Parratt & Associates Scoping Biorefineries: Temperate Biomass Value Chains



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Appendices





Appendix 1.

Stakeholder Consultation

125

Appendix 2.

Summary Table Global Renewable Chemicals Market 2007‐2014 ($Thousands)

126

Appendix 3.

Data Estimates of revenue from a temperate biomass value chain in 2010 and 2020

127

Appendix 4.

Workshops with Companies, Government and Non‐Government Organisations

128


Figures








Figure 2-1

Peak Oil predictions

21

Figure 2-2

Bio-product Value Chains

28

Figure 3-1

Percentage distribution of estimated current biomass production from Forest products potentially available as biorefinery from Southern Australia

41

Figure 3-2

Percentage distribution of estimated current biomass production potentially from crops available as biorefinery feedstock from Southern Australia

42

Figure 4-1

Schematic representation of the location and structure of different components in Lignocellulosic material. Adapted from Ritter

50

Figure 4-2

Basic biorefinery processes and product categories

51

Figure 4-3

NREL estimated costs for cellulosic biorefinery

58

Figure 4-4

Lignocellulosic biorefinery scheme with an emphasis on the lignin stream

62

Figure 5-1

Example of product streams potentially available from lignocelluloses processing

68

Figure 5-2

Summary figure: Global Renewable Chemicals Market 2007‐2014 ($Thousands)

72

Figure 5-3

Biofeedstock Utilization in Renewable Chemicals

75

Figure 5-4

Sources of Renewable Chemicals

76

Figure 5-5

Growing Market for Biocatalysis

77

Figure 5-6

Chemicals and Plastics and the global (re) emergence of an integrated biobased economy

78

Figure 6-1

Overview of Policy Instruments

94

Figure 6-2

Overview of key relationships relevant to assessment of bioenergy potentials

95

Figure 7-1

Estimates of revenue from a temperate biomass value chain in 2010 and 2020 in Billions

101


Tables








Table 2-1

GHG Emission Reduction Potential - Summary

23

Table 2-2

Revenue Potential along the International Biomass Value Chain (source: WEF 2010, The Future of Industrial Biorefineries)

29

Table 3-1

Estimates of biomass availability across Australia for energy or fuel

34

Table 3-2

Estimates of biomass availability for energy or fuel from regional case studies

36

Table 3-3

Key assumptions used to estimate biomass production from forests and crops

39

Table 3-4

Estimated current biomass production potentially available as biorefinery feedstock from southern Australia (kT/y oven-dry weight). Note: NSW includes ACT.

40

Table 3-5

Assumed costs of producing, harvesting, chipping and transporting different feedstock types

44

Table 3-6

Estimated production and transport costs ($/t oven-dry weight) for different feedstock types and distances *

45

Table 4-1

Lignocellulosic biorefinery technologies for fuel and co-product production

55

Table 4-2

Capital Investment and outputs from operational and planned facilities

57

Table 4-3

Estimated costs for an Australian Temperate Biomass Biorefinery

58

Table 4-4

Capital and operating costs for a 568M L/yr petroleum equivalent plant (in 2005 dollars A$)

61

Table 4-5

Examples of companies currently producing or at proof of concept for bio-based products

65

Table 5-1

Technical substitution (%) potential of biobased man-made fibres (staple fibres and filament)

70

Table 5-2

Prospective biobased platform chemicals and their application areas

71

Table 5-3

Global Renewable Platform Chemicals Market, by products, 2007-2014 ($millions)

73

Table 6-1

Key Motivations for Bioenergy Policy

93

Table 6-2

Breakdown of projected new jobs in the bioenergy industry by 2020

96

Table 6-3

University postgraduate research training

98



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