operating cost of a biorefinery, feedstock supply variability and delivered cost inconsistency should be primary decision criteria for any future biorefinery projects.
author Stephen, James Duncan
author_facet Stephen, James Duncan
author_sort Stephen, James Duncan
title Biorefinery feedstock availability and price variability : case study of the Peace River region, Alberta
title_short Biorefinery feedstock availability and price variability : case study of the Peace River region, Alberta
title_full Biorefinery feedstock availability and price variability : case study of the Peace River region, Alberta
title_fullStr Biorefinery feedstock availability and price variability : case study of the Peace River region, Alberta
title_full_unstemmed Biorefinery feedstock availability and price variability : case study of the Peace River region, Alberta
title_sort biorefinery feedstock availability and price variability : case study of the peace river region, alberta
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/1008
work_keys_str_mv AT stephenjamesduncan biorefineryfeedstockavailabilityandpricevariabilitycasestudyofthepeaceriverregionalberta
_version_ 1716654730946543616