Estimating the energy return on investment of forestry biomass: Impacts of feedstock, production techniques and post-processing

IF 5.9 3区 工程技术 Q1 AGRONOMY Global Change Biology Bioenergy Pub Date : 2024-05-06 DOI:10.1111/gcbb.13146
Martin Colla, Etienne de Chambost, Louis Merceron, Julien Blondeau, Hervé Jeanmart, Guillaume Boissonnet
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Abstract

The Energy Return On Investment (EROI) is a recognised indicator for assessing the relevance of an energy project in terms of net energy delivered to society. For woody biomass divergences remain on the right methodology to assess the EROI leading to large variations in the published estimates. This article presents an in-depth discussion about the EROI of woody biomass in three different forms: woodchips, pellets and liquid fuels. The conceptualisation of EROI is further developed to reach a consistent definition for biomass post-processed fuels. It considers, on top of the external energy investments, the grey energy associated with the energy used to enrich the fuel. With the proposed methodology, all woodchips have an EROI of the same order of magnitude, between 20 and 37, depending on forestry types, operations and machineries. For secondary residues, the first estimate is 170 if, as co-products, no energy investment is allocated to the forestry operations and transport. On the basis of a mass allocation for forestry operations and transport, the EROI for secondary residues becomes of the same order of magnitude as that for wood chips. Woodchips can be further post-processed into pellets or liquid fuels. Pellets have an EROI of 4–7 if the heat is externally supplied and 8–23 if internally supplied (self-consumption of part of the raw material). Liquid fuels derived from primary wood and residues through gasification and Fischer-Tropsch synthesis have an EROI between 4 and 16. Fuel enhancement with hydrogen (Power & Biomass to Liquids) impacts negatively the EROI due to the low EROI of hydrogen produced from renewable electricity. However, these fuels offer other advantages such as improved carbon efficiency. A correct estimate of EROI for forestry biomass, as proposed in this work, is a necessary dimension in assessing the suitability of a project.

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估算林业生物质的能源投资回报:原料、生产技术和后处理的影响
能源投资回报率(EROI)是一项公认的指标,用于评估能源项目在向社会提供净能源方面的相关性。就木质生物质而言,在评估 EROI 的正确方法上仍存在分歧,导致公布的估算结果差异很大。本文深入讨论了三种不同形式木质生物质的经济效益指数:木屑、颗粒燃料和液体燃料。本文进一步发展了 EROI 的概念,以便为生物质后处理燃料提供一致的定义。除外部能源投资外,它还考虑了与燃料浓缩能源相关的灰色能源。根据建议的方法,所有木片的 EROI 数量级相同,在 20 到 37 之间,具体取决于林业类型、操作和机械。对于次生残渣,如果作为副产品,林业作业和运输不需要能源投资,则第一个估计值为 170。在对林业作业和运输进行大规模分配的基础上,次生残渣的 EROI 与木片的 EROI 处于同一数量级。木屑可进一步后加工成颗粒或液体燃料。如果热量由外部提供,颗粒燃料的 EROI 为 4-7,如果由内部提供(部分原料自用),则为 8-23。通过气化和费托合成从原木和残留物中提取的液体燃料,其 EROI 在 4 到 16 之间。由于从可再生电力中产生的氢气的 EROI 较低,使用氢气增强燃料(Power & 生物质转化为液体)会对 EROI 产生负面影响。不过,这些燃料还具有其他优势,例如提高了碳效率。正确估算林业生物质的经济效益指数是评估项目是否合适的一个必要因素。
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来源期刊
Global Change Biology Bioenergy
Global Change Biology Bioenergy AGRONOMY-ENERGY & FUELS
CiteScore
10.30
自引率
7.10%
发文量
96
审稿时长
1.5 months
期刊介绍: GCB Bioenergy is an international journal publishing original research papers, review articles and commentaries that promote understanding of the interface between biological and environmental sciences and the production of fuels directly from plants, algae and waste. The scope of the journal extends to areas outside of biology to policy forum, socioeconomic analyses, technoeconomic analyses and systems analysis. Papers do not need a global change component for consideration for publication, it is viewed as implicit that most bioenergy will be beneficial in avoiding at least a part of the fossil fuel energy that would otherwise be used. Key areas covered by the journal: Bioenergy feedstock and bio-oil production: energy crops and algae their management,, genomics, genetic improvements, planting, harvesting, storage, transportation, integrated logistics, production modeling, composition and its modification, pests, diseases and weeds of feedstocks. Manuscripts concerning alternative energy based on biological mimicry are also encouraged (e.g. artificial photosynthesis). Biological Residues/Co-products: from agricultural production, forestry and plantations (stover, sugar, bio-plastics, etc.), algae processing industries, and municipal sources (MSW). Bioenergy and the Environment: ecosystem services, carbon mitigation, land use change, life cycle assessment, energy and greenhouse gas balances, water use, water quality, assessment of sustainability, and biodiversity issues. Bioenergy Socioeconomics: examining the economic viability or social acceptability of crops, crops systems and their processing, including genetically modified organisms [GMOs], health impacts of bioenergy systems. Bioenergy Policy: legislative developments affecting biofuels and bioenergy. Bioenergy Systems Analysis: examining biological developments in a whole systems context.
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