http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0306261916308194

Applied Energy

1 October 2016, Vol.179:55–63, doi:10.1016/j.apenergy.2016.06.044

BECCS potential in Brazil: Achieving negative emissions in ethanol and
electricity production based on sugar cane bagasse and other residues
Moreira et al

Highlights
•Demonstrates the cost competitiveness of sugarcane based bioenergy carbon
capture and storage (BECCS).

•Evaluates BECCS based on emissions from sugar fermentation, which is the
low hanging fruit technology available.

•Determines the BECCS cost premium of CO2, ethanol and electricity.

•Determines the full mitigation potential of this BECCS technology in
Brazil.

•Discusses polices to enable BECCS deployment by society.

Abstract

Stabilization at concentrations consistent with keeping global warming
below 2 °C above the pre-industrial level will require drastic cuts in
Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emissions during the first half of the century; net
negative emissions approaching 2100 are required in the vast majority of
current emission scenarios. For negative emissions, the focus has been on
bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS), where carbon-neutral
bioenergy would be combined with additional carbon capture thus yielding
emissions lower than zero. Different BECCS technologies are considered
around the world and one option that deserves special attention applies CCS
to ethanol production. It is currently possible to eliminate 27.7 million
tonnes (Mt) of CO2 emissions per year through capture and storage of
CO2 released during fermentation, which is part of sugar cane-based ethanol
production in Brazil. Thus, BECCS could reduce the country’s emissions from
energy production by roughly 5%. Such emissions are additional to those due
to the substitution of biomass-based electricity for fossil-fueled power
plants. This paper assesses the potential and cost effectiveness of
negative emissions in the joint production system of ethanol and
electricity based on sugar cane, bagasse, and other residues in Brazil. An
important benefit is that CO2 can be captured twice along the proposed
BECCS supply chain (once during fermentation and once during electricity
generation). This study only considers BECCS from fermentation because
capturing such CO2 is straightforward, thus potentially representing a
cost-effective mitigation option for Brazil compared to other alternatives.
The assessment shows that fuel prices would increase by less than 3.5% due
to the adoption of BECCS from fermentation, while increasing investors’
revenues are sufficient to compensate for the investment required. With
appropriate government subsidies, or by sharing BECCS costs between all car
fuels and all electricity supplied by hydro and bioelectricity, the
increment in ethanol and electricity prices could be less than 1% for the
final consumer. Meanwhile it would supply 77.3% of all cars’ fuel (private
cars) and 17.9% of all electricity in Brazil.

Keywords
Bioenergy carbon capture and storage (BECCS)
Negative emissions
Ethanol
Renewable energy
Climate mitigation

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