Abstract

Biorefineries for the production of fuels, chemicals, or materials can be an important contributor to reducing dependence on fossil fuels. The economic performance of the biorefinery supply chain can be increased by, for example, industrial integration to utilise excess heat and products, increasing size to improve economy of scale, and using intermediate upgrading to reduce feedstock transport cost. To enable a large-scale introduction of biorefineries it is important to identify cost efficient supply chain configurations.This work investigates a lignocellulosic biorefinery concept integrated with forest industry, focusing on how different economic conditions affect the preferred supply chain configurations. The technology investigated is black liquor gasification, with and without the addition of pyrolysis liquids to increase production capacity. Primarily, it analyses trade-offs between high biomass conversion efficiency and economy of scale effects, as well as the selection of centralised vs. decentralised supply chain configurations.The results show the economic advantage for biomass efficient configurations, when the biorefinery investment is benefited from an alternative investment credit due to the replacement of current capital-intensive equipment at the host industry. However, the investment credit received heavily influenced the cost of the biorefinery and clearly illustrates the benefit for industrial integration to reduce the cost of biorefineries. There is a benefit for a decentralised supply chain configuration under very high biomass competition. However, for lower biomass competition, site-specific conditions will impact the favourability of either centralised or decentralised supply chain configurations.

Highlights

  • Biorefineries for the production of hydrocarbons in the form of fuels, chemicals, or materials, can make an important contribution to reaching a fossil-free economy

  • From a supply chain cost perspective, the results show that the supply chain configuration scenario (1) Black liquor gasification (BLG) is economically favourable compared to the co-gasification cases, indicating that high biomass conversion efficiency is favoured over larger facilities

  • This work investigated a forest industry integrated biorefinery concept based on black liquor gasification with, and without the addition of pyrolysis liquids

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Summary

Introduction

Biorefineries for the production of hydrocarbons in the form of fuels, chemicals, or materials, can make an important contribution to reaching a fossil-free economy. Several factors influence the performance of biorefinery supply chains, for example, biomass conversion efficiency, economy of scale, transportation cost, and commodity prices, as well as the choice of transport modes, and location of facilities [1,2]. A number of previous studies have shown that the integration of biorefineries with other industries, for example, utilisation of excess heat and by-products, can be beneficial (e.g., [3,4]). Integration with traditional forest industries can be beneficial in terms of logistics, due to the industries’ experience in operating large-scale biomass Nomenclature. BL BLG CAPEX CEPCI CHP black liquor black liquor gasification capital expenditures chemical engineering plant cost index combined heat and power. For biorefinery concepts relying on industrial by-products as feedstock, the production capacity will be limited by the feedstock availability. To increase the production capacity an additional feedstock is required, but depending on the by-product, the additional feedstock might require pre-processing

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