Strain selection, biomass to biofuel conversion, and resource colocation have strong impacts on the economic performance of algae cultivation sites

Decisions involving strain selection, biomass to biofuel technology, and the location of cultivation facilities can strongly influence the economic viability of an algae-based biofuel enterprise. We summarize our past results in a new analysis to explore the relative economic impact of these design...

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Main Authors: Erik R. Venteris, Mark S. Wigmosta, Andre M. Coleman, Richard L. Skaggs
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-09-01
Series:Frontiers in Energy Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fenrg.2014.00037/full
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spelling doaj-77846292bf9440848d69e2e9af3358372020-11-24T21:41:07ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Energy Research2296-598X2014-09-01210.3389/fenrg.2014.00037107597Strain selection, biomass to biofuel conversion, and resource colocation have strong impacts on the economic performance of algae cultivation sitesErik R. Venteris0Mark S. Wigmosta1Andre M. Coleman2Richard L. Skaggs3Pacific Northwest National LaboratoryPacific Northwest National LaboratoryPacific Northwest National LaboratoryPacific Northwest National LaboratoryDecisions involving strain selection, biomass to biofuel technology, and the location of cultivation facilities can strongly influence the economic viability of an algae-based biofuel enterprise. We summarize our past results in a new analysis to explore the relative economic impact of these design choices. Our growth model is used to predict average biomass production for two saline strains (Nannocloropsis salina, Arthrospira sp.), one fresh to brackish strain (Chlorella sp., DOE strain 1412), and one freshwater strain (order Sphaeropleales). Biomass to biofuel conversion is compared between lipid extraction (LE) and hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL) technologies. National-scale models of water, CO2 (as flue gas), land acquisition, site leveling, construction of connecting roads, and transport of HTL oil to existing refineries are used in conjunction with estimates of fuel value (from HTL) to prioritize and select from 88,692 unit farms (UF, 405 ha in pond area), a number sufficient to produce 136E+9 L yr-1 of renewable diesel (36 billion gallons yr-1). Strain selection and choice of conversion technology have large economic impacts, with differences between combinations of strains and biomass to biofuel technologies being up to $10 million dollars yr-1 UF-1. Results based on the most productive strain, HTL-based fuel conversion, and resource costs show that the economic potential between geographic locations within the selection can differ by up to $4 million yr-1 UF-1, with 1.8 BGY of production possible from the most cost-effective sites. The local spatial variability in site rank is extreme, with very high and low sites within 10s of km of each other. Colocation with flue gas sources has a strong influence on rank, but the most costly resource component varies from site to site. The highest rank UFs are located predominantly in Florida and Texas, but most states south of 37°N latitude contain promising locations.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fenrg.2014.00037/fullBiofuelsGeographic Information Systemsalgaeresource assessmenttechno-economics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Erik R. Venteris
Mark S. Wigmosta
Andre M. Coleman
Richard L. Skaggs
spellingShingle Erik R. Venteris
Mark S. Wigmosta
Andre M. Coleman
Richard L. Skaggs
Strain selection, biomass to biofuel conversion, and resource colocation have strong impacts on the economic performance of algae cultivation sites
Frontiers in Energy Research
Biofuels
Geographic Information Systems
algae
resource assessment
techno-economics
author_facet Erik R. Venteris
Mark S. Wigmosta
Andre M. Coleman
Richard L. Skaggs
author_sort Erik R. Venteris
title Strain selection, biomass to biofuel conversion, and resource colocation have strong impacts on the economic performance of algae cultivation sites
title_short Strain selection, biomass to biofuel conversion, and resource colocation have strong impacts on the economic performance of algae cultivation sites
title_full Strain selection, biomass to biofuel conversion, and resource colocation have strong impacts on the economic performance of algae cultivation sites
title_fullStr Strain selection, biomass to biofuel conversion, and resource colocation have strong impacts on the economic performance of algae cultivation sites
title_full_unstemmed Strain selection, biomass to biofuel conversion, and resource colocation have strong impacts on the economic performance of algae cultivation sites
title_sort strain selection, biomass to biofuel conversion, and resource colocation have strong impacts on the economic performance of algae cultivation sites
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Energy Research
issn 2296-598X
publishDate 2014-09-01
description Decisions involving strain selection, biomass to biofuel technology, and the location of cultivation facilities can strongly influence the economic viability of an algae-based biofuel enterprise. We summarize our past results in a new analysis to explore the relative economic impact of these design choices. Our growth model is used to predict average biomass production for two saline strains (Nannocloropsis salina, Arthrospira sp.), one fresh to brackish strain (Chlorella sp., DOE strain 1412), and one freshwater strain (order Sphaeropleales). Biomass to biofuel conversion is compared between lipid extraction (LE) and hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL) technologies. National-scale models of water, CO2 (as flue gas), land acquisition, site leveling, construction of connecting roads, and transport of HTL oil to existing refineries are used in conjunction with estimates of fuel value (from HTL) to prioritize and select from 88,692 unit farms (UF, 405 ha in pond area), a number sufficient to produce 136E+9 L yr-1 of renewable diesel (36 billion gallons yr-1). Strain selection and choice of conversion technology have large economic impacts, with differences between combinations of strains and biomass to biofuel technologies being up to $10 million dollars yr-1 UF-1. Results based on the most productive strain, HTL-based fuel conversion, and resource costs show that the economic potential between geographic locations within the selection can differ by up to $4 million yr-1 UF-1, with 1.8 BGY of production possible from the most cost-effective sites. The local spatial variability in site rank is extreme, with very high and low sites within 10s of km of each other. Colocation with flue gas sources has a strong influence on rank, but the most costly resource component varies from site to site. The highest rank UFs are located predominantly in Florida and Texas, but most states south of 37°N latitude contain promising locations.
topic Biofuels
Geographic Information Systems
algae
resource assessment
techno-economics
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fenrg.2014.00037/full
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