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Helpful resources
1. Energy conversion factors:
http://www.forestencyclopedia.net/p/p2/p1138/p1188
Klass, Donald L. 1998. Biomass for renewable energy, fuels, and
chemicals. (Electronic resource) Appendix A. Available in U of T
electronic library .
2. Biomass feedstocks
http://www.ornl.gov/ornlhome/energy.shtml - Bioenergy
feedstock information network
3. Bioenergy conversion processes
Biorefineries [electronic resource]: for biomass upgrading facilities. A.
Dembirbas (2009) Springer. Available as Electronic book in
University of Toronto Library.
Biomass for renewable energy, fuels, and chemicals[electronic
resource]. D.L. Klass, Donald (1998).
Renewable Energy Systems [electronic resource edited by Martin
Kaltschmitt, Nickolas J. Themelis, Lucien Y. Bronicki, Lennart Sder,
Luis A. Vega. New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer,
3
2013
Helpful resources
4. International Energy Agency (IEA) www.ieabioenergy.com
Vision: to achieve a substantial bioenergy contribution to
future global energy demands by accelerating production and
use of environmentally sound, socially acceptable and
cost-competitive bioenergy on a sustainable basis, thus
providing increased security of supply whilst reducing green
house gas emissions from energy use.
Technical
Introduction to Bioenergy/Biorefinery
Exploring Concepts and
Terminology
Learning Objectives:
-Renewable/sustainable Energy
-Bioenergy
-Forms of Bioenergy
-Biomass
-Biorefinery
-Energy resource trends
7
Renewability
What is definition of a non-renewable energy
resource?
an economic resource that can not be replaced once it is
used up.
Examples?
Coal, crude Oil, natural gas, uranium.
What is the definition of a renewable energy resource?
A type of natural resource that can be replenished or
takes a rather short period of time for nature to produce
in order to sustain the rate of consumption.
Examples?
corn or wheat based bioethanol
biodiesel from palm oil
biodiesel from waste oil
heat/power generated from forest harvest residues 8
Sustainability
What is definition of a sustainable energy
resource?
1. Balances three sustainability pillars
Example: Oil Palm https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7BRGj0DwYwA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tzXAIb6xQSk
Questions: Why is oil palm production not sustainable?
What are solutions to make its production sustainable?
9
Terms Energy Resources
1. Primary Energy Resource:
Is one that occurs naturally!
can be used directly or converted to usable energy. (only extracted or captured or
separated, to make energy available)
1. Renewable: an energy resource that does not deplete resource or resource is replenished in
a reasonable timeframe. (normally domestic, clean and inexhaustible)
1. Solar radiation
2. Wind
3. Hydropower
4. Geothermal
5. Tidal/Wave power
6. Biomass
2. Non-renewable: an energy resource that is not replaced or replaced very slowly by natural
processes (not available in our lifetime)
1. Fossil Fuel (Coal, bitumen, petroleum/oil, natural gas, tar sands)R/P oil 54 yr, NG 64 yr,
coal 112yr)
2. Uranium
3. Refined fuels
Primary energy converts to secondary energy
resources
Efficiency =
output energy/input energy 11
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/envaccounting/londongroup/meeting13/LG13_12a.pdf
Renewable Energy Drivers
1. Limited fossil fuel resources supply
Increasing cost??
2. Growing global energy demand
Population growth
Higher standard of living
Industrialization of developing countries
3. Global climate change
maximum of 20C raise in temperature by 2050
There is medium confidence that approximately 20 to 30% of plant
and animal species assessed so far are likely to be at increased
risk of extinction if increases in global average temperature exceed
1.5 to 2.5C [over 1980-1999 levels [IPCC]
14
15
18
Klass
Energy and standard of living (per capita)
Developing
Nations
2050 9
billion
20
http://www.nasa.gov/topics/earth/features/2011-temps.html
4. North America & European Energy Security
Crude oil prices 1861-2015
US dollars per barrel, world events
25
$60 60
$40 40
$20 20
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Terms Bioenergy
Definition of Bioenergy:
Energy derived from biomass resources
A type of renewable energy produced from organic
matter.
Conversion of solar energy that is captured in plant materials to
produce heat, power or fuel.
This includes i)biopower, ii)biofuels used for transportation, and
iii) space heat/industrial heat
Examples:
1. Firewood direct combustion
2. Bioethanol liquid fuel
3. Co-generation
production of electricity & heat (CHP)
29
Forms of Bioenergy
Bioenergy is unique among renewable energy
1. Solid fuels
Firewood, pellets, forest / agricultural waste
2. Liquid fuels
Bio-alcohol - uses hydrolysis and fermentation
(carbohydrates) or thermal processing. Iogen
Biodiesel - uses refining of oil (lipids,triglycerides, eg seeds/
algae) Biox corp. and thermal conversion
Bio-oil, Pyrolysis oil uses thermal degradation
Dynamotive, Ensyn, Haliburton Forest
3. Gas Fuels
Biogas- uses anaerobic digestion (60% CH4 & 40% CO2)
New Forest
Methane, synthetic NG [ syngas, SNG] uses thermal
degradation (gasification) and catalytic conversion technologies
30
Nexterra
Term - Biorefinery
can be a
facility
a process
a plant
or a
cluster of
facilities
de Jong, 2015 31
Term - Biorefinery
Objectives:
1. To extract all the added value from the biomass
feedstock, leaving little or no waste
2. Have a number of co-product revenue streams
3. Use bioenergy for GHG saving by replacement of
fossil-based energy.
34
First day on the job!
http://www.history.com/shows/ax-men/videos/playlists/season-3-
exclusives#ax-men-felling-a-tree
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rd4uB0U_qBw