Abstract

AbstractThe fuel supply of forest chips has to adapt to the annual fluctuations of power and heat generation. This creates inefficiency and unbalances the capacity utilization of the fuel supply fleet in the direct fuel supplies from roadside storages to power and heat generation. Terminals can offer an alternative approach for the fleet management of fuel supplies in terms of smoothing the unbalanced fleet use towards more even year‐round operations. The aim of the study was to compare the supply costs of a conventional direct forest chip supply to an alternative fuel supply with the use of a feed‐in terminal using the discrete‐event simulation method. The influences of the terminal location, terminal investment cost, outbound terminal transport method, terminal truck utilization and quality changes of terminal‐stored forest chips for the fuel supply cost were studied in the case environment. By introducing a feed‐in terminal and a shuttle truck for the transports of terminal‐stored forest chips, the total supply cost was 1.4% higher than the direct fuel supply scenario. In terminal scenarios, the supply costs increased 1–2% if the cost of the terminal investment increased 30%, the distance to the terminal increased from 5 to 30 km or the total annual use of a terminal truck decreased 1500 h. Moreover, a 1 per cent point per month increase in the dry matter loss of terminal‐stored chips increased the total supply cost 1%. The study revealed that with the relatively low additional cost, the feed‐in terminal can be introduced to the conventional forest chip supply. Cost compensation can be gained through the higher annual use of a fuel supply fleet and more secured fuel supply to power plants by decreasing the need for supplement fuel, which can be more expensive at a time of the highest fuel demand.

Highlights

  • Material-storing terminals are widely used in various material and goods supply logistics

  • Scenarios with higher amounts of forest chip supply than the business as usual (BAU) scenario 1A1 resulted in longer transport distances (Fig. 4)

  • To meet the demand for the forest chip supply, the external shift during the high heating season was needed for the supply fleet

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Summary

Introduction

Material-storing terminals are widely used in various material and goods supply logistics. Biomass supply logistics for energy generation, especially in large scale, require fuel terminals in the supply system (Virkkunen et al, 2015). The use of terminals in the forest fuel supply has notably increased in Nordic countries (K€arh€a, 2011; Palander & Voutilainen, 2013; Routa et al, 2013; Kons et al, 2014; Virkkunen et al, 2015; Strandstro€m, 2016). The operations of a fuel supply fleet in traditional fuel supply systems have to adapt to the annual fluctuations of power and heat production.

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