Presentation Transcript
The Biorefinery in New York: Woody Biomass into Commercial Ethanol: The Biorefinery in New York: Woody Biomass into Commercial Ethanol Cornelius B. Murphy, Jr.
Tom Amidon
SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry
Syracuse, New York
Outline:: Outline: Biorefining integrated with Bio-energy
Biorefining integrated with Pulp and Paper
Slide3:
The Wood-based Biorefinery: The Wood-based Biorefinery Renewable,
Sustainable
Bioproducts:
Fuels, Chemicals,
Materials Renewable Resources to 'Green' Bio-Products Biomass
Feedstock
What:: What: Wood Growing, Procurement, Chipping, Chemical Processing – Forest Products
Willow Biomass Growing, harvesting, Burning – Farmers/Wood Fuel Industry
Fermentation of sugars to products and marketing – Ethanol Industry
Slide6:
Slide7:
Where? Who?: Where? Who? Conventional Wood Processing for Pulp/Energy in Ticonderoga, NY and Lyons Falls
Biomass Willow – New York Field Trials in Tully, NY and Lyons Falls, NY
Fermentation of Sugars in Oneonta or Fulton, NY
When:: When: In the next year:
Extraction of wood sugars at ESF Pilot
Burning of extracted wood at Lyonsdale
Ethanol from wood sugars at ESF Pilot
Northeast Biofuels reconfiguration
When:: When: Over the next three years
Commercial scale extraction of wood sugars at Lyonsdale and shipping
Extraction/burning - Lyonsdale/Oneonta
Ethanol from Lyonsdale wood sugars produced at Oneonta/Northeast Biofuels
Slide11:
Why – US Targets for a National Biobased Industry: Why – US Targets for a National Biobased Industry NRC Report - 2000
Why – Paper Industry: Why – Paper Industry Paper Industry – Cellulose for Paper and Lignin for Energy yields low profitability
Insert a new process in front of the digester to extract hemicellulose and convert to ethanol, PHA’s etc. recover acetic acid and enhance energy efficiency
Estimated Profit increase for complete Paper Industry application is $3.3 Billion/year (Thorp – PIMA ’04 Presentation)
Total estimated at 1.9 Billon gallons ethanol and 600 Million gallons acetic acid for industry-wide application
Why – Wood Burning Industry: Why – Wood Burning Industry Wood burning industry – Marginal Economics and only lowest quality wood economic
Evolutionary Change - Wood cost at $40-80 per dry ton ($0.02-0.04/dry pound) and extraction at 15% of mass recovered: 2/3 sugars 1/3 acetic acid/extractives
Sugars at $0.07/pound and acetic acid/extractives at $0.30/pound Ave. $0.146/lb. value for the 300 pounds recovered from ½ to all of the wood cost
Residue burned with cost reduction greater than the 20% of mass lost
Biomass Willow an economic fuel crop
Slide15: Map showing concentration of existing ethanol facilities in the US
Why–Wood Sugar Ethanol Production in Fulton, New York: Why–Wood Sugar Ethanol Production in Fulton, New York New York Corn for Dairy Use – Most commodity corn shipped from Mid-West
Corn Market Price fluctuation business risk
Sugar source diversification beneficial short term/long term on business model
Wood sugars locally grown and lower in cost
Adjacent land with abundant low cost hardwood forests and good Biomass Willow growing potential
40% of New York corn production required to produce 150 MGPY of ethanol
Slide17:
How: How Fractionate Woody Biomass with a low cost and environmentally preferable system that preserves current uses
Obtain a low cost, easy to clean up sugar stream
Process advantageous for hardwoods
Easy separation of valuable co-products
How: How Hardwoods are advantaged
Use water as solvent
Use Membrane/Filtration Technology
Commercialize pentose fermentations
Use conventional wood chips and preserve structure in process
Biorefinery Core Competencies: Biorefinery Core Competencies Feedstock Selection (Fast Growing and, perhaps Low or High Lignin/hemicellulose)
Biodelignification (fungi, enzymes)
Cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin separation yielding 'usable' fractions (ESF Process/others)
Cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin applications
Waste and energy recovery
Gasification for new products
Slide21:
Conclusions: Conclusions Wood holds great promise as the 'Biorefinery' feedstock of choice
Cellulose, Hemicellulose, and Lignin will all enjoy broad utilization
Advances in separations systems, biotechnology, biomass gasification, silviculture, and agro-forestry will establish the 21st century and beyond as the 'Age of Wood'
We need to start with the low hanging fruit
Slide23: O2 Agenda 2020 Focus for the Future
Meeting the Challenge of Deployment CO2 Breakthrough Mfg.
Technologies
Major Manufacturing
Cost/Capital Reduction
Significant Enhancement in Product Properties
with Existing Assets
Substantial Improvement
in Energy Efficiency for Existing Processes Advancing the Wood
Products Revolution
 Improved Building Systems
 Reduced System Costs Technologically Advanced Workforce
From Workforce to Knowledge Workers in 7 years Positively Impacting the Environment
Significant Reduction in Greenhouse Gases
Decreased Ecological Footprint
Future Industrial Connections: Future Industrial Connections Paper Industry – Cellulose for paper and lignin for energy with hemicellulose and extractable such as acetic acid, turpentine, fatty acids, etc. for New Materials
Wood burning industry – Lignin as fuel and all other components for new materials
Purpose-built Biorefinery – All components available for new materials
Technology appropriate may well differ depending on the industry
Waste and energy recovery
Gasification evolution has begun
The Coming Age of WoodEgon Glesinger, 1949: The Coming Age of Wood Egon Glesinger, 1949 …. forests can be made to produce fifty times their present volume of end products and still remain a permanently self-renewing source for raw materials…...
Only forests - no other raw material resource - can yield such returns. The forest can, and so must, end the chronic scarcities of material goods that have harassed man’s experience since the beginning of history.
Slide26: Thank You