1 / 87

Realizing Plants’ Full Potential: Electricity from Biomass

Realizing Plants’ Full Potential: Electricity from Biomass. By Becky Schanz and Megan Garvey Chicago-Kent College of Law Energy Law Presentation* bjschanz@earthlink.net mgarvey03@aol.com. Overview of Presentation. Introduction and Background

Télécharger la présentation

Realizing Plants’ Full Potential: Electricity from Biomass

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Realizing Plants’ Full Potential: Electricity from Biomass By Becky Schanz and Megan Garvey Chicago-Kent College of Law Energy Law Presentation* bjschanz@earthlink.net mgarvey03@aol.com

  2. Overview of Presentation • Introduction and Background • Technologies that Produce Electricity from Biomass • Legal Aspects • Conclusion

  3. Biomass: • Biomass is plant matter or other biological material, such as trees, grasses, or agricultural crops. • On average, biomass is made of 75% carbohydrates and 25% lignin. • Lignin forms the woody cell walls of the plants.

  4. Biomass • Wood and Wood products

  5. Biomass • Agricultural Biproducts and Residues

  6. Biomass • Trees, shrubs, grasses and other energy crops • Typically fast growing

  7. Bioenergy: • Bioenergy or biomass energy is any fuel, electric power, or useful chemical product derived from organic matter. • Bioenergy can be derived either directly from the plants or indirectly from plant-derived wastes and residues.

  8. Environmental Factors • Generates same amount of heat and carbon dioxide as from natural processes. • Renewable energy source • Reduces erosion by preserving soil

  9. Environmental Factors • Provides a habitat for wildlife species • Provides moisture retention and shade, which cools our atmosphere. • Most wood used is remnants from the logging industry, such as tree tops and wood chips.

  10. Reliability • The United States has an estimated 65-90 billion tons of dry matter. • At 2000 energy use levels, this biomass could supply 14-19 years of energy. • The Department of Energy states that all of the biomass available now has an energy content that would produce an estimated 2,740 Quads. • 1 Quad = 1,000,000,000,000,000 Btus

  11. US Sources of Biomass

  12. US Electricity Generation

  13. US Biomass Generation • The US is the largest biopower generator. It produces 37 billion kWh of biomass electricity which requires about 60 million tons of biomass a year. • The US has more than 7,000 MW of installed capacity. • We have about $15 billion invested and 66,000 jobs.

  14. Biomass Potential in Illinois

  15. Biomass Usage

  16. Marketing & Incentives • Green Power Marketing provides choices for consumers to purchase power from renewable or environmentally friendly sources. • Customers also pay a premium to support investment in renewable energy technologies.

  17. Marketing & Incentives • The EPA Combined Heat and Power Partnership program is a voluntary partnership between EPA, combined heat and power (CHP) industry, utilities, and state and local governments that create CHP programs.

  18. Biomass Uses for Energy • Heating – stoves, process heat • Cooking – developing world • Transportation – ethanol • Electric Power Production

  19. Technologies used to Produce Electricity from Biomass • Direct Combustion - burning biomass with excess air to produce steam

  20. Technologies (cont.) • Co-Firing – replaces part of the coal with biomass, as a supplementary energy source.

  21. Technologies (cont.) • Gasification – heat biomass without oxygen to produce a calorific gas

  22. Technologies (cont.) • Small Modular Bio-Power – develops small, efficient, clean biopower systems

  23. Direct-Fired Combustion • Oxidation of air and biomass • Produces hot flue gases that produce steam • Steam generates electricity in generators

  24. Direct-Fired Biomass System

  25. Small-Modular Systems • Less than 5 MW • Potential to power villages • Consist of power generation attached to the transmission and distribution grid, which is close to the end consumer. • Potential to supply 2.5 billion people who are currently without electricity.

  26. Gasification • Two processes: • Pyrolysis – releases volatile compounds of the fuel • Bigger role here than in coal fired plants • Char Conversion – carbon remaining after pyrolysis reacts with steam and/or oxygen (combustion) • Biomass has high reactivity

  27. Types of Gasifiers • Direct Gasifier • Indirect Gasifier

  28. Direct Gasifier

  29. Indirect Gasifier

  30. Gasification Process – Direct Gasifier • Plant gets wood chips • Biomass is gasified • Air is extracted from the gas turbine and fed into the gasifier • Gasification steam is extracted. • Remaining fuel gases are cooled.

  31. Gasification Process – Direct Gasifier • Fuel gas combusts and produces electric power and a high temperature exhaust steam • Exhaust steam expands in a steam turbine to produce additional power • Steam is extracted and electricity is sent to a substation

  32. Generating Capacity • The United States has about 7 GW of grid-connected biomass generating capacity. • Coal-fired electric units are 297 GW of capacity, which is about 43% of total generating capacity.

  33. Vermont Project • Vermont has the first industrial biomass gasification process located in Burlington. • The process integrates a high-throughput gasifier with a high-efficiency gas turbine. • Circulating hot sand surrounds the biomass particles and the particles break down and produce gas. • This project uses an indirect gasifier system.

  34. Vermont Project

  35. Hawaii Project • Hawaii Biomass Gasifier is part of the DOE’s initiative to demonstrate a gasification system to turn biomass into electricity. • Its goal is to provide competitive electric power. • The plant uses maple wood chips, California highway clippings, paddy rice straw, fuel from refuse, bark, paper mill sludge, and alfalfa. • This project uses a direct gasifier system.

  36. Advantages of Gasification • Biomass closes the carbon system and therefore reduces emissions. • Biomass is low in sulfur • Biomass contains .05 to .20 % of weight is sulfur • Coal contains 2-3% of weight is sulfur

  37. Advantages of Gasification • Operates at a lower temperature and wider variety of feedstocks than direct combustion systems. • Can produce a Btu gas that is interchangeable with natural gas. • Produces nitrogen free gas. • Less landfill waste. • Future technologies are being developed • Fuel Cell Systems

  38. Disadvantages of Gasification • Some biomass plants have closed because of deregulation of the electric utility industry. • Hard to compete with cheaper sources, such as coal, oil, and nuclear. • Small amounts of tar are released in the gas. The tar can coat parts of the pipe or the equipment. • Catalyst reactor has been developed to decrease the amount of tar to parts-per-million.

  39. Disadvantages of Gasfication • Still a new technology and the Vermont Plant has not been able to operate continuously yet for a sustained period of days or weeks. • Over storage of wood fuel can lead to odor problems and spontaneous combustion.

  40. Present and Future Costs

  41. Costs • Capital costs of building a biomass-fired steam turbine plant is about $2000-2500 per KW of installed capacity. • These costs are expected to decrease in the future.

  42. Future of Gasification • Gasification has a bright future, once the technology is fine-tuned. • If the cost of the process decreases as expected, it will be able to compete economically with current energy sources.

  43. Co-Firing Biomass with Coal and the Legal/Governmental Incentives for Biomass as a Renewable

  44. Co-firing Biomass with Coal to produce Electricity • What is Co-firing? • The simultaneous combustion of biomass and coal in a pre-existing boiler of a traditional coal-fired power plant • 2 Methods • Blending • (+) Least expensive • (-) Limited amounts; higher possibility of damage • Separate Feed • (+) greater emission reductions; greater amounts of biomass tolerates; less harmful to existing boiler • (-) requires more resources (equipment, $)

  45. One form of “blending” is directly adding biomass to the coal-belt.

  46. Advantages of Co-firing:“Something for Everyone” The Existing Power Plant • Existing equipment is still utilized • Easier to meet environmental regulations and hedge future regulations • Cost savings • Tax incentives • Fuel supply options • Good PR

  47. Advantages of Co-firing:“Something for Everyone” Biomass • Encourages development of feedstock infrastructure • Creates a market for residues and energy crops

  48. Advantages of Co-firing:“Something for Everyone” The Environment • Reduces GHG emissions (CO2; CH4) • Reduces SO2 and NOX emissions • Reduces burden on landfills • Extends the life of coal-use for electricity generation

  49. Advantages of Co-firing:“Something for Everyone” The Economy $$$ • Provides an end use for low value/negative value products • Maintains existing market for coal • Increases domestic economic growth and job creation • Increase economic activity in rural/agricultural areas • Increase business for equipment suppliers

  50. Disadvantages of Co-firing Technological issues • Existing boilers/systems designed (exclusively) for fossil fuels • Negative impact on existing boilers • CL-based corrosion • Negative impact on boiler capacity

More Related