o.de funded by Bioenergy Environmental Impact Analysis (BIAS) presented at the FAO Expert Meeting 5/6 Rome, Feb. 18-20, 2008 Uwe R. Fritsche Coordinator, Energy & Climate Division Oeko-Institut e.V. (Institute for applied Ecology), Darmstadt Office Impacts of Biofuels on Greenhouse Gas Emissions
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Impacts of Biofuels on Greenhouse Gas Emissions · Generation Biodiesel 2. Generation Biodiesel fossil Diesel 1. + 2. Generation EtOH CNG. o. de funded by GHG from Land-Use Change
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funded by
Bioenergy Environmental Impact Analysis (BIAS)
presented at the FAO Expert Meeting 5/6 Rome, Feb. 18-20, 2008
Uwe R. FritscheCoordinator, Energy & Climate Division
Oeko-Institut e.V. (Institute for applied Ecology), Darmstadt Office
Impacts of Biofuels on Greenhouse Gas Emissions
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BIAS: Brief Overview
• FAO commissioned joint study from Öko-Institut, IFEU and Copernicus Institute on keyenvironmental issues of bioenergy
– Develop Analytical Framework: methods
– Issues: Life-Cycle GHG + direct and indirect LUC, airemissions & toxics, biodiversity, water, soil impacts
– Approach: compile existing knowledge, use ownanalysis and scientific expertise
– Define Data Categories and „Tool Box“
– Application not part of current BIAS activities
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Biomass crops
Residues/wastes
Material Use
Energy Use
Biomass & Biofuels
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Biodiesel
Potential Biofuel CropsPotential Biofuel Crops
Bioethanol
rapeseeds
maize(corn)
soy palmoil
Jatropha,
Castor, Neem…
wheat
sugarbeet
lignocelluloseperennial grasses,
short-rotation
copice
sugarcane
cassava etc.
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Consider all Bioenergy Flows
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Technologies + Fuels
coal
natural gas
crude oil
biomass
nuclear
wind
solar
hydro
geotherm.
Primary energy Energy carrier Infrastructure Power train
gasoline
FT gasoline
diesel
FT diesel
biodiesel
ethanol
methanol
DME
CNG
LPG
hydrogen
electricity
fuel cellsand hybrid
ICE and hybrid
Source: Based on WBCSD 2004
electric motorGa
so
us
fue
lsL
iqu
id f
ue
ls
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Greenhouse-Gas Emissions
• Accounting Issues
– Scope and data background
– Allocation and system boundaries
– Life-cycle analysis: full fuel-chain approach
– GHG from direct and indirect land-use change
– Links to EU and global GHG data and methodologies
(EEA, GBEP, UNEP…)
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GEMIS Database
Energy Materials Transport
technical dataemission data
cost datadirect job datameta data
freely available at www.gemis.de
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Life-Cycle GHG Balances
Data include by-product credits, but no land-use change (GEMIS 4.4)
relative to with a risk adder level: fossil diesel/gasoline
kg CO2eq/GJ
Accounting for CO2 from indirect LUC using the “risk adder“
for the GHG balance of biofuels*
*= By-product allocation using lower heating value
risk adder is zero for residues/wastes and for biocrops from
unused/degraded lands
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A conservative: conversion of
savannah
B real: conversion
of soy cropping
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
200
kg C
O2-
Eq
. per
GJ
Bio
fuel
PME Palmoil
Direct LUC:
A
B
A
A
C
C
C
B
B
C risk sdder
(only for B)
indirect LUC:
D
D: total
Direct LUC:
C no riskadder
indirect LUC: Direct LUC:
C risk adder(only for B)
indirect LUC:
land use change
production of biomass
transport of biomass
conversion step I
transport betw. conv. steps
conversion step II
transport to admixture
A conservative: conversion trop.
rain forest
B real: conversionof degradedland
A conservative: conversion of pasture
B real: conversionof wheat crops
(small reductionof soil-C)
BSO Default
Example: fictiouspractise
D
D
D: total
D: total
GHG from indirect LUC: risk adder
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GHG from indirect LUC: US Data
Source: Presentation of Prof. Michael O’Hare. University of California, Berkely at the CARB LCFS Working Group 3 meeting, Sacramento, CA, January 17, 2008 based on data from Alex Farell (see
http://www.arb.ca.gov/fuels/lcfs/lcfs.htm)
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Conclusions (1)
• GHG emissions become key issue in biofuels trade
• Ccertification needed up from 2009/2010 forEU market access; will become linked to CDM
• GHG emissions must include direct land-usechanges, and indirect land-use GHG emissions can be high, need „risk hedging“
• GHG limits for biofuels also reduce (but notavoid) risk of negative biodiversity impacts
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Conclusions (2)
• So far, only few developing countries deal with life-cycle GHG emissions of biofuels (AR, BR, TH…)
• FAO should actively support countries in dealing with GHG accounting, and relatedcertification; cooperation with UNEP needed, work with GBEP GHG Task Force
• Biogas/biomethane have low GHG profile, but often ignored ���� need more attention
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Biomethane from compressed biogas in New Delhi, India