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Sustainably harvested Forest Biomass can help replace coal and gas

May 20, 2021 by Jennifer Jenkins

Burning sustainably harvested wood pellets emits far less carbon than burning coal or gas. That’s the main reason why it should be used in the global energy transition, argues Jennifer Jenkins at Enviva. Coal is declining, but not fast enough. Gas consumption is rising. Forest biomass can more easily be swapped in than wind and solar to provide dispatchable power. But it must be done sustainably. Referencing her white paper, Jenkins sets out the … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Biofuels, Energy Tagged With: bioenergy, biomass, coal, EU, forests, gas, sustainability, Taxonomy, US

Aviation and Shipping emissions: will Biden take on the challenge?

February 12, 2021 by William Todts

William Todts at Transport & Environment is very worried about the Biden administration’s approach to aviation and shipping emissions. The signals are that the U.S. wants to work through the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) and the International Maritime Organization (IMO). But they have neither the ability nor the means to spur technological breakthroughs. That matters, because it’s only the use of alternative fuels that can … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Alternative fuels, Biofuels, Energy, Hydrogen, Transport and energy Tagged With: Airbus, ammonia, aviation, Biden, biofuels, Boeing, Caterpillar, electricity, emissions, hydrogen, ICAO, IMO, kerosine, MAN Energy, shipping, synfuels, transport, US

Bioenergy is the undervalued pillar of the clean energy transition

December 17, 2020 by Seungwoo Kang and Elisa Asmelash

Bioenergy is already the world’s largest source of renewable energy, responsible for 70% of the supply (and around 10% of total primary energy). Burning organic matter goes back to the invention of fire and is still commonplace around the globe. Yet it gets hardly any of the attention and policy support that’s given to other clean energy technologies like solar, wind and now hydrogen. Bioenergy can and should play an even greater role, explain … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Biofuels, Energy Tagged With: aviation, BECCS, bioenergy, biofuels, biojet, biomethanol, cement, chemicals, farming, forestry, shipping

Biofuels vs Hydrogen: which can fuel aviation, shipping, trucks?

December 3, 2020 by Cornelius Claeys

The positive signals coming from EV sales and charge points contrast with the lack of progress in finding alternative fuels for aviation, shipping and trucks. Cornelius Claeys runs through the prospects for biofuels and hydrogen to power long-haul transport. Biofuels are already used as a substitute for fossil fuels, and EV uptake will usefully free them for fuelling heavy transport. But as decarbonisation ambitions rise the pressure on scarce … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Biofuels, Energy, Hydrogen, Transport and energy Tagged With: aviation, biofuels, emissions, EVs, hydrogen, shipping, trucks

Optimising Cyanobacteria for carbon fixation and biofuels

July 1, 2020 by NREL

The landscape can be changed for energy transition technologies by research breakthroughs, and that includes work on bacteria and proteins. The National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) and its partners have been running experiments on cyanobacteria. These single-cell organisms, also using photosynthesis, fix carbon dioxide twice as efficiently as plants. They grow rapidly, doubling their numbers in three hours. The first step is to understand … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Biofuels, Carbon Capture, Energy, Innovations Tagged With: biofuels, carboxysomes, CCS, CCUS, chemicals, CO2, cyanobacteria, switchgrass

Biogas and Biomethane’s untapped potential across the world

March 27, 2020 by IEA

The IEA’s World Energy Outlooks have no doubt that electrification alone cannot meet our climate goals. That’s why natural gas continues to play a major role. But biogas and biomethane have the potential to replace 20% of that gas, says the IEA’s special report “Outlook for biogas and biomethane: Prospects for organic growth”. At present only a fraction of that is being utilised. Here the IEA summarises their comprehensive report. Costs are the … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Biofuels, Biogas, Energy Tagged With: agriculture, biogas, biomethane, emissions, gas, heat, industry, waste

Biofuels “light-to-power” slump: because photosynthesis is no match for Solar PV

February 4, 2020 by Gerard Reid

The success of energy crops depends on many things. But the first link in the chain is a weak one: natural photosynthesis, the conversion of light into energy by plants. The problem is the efficiency of photosynthesis is no match for that of a modern solar PV cell. And while solar technology keeps improving, mother nature – not a signatory to the Paris Agreement – has no plans to do so. Any progress must come from biotechnology which is slow … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Biofuels, Biogas, Energy Tagged With: biofuels, biogas, bioliquids, biomass, electricity, photosynthesis, solar, storage

An independent Global Energy Forecast to 2050 (part 4 of 5): Nuclear, biomass and CCS

November 7, 2019 by Schalk Cloete

Schalk Cloete is creating his own 5-part independent Global Energy Forecast to 2050, to compare with the next IEA World Energy Outlook, due in November. To make his predictions he has created simulations of cost-optimal technology mixes and made his own assumptions over the drivers that will affect them: policy, technological progress, demand growth and behavioural change are all included. If nuclear, biomass and CCS take off they will … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Biogas, Carbon Capture, Energy, Nuclear, Policies Tagged With: biomass, carbontax, CCS, electricity, Nuclear, renewables, WorldEnergyOutlook

Advanced Aviation Biofuels: ready for take-off?

June 19, 2019 by Dolf Gielen and Sakari Oksanen

A survey by the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) of leading biofuel investors and producers worldwide reveals that they are still struggling to get governments to deliver the right regulatory framework – and carbon pricing – to ensure biojet fuel’s rapid growth. Scaled up, the fuel also needs to come down in price to compete with jet fuel’s 50 eurocents per litre. Technological progress is being made. But biofuel investment has … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Biogas, Energy, Transport and energy Tagged With: aviation, biofuel, biojet, emissions, HEFA, IRENA, Neste, SkyNRG, transport

Biogas and Biomethane in Europe: Denmark, Germany, Italy lead

May 13, 2019 by Marc-Antoine Eyl-Mazzega and Carole Mathieu

Over and again, legislators worldwide are confronting the same question: which technologies do we subsidise and support, when, by how much, and for how long. Get it right and those costs will reduce and should disappear once scale is reached. Solar and wind are on their way to proving that. What about biofuels? Marc-Antoine Eyl-Mazzega and Carole Mathieu of the Institut Français des Relations Internationales (IFRI) look at the last 10 years. The … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Biogas, Energy Tagged With: biogas, biomethane, Denmark, feed-in tariffs, Germany, investment, Italy, policies, tenders

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      Recent Posts

      Scaling up global grid-scale Storage to 80GW/year (it was 16GW in 2022)

      H2 Green Steel has raised billions in 3 years: a case study of Industrial Project Finance

      Could big U.S. subsidies for Hydrogen create perverse incentives, raise emissions?

      Belgium: commercially viable Rooftop Solar for social housing. No installation subsidies, lower bills

      Concrete supercapacitor: works like a battery, much cheaper, easy to make

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