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BIOFUELS Prof. Dr. Fatma Ashour 2009 THINK OUTSIDE THE BARREL … THINK GREEN
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BIO FUELS

Feb 24, 2016

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BIO FUELS. Prof. Dr. Fatma Ashour 2009. THINK OUTSIDE THE BARREL …. THINK GREEN. Bio. Biological Resources. Fuel. Energy Source. Bio. Fuel. Energy Source from Biological Resources. Meaning of Biofuel. Biodiesel. Feedstock (Raw Material). Production. Reaction. Washing. Separator. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: BIO FUELS

BIOFUELSProf. Dr. Fatma Ashour

2009

THINK OUTSIDE THE BARREL …THINK GREEN

Page 2: BIO FUELS

Meaning of BiofuelBio

Biological

Resources

Fuel

Energy Source

Bio FuelEnergy Source from

Biological Resources

Page 3: BIO FUELS

Biodiesel

Page 4: BIO FUELS

Feedstock (Raw Material)

Fats

Animal Fat

SoybeanRapeseed

Jatropha

WVO

Page 5: BIO FUELS

Mixing

Reaction

Separator Washing

Production

Page 6: BIO FUELS

Bioethanol

Page 7: BIO FUELS

Feedstock (Raw Material)

Page 8: BIO FUELS

Production

Page 9: BIO FUELS

Cellulosic Ethanol

Page 10: BIO FUELS

Algae Diesel

Page 12: BIO FUELS

Biomass

Page 13: BIO FUELS

Biogas

Page 14: BIO FUELS

Biogas Production Steps

Page 15: BIO FUELS

BioHydrogen

Page 16: BIO FUELS

BTL (Biomass-to-Liquid)

Page 17: BIO FUELS

Biofuels vs. Fossil Fuels

Page 18: BIO FUELS

Biofuels: Strengths & Opportunities1. Fossil fuels contribute to global warming by

increasing GHG emissions

Biofuels reduce GHG emissions (closed carbon dioxide cycle)

BiofuelsFossils

Page 19: BIO FUELS

Biofuels: Strengths & Opportunities2. Energy Security:

Decrease dependency on crude oil Decrease imports of crude oil Energy diversification

3. Renewable

4. Less toxic

5. Sustainable use of otherwise problematic waste products

Page 20: BIO FUELS

Biofuels: Strengths & Opportunities6. Economic Benefits

Economic use of wasteland Useful co-products Carbon Credit Opportunities Additional distribution channel for agricultural

products Decentralized production and thus strengthen

rural economies

Page 21: BIO FUELS

Biofuels: Weaknesses & Threats1. The biofuel market is a relatively new market

2. Feedstock production of biofuels is in competition

with food production

3. Feedstock production may be land consuming

4. Feedstock production largely depends on many

vagaries of nature

Page 23: BIO FUELS

Special Advantages of BiodieselThe properties of biodiesel (viscosity, ignition properties)

are similar to those of fossil diesel.

Cetane number and lubricating effect of biodiesel are

significantly higher than fossil diesel.

The toxicity of biodiesel is lower compared to fossil diesel.

Biodiesel can be blended with petrodiesel at any ratio.

Page 24: BIO FUELS

Special Advantages of Bioethanol1. Ethanol has a high octane number.

2. Ethanol contains 35% oxygen which reduces particulate and NOx

emissions from combustion when compared to the combustion of

petrol.

3. Combustion of ethanol results in low CO emissions.

4. Bioethanol can be blended with gasoline at any ratio.

5. Ethanol contains no sulfur, causing no emissions of sulfur oxides.

Page 25: BIO FUELS

Biofuels Market

Page 26: BIO FUELS

The Effect of Moderating Oil PricesAt oil prices over US$50 per barrel, biofuels are a

cost-effective option to displace conventional gasoline and diesel fuel for transport.

At world crude oil prices of US$80 to $US100 per barrel, biofuels from a wide variety of cellulosic feedstock, including crop residues and forest residues as well as crops that are not common today, would be cost-competitive.

Since biofuels can be produced from many different feedstock that are grown under very different conditions in many different places, there are considerable cost differentials and thus significant opportunities for biofuels trade

Page 27: BIO FUELS

International Tendencies (Brazil)

Page 28: BIO FUELS

International Tendencies (Africa)

Bioethanol Production Africa 2006: 606,000 liters = 1.2% global production (US + Brazil: 75% global production)