Room: Poster Area
Date: Tuesday, 25 June 2024
Time: 16:15 - 17:15 CEST
Session code 2BV.7
Climate change assessments: from case studies to system investigations
CCS in BIoethanol Plants: An Assessment under Brazil’s Biofuels Policy (RenovaBio)
Short Introductive summary
BECCS deployment is likely to prioritise industries in operation with competitive and already low-carbon products. This is the case of ethanol in Brazil, with an annual production of 30 billion liters covering 40% of light vehicles energy demand. In this context, the objective of this paper is to assess the impacts of CCS adoption on sugarcane ethanol plants in Brazil considering the National Biofuels Policy – RenovaBio lifecycle emissions accounting principles. We find the adoption of CCS exclusively applied to high-purity CO2 of fermentation units in sugarcane ethanol plants is currently not sufficient to reach a negative ethanol carbon intensity. The carbon capture potential of bagasse CHP is the highest among the identified point sources, but the high costs of post-combustion capture are likely to discourage adoption. Biogas upgrading, while providing an additional stream of relatively high CO2 concentration, is the smallest in volume. In conclusion, CCS is key to reaching negative emissions, but efforts targeting efficiency and the adoption of other technologies would converge to maximising the climate contribution from sugarcane ethanol.
Presenter
Danilo PERECIN
Research Centre for Greenhouse Gas Innovation - Universidade de São Paulo, BRAZIL
Presenter's biography
Danilo Perecin is a chemical engineer and holds a PhD in energy planning from the University of São Paulo, when he was a visiting researcher at the Centre for Environmental Policy - Imperial College London. He is a public servant at the biofuels department of Brazil's Energy Research Office (EPE), a body tasked with providing data and studies to support the Ministry of Mines
Biographies and Short introductive summaries are supplied directly by presenters and are published here unedited
Co-authors:
M. M. dos Santos, Research Centre for Greenhouse Gas Innovation, University of São Paulo, BRAZIL
W.J. Kimura, University of São Paulo, BRAZIL
B. Narvaez-Romo, Research Centre for Greenhouse Gas Innovation, University of São Paulo, BRAZIL
S. T. Coelho, Research Centre for Greenhouse Gas Innovation, University of São Paulo, BRAZIL
Session reference: 2BV.7.13