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Bioenergy: Large-Scale Production and Climate Change Implications Jerome Weingart and Judy Siegel Energy and Security Group Reston, Virginia (USA) International Conference on Sustainable Bioenergy Bonn, Germany October 12-13, 2006 Focus of presentation • Principal climate impact areas: largescale biomass production and use for energy • Research and analysis necessary to understand these impacts • Case example: potential of liquid biofuels to offset GHG emissions in the road transport sector of developing Asia (excludes Japan, S. Korea, Singapore). Constraints: Biofuels Production and Use • Environmental impacts (land conversion) – Tropical forest replacement by monocrops – Deforestation – Diminished ecological diversity and resilience; destruction of wildlife habitat – Nutrient leaching – Pollution from chemicals – Loss of watersheds – Soil erosion, mud slides, and forest fires • Need to protect soil productivity, water quality, and other ecosystem services (WRI) Constraints: Biofuels Production and Use • Potential competition for food production • Availability of suitable land Land required for long-term global biofuels feedstock production (10% substitution) * Biofuel Ethanol (cellulose) Ethanol (sugar beet) Ethanol (sugar beet) Biodiesel 107 ha 15 % world cropland 10 % 16 11 % 6 4% 17 12 % * IEA (2004) Automotive Fuels for the Future (pp 75-76) Biofuels from field to wheels: monocropping, diversity reduction, and destruction of habitat Oil palm plantation Climate Change Issues • Climate system impacts through altered land use and massive cultivation (including water use) – Altered surface roughness – Altered evapotranspiration rates – Altered surface albedo – Nitrogen oxides & methane from agriculture • (others) For panel discussion today Biofuels Climate Benefits • GHG emissions displacement • Improved air quality (tailpipe emissions reductions) • Reclamation of degraded land (e.g. via Jatropha) • Reduction of sand storms and atmospheric dust • Slowing of desertification (eventual reversal?) Greenhouse Gas Emissions from the Asia Vehicle Transport Sector * Scenarios for market penetration of low-GHG biofuels J. Weingart (2006). Analysis for the Asian Development Bank Global GHG Emissions from Energy * World Resources Institute (2005). Navigating the Numbers Global GHG Emissions from Transport * World Resources Institute (2005). Navigating the Numbers Road fuels global production in 2005 Fuel Production (billion liters/year) Crude oil Gasoline (road sector) 4,705 IEA model Diesel (road sector) IEA model Bioethanol (1.7% energy basis) Biodiesel (0.5% energy basis) 1,289 668 33 4 World-wide demand for liquid fuels for road transport (IEA/SMP) 2000 - 2050 3,500 MMtoe/year 3,000 2,500 Rest of World 2,000 OECD Pacific OECD Europe 1,500 OECD North America 1,000 Other Asia India China 500 0 2000 2010 2020 2030 Year 2040 2050 MMTOE per year Liquid Fuels for Transport in Asia: IEA Base Case Scenario (IEA-SMP transport model) 1,000 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 2000 Other Asia India China 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050 Year IEA/SMP = International Energy Agency / Sustainable Mobility Project Vehicle Ownership Rate Estimates for China and India Vehicles per 1,000 people 250 200 150 China India 100 50 0 1990 2000 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050 2060 China – from this, to … this, and to … This! The future (?): 6-fold GHG emissions growth from Asia road transport MMT CO2-e per year for China, India, and emerging Asia road transport fuels 3500 MMT CO2-e/year 3000 2500 2000 Gasoline 1500 Diesel 1000 500 0 2000 2010 2020 * Reference case (from IEA/SMP model) 2030 2040 2050 Why are we interested in biofuels for the Asian road transport sector? • • • • Potentially competitive with petrofuels Indigenous, can offset imported petroleum Significant reduction in tailpipe emissions Potential for major reduction (80 – 95%) in net unit life-cycle GHG emissions compared with petrofuels, and • Potential for large-scale sustainable production (perhaps) What is a scenario? • A scenario is like a screen play for the future. • A scenario is NOT a prediction; it asks “what if”, using rules that reflect real world market dynamics and constraints What is a market penetration scenario? • Model of a possible future • Analytic – logistic penetration model for increasing market share of an “intruder” into an “incumbent” market (“S”-shaped curve) • Permits specification of key parameters to assess impacts of alternative penetration rates and ultimate market fraction for new options Stages of market penetration Fraction of market penetration Logistic Penetration (1% to 50% in 20 years) 1.0 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 Pioneering 0 Illustrative phases of market development Maturation Market dynamism Takeoff Expansion Prototype 5 10 15 20 25 Year 30 35 40 45 Two illustrative scenarios: biofuels penetration of road fuel markets in Asia • 10% to 90% penetration in 50 years • Logistic (“S”-shaped) penetration • “Extreme” biofuels market penetration S1 – Potential market = 50% road fuels – 75% lower associated GHG emissions • “Ultimate” biofuels market penetration S2 – Potential market = 100% road fuels – 90% lower associated GHG emissions GHG Emissions Impacts of Biofuels Field-to-wheel CO2-equivalent GHG emissions from biofuels, per km, relative to base fuel 0% -20% -40% -60% -80% -100% -120% Ethanol Ethanol Ethanol from grains, from sugar from sugar US/EU beets, EU cane, Brazil Ethanol from cellulosic feedstocks Source: 25 L. Fulton (2004), IEA (currently at UNEP Nairobi) Biodiesel from rapeseed, EU Asia road transport GHG emissions with and without accelerated biofuels penetration S1 Petroleum fuels With biofuels 3,500 MMT CO2-e/year 3,000 Business as usual GHG emissions 2,500 2,000 1,500 Biofuels and reduced GHG emissions 1,000 500 1990 2000 2010 2020 2030 Year 2040 2050 2060 Asia road transport GHG emissions with and without extreme biofuels penetration S2 Base case 100% petro fuels Aggressive penetration low GHG biofuels 3,500 Business as usual GHG emissions MMT CO2-e/year 3,000 2,500 2,000 1,500 High biofuels penetration GHG emissions 1,000 500 1990 2000 2010 2020 2030 Year 2040 2050 2060 How to maximize biofuels offsets of GHG emissions • Reduce growth in transport fuel demand • Increased end use efficiency is much less expensive than expanding supply • This is the “golden rule” for renewables Potential next steps • Consistent life-cycle analysis for large-scale bio-ethanol and biodiesel production/use (“platform” for climate impact analysis and assessment) • Collaboration among national biofuels working groups using compatible LCA and environmental impact methodologies • Establishment of biofuels collaboratives for collaboration, coordination, technical assistance, and knowledge management New Bioenergy Center (Washington, DC) • International NGO Renew the Earth has established a bioenergy center • Purposes include – Bioenergy information clearinghouse – Analysis of alternative bioenergy options – Assessment of bioenergy sustainability requirements and opportunities For more information: Judy Siegel [email protected] Jerome Weingart [email protected]