Understanding Discord NSFW Servers A Guide for Responsible Users.pdf
About biomass for power
1. ABOUT BIOMASS FOR POWER
Agro WOODY AQUEOUS WASTE
SOURCES, CLASSIFICATION, CHARACTERISTICS,
PROPERTIES, CRITERIA FOR CHOOSING TREE SPECIES
FOR ENERGY PLANTATIONS
BIOMASS CONVERSION METHODS
2. IMPORTANCE OF ENERGY SOURCES
INCREASING POPULATION WITH
INCREASED PER CAPITA ENERGY CONSUMPTION
FOR
ELECTRICAL, TRANSPORT, INDUSTRIAL AND
AGRICULTURAL ACTIVITIES
CONSTANTLY INCREASES DEMAND FOR ENERGY
3. INCREASED PER CAPITA ENERGY CONSUMPTION
AS POPULATION HAS INCRESAED RAPIDLY
1965 - 2005
AT PRESENT, WE DEPEND MOSTLY
ON COAL, OIL AND NATURAL GAS (FOSSIL FUELS).
3
4. At present, nuclear, wind and
hydro are the non-fossil fuel
sources of energy that
contribute to electricity
generation supplementing
coal, natural gas and oil.
4
5. Role of biomass in electricity Generation?
• At present, nuclear, wind and hydro are the
non-fossil fuel sources of energy that
contribute to electricity generation
supplementing coal, natural gas and oil.
• Where cane sugar industry is thriving, with
bagasse as fuel, electricity is produced along
with process steam for the sugar industry.
• Contribution of biomass gasification with
combined cycle or micro-gas turbine for
power is yet to be fully established.
5
6. 2002-2030
biomass
The social, economic and environmental benefits of biomass
power are accepted for long term sustainability. The technologies
are progressively getting upgraded, attaining maturity, and
reaching commercialization. This is one of the renewable sources.
6
8. The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI)
Reference book Chapters
12 to15
8
9. Another Reference book: Chapter 4 & 5
Fundamentals of Renewable Energy
Sources
By
G. N. Tiwari and M. K. Ghosal
Narosa Publishing House, N.D. 2007
Chapter 4: Biomass, Biofuels and Biogas
Chapter 5: Biopower
9
11. What does it take to produce
energy from biomass?
• Input for producing biomass: Seed, Land with soil,
water, N P K + minor nutrients, sunlight and manual
+ animal energy.
• How to Make it a usable Fuel: Biomass Residue
from other uses maybe used as biofuel for
combustion [heat-> Engine] or may be converted by
preparatory methods into derived S/L/G biofuel
• End use conversion devices: Thermodynamic
cycles, Stoves, kilns, furnaces, steam turbines, gas
turbines, engines and electricity Generators.
11
14. A set of factors explain the slow growth on the
biomass utilization . They include:
1. High costs of production
2. Limited potential for production
3. Lack of sufficient data on energy
transformations coefficients.
4. Low energy efficiency
5. Health hazard in producing and using biomass.
14
20. Biomass conversion technologies
A number of modern biomass conversion
technologies are now available, which allow for
conversion of biomass to modern energy forms
such as electricity or gaseous (biogas, producer
gas), liquid (ethanol, methanol), and solid
(briquette) fuels. Biomass conversion
technologies can help in meeting different types
of energy needs, particularly electricity. Key
technologies for power generation that have been
promoted in India are gasification, combustion,
cogeneration and biomethanation.
20
25. BIOMASS
• Biomass is material derived from plant and
animal sources.
• Products of Forestry, Agriculture, Urban and
Industrial Waste Disposables are sources of
biomass that may be converted into biofuels.
25
32. Forests
Discuss forests as multifunctional
natural resource that can also yield
woody biofuel.
33. Forest resource base-India
• 1 % of World's forests on 2.47 % of world's
geographical area
• Sustaining 16 % of the world's population and
15 % of its livestock population
• Forest area cover—63.3 mill. hectares, is
19.2% of the total geographical area of India.
33
34. Causes of tremendous pressure on
Forest resource base
• Exponential rise in human and livestock
population
• increasing demand on land allocation to
alternative uses such as agriculture, pastures
and development activities.
• Insufficient availability, poor purchasing power
of people in rural areas for commercial fuels
like kerosene & LPG drives poor people to use
firewood inefficiently as a cooking fuel.
34
35. The National Forest Policy
• A minimum of 33 % of total land area under
forest or tree cover from present 19.2%
cover.
•Recognize the requirements of local people
for timber, firewood, fodder and other non-
timber forest produce-- as the first charge on
the forests,
• The need for forest conservation on the
broad principles of sustainability and
people’s participation.
35
36. Joint Forest Management system.
15.5 m. ha of degraded forest land has natural root
stock available, which may regenerate given proper
management under the JFM
•Another 9.5 m. ha is partially degraded with some
natural rootstock, and another six m. ha is highly
degraded. These last two categories together
constitute another 15.5 m. ha, which requires
treatment through technology-based plantation of
fuel, fodder and timber species with substantial
investment and technological inputs.
36
37. The emphasis will be on:
• Fuelwood and fodder plantations to meet
the requirements of rural and urban
populations.
•Plantations of economically important
species (through use of high-yielding clones)
on refractory areas to meet the growing
timber requirement.
• Supplementing the incomes of the tribal
rural poor through management and
development of non-timber forest products.
37
38. The emphasis will be on cont…
• Developing and promoting pasture on suitable
degraded areas.
• Promoting afforestation and development of
degraded forests by adopting, through micro-
planning, an integrated approach on a watershed
basis.
• Suitable policy initiatives on rationalization of tree
felling and transit rules, assured buy-back
arrangements between industries and tree
growers, technology extension, and incentives like
easy availability of institutional credit etc.
38
39. Forestry in the New Millenium:
To sum up, tropical India, with its adequate
sunlight, rainfall, land and labour,
is ideally suitable for tree plantations.
With the enhanced plan outlay for
forestry sector and financial support
from donor agencies, the country will
be able to march ahead towards the target
of 33 percent forest cover.
39
40. What are agro-forestry, ‘trees-
outside-forests [T o F]’ and
Energy Plantation?
Other than Forests we have thinner
sources of trees.
40
41. Agro-forestry
Integrates trees with farming, such as lines
of trees with crops growing between them
(alley cropping), hedgerows, living fences,
windbreaks, pasture trees, woodlots, and
many other farming patterns.
Agro-forestry increases biodiversity,
supports wildlife, provides firewood,
fertilizer, forage, food and more, improves
the soil, improves the water, benefits the
farmers, benefits everyone.
41
42. agroforestry - A dynamic, ecologically based
natural resources management system that,
through the integration of trees in farmland and
rangeland, diversifies and sustains production for
increased social, economic and environmental
benefits for land users at all levels. Agroforestry,
the intercropping of woody and non-woody plants,
although age-old in practice, has now established
itself as a new science.
42
44. Energy Plantation: Growing trees for their fuel
value
• ‘Wasteland’-- not usable for agriculture
and cash crops, useful for a social forestry
activity
• A plantation that is designed or managed
and operated to provide substantial amounts
of usable fuel continuously throughout the
year at a reasonable cost-- 'energy
plantation'
44
45. Criteria for energy plantation-1
• 'Wasteland‘--sufficient area, not usable for
agriculture and cash crops, available for a social
forestry activity
• Tree species favorable to climate and soil conditions
• Combination of harvest cycles and planting densities
that will optimize the harvest of fuel and the
operating cost--12000 to 24000 trees per hectare.
45
46. Criteria for energy plantation-2
• Multipurpose tree species-fuel wood supply &
improve soil condition
• Trees that are capable of growing in
deforested areas with degraded soils, and
withstand exposure to wind and drought
• Rapid growing legumes that fix atmospheric
nitrogen to enrich soil
46
47. Criteria for energy plantation-3
• Species that can be found in similar ecological
zones
• Produce wood of high calorific value that
burn without sparks or smoke
• Have other uses in addition to providing fuel -
- multipurpose tree species most suited for
bio-energy plantations or social forestry
47
48. Give examples of trees suitable
for Indian climatic zones
Fast growing nitrogen fixing trees
that can withstand arid wasteland
50. Leucaena leucocephala Crop Use:
Forage legume = vegetable,
• Regeneration of earthworm populations in a
degraded soil by natural and planted fallows under
humid tropical conditions
• Use of Leucaena leucocephala: Fodder,
fuelwood, erosion control, nitrogen fixation,
alley cropping, staking material
• Ntrogen fixation legume: Due to Leucaena
leucocephala crop wasteland is reclaimed
50
51. HYDROCARBON PLANTS, OIL
PRODUCING SHRUBS:
• Hydrocarbon-- Euphorbia group
• & Euphorbia Lathyrus
• OIL Shrubs-- Euphorbia Tirucali
• Soyabean
• Sunflower
• Groundnut
• Jatropa
51
56. Properties of Wet and Biodegradable
biomass:
• C O D value
• B O D value
• Total dissolved solids
• Volatile solids
56
57. What intervention is needed
in traditional and primitive
rural utilization of
biomass as fuel?
By overcoming poor purchasing power
for LPG /Kerosene [to eliminate biofuel]
and investing in Energy Plantations
Make biofuel use economical and use
efficient with new technology.
58. Problems in use of bio-fuels
Traditional biomass use is characterized by
• low efficiency of devices, scarcity of fuelwood,
drudgery associated with the devices used,
• environmental degradation (such as forest
degradation) and low quality of life.
58
59. • In the twenty-first century, energy is not as it
always was.
• Yesterday’s world was entirely dependent on
biomass, particularly wood for heating and
cooking.
• A century ago biomass was eclipsed by fossil
fuels. Biomass is generally viewed with disfavor
as something associated with abject poverty.
• Yet there is another side to biomass; there is
now something of a resurgence going on. As
fossil fuel prices increase, biomass promises (?)
to play a more active role as a utility fuel, a motor
vehicle fuel, and a supplement to natural gas.
59
60. Rural India & ‘bio-energy’
• Before the advent of fossil fuels, energy needs for all activities
were met by renewable sources such as solar, biomass, wind,
animal and human muscle power.
• In rural India, traditional renewables such as biomass and
human and animal energy continue to contribute 80 % of the
energy consumption [MNES, 2001].
60
61. Share of bio-energy in primary energy
consumption in India
In India, the share of bio-energy was estimated at
around 36 % to 46 % of the total primary energy
consumption in 1991 [Ravindranath and Hall, 1995], and has
come down to around 27 % in 1997 [Ravindranath et al.,
2000].For cooking, water heating and village industry,
use of firewood may have been substituted by LPG,
kerosene and diesel. Though availability has improved,
now prices are increasing. Improved cook stoves?
61
62. Eliminate excess use of fuel wood as rural Heating and
cooking Fuel: Fuelwood accounts for 60% of the total fuel
in the rural areas. In urban areas, the consumption pattern
is changing fast due to increased availability of commercial
fuel (LPG, kerosene, and electricity). During 1983–1999, the
consumption of traditional fuel declined from 49% to 24%
and LPG connection to households increased from 10% to
44%. Developments in the petroleum sector facilitate the
availability of (subsidized) LPG and kerosene, the two most
important forms of energy preferred as substitutes for
fuelwood in households for cooking.
62
66. What are modern bioenergy
technologies, barriers to their
development and what
programmes are needed?
Biomass conversion to usable fuels
and the end use devices are to be
developed and marketed
67. India has over two decades of experience of implementing
bioenergy programmes. The Ministry of Non-conventional
Energy Sources (MNES or MNRE), the prime mover of the
programmes in India, has now responded with a
comprehensive renewable energy policy to give a
further fillip to the evolving sector. The need for climate
change mitigation provides an opportunity for promoting
the renewable energy (RE) sector. This calls for an
assessment of the policy barriers to the spread of
bioenergy technologies (BETs) in India.
67
68. • The experience shows that despite several financial
incentives and favourable policy measures, the rate of
spread of BETs is low because of the existence of
institutional, technical, market and credit barriers.
• These barriers are by and large known, but what still
remains to be understood is the type and size of barriers
from the stakeholders’ perspective, which varies for a
given technology and the stakeholder.
• Policy options suggested to overcome such barriers
include:
68
69. Bioenergy technologies : Remove Barriers:
(1) rational energy pricing: Explain the withdrawal of subsidy to Oil &
Gas products from economic & environmental point of view.
(2) Incentives for bioenergy to promote private sector participation,
(3) institutions to empower and enable community participation,
(4) financial support for large-scale demonstration programmes and for
focused research and development on bioenergy technologies
(BETs) for cost reduction and efficiency improvement, and finally,
(5) favourable land tenurial arrangements to promote sustained
biomass supply.
The global mechanisms for addressing climate change such as the
Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) and the Global Environment
Facility (GEF) provide additional incentives to promote BETs.
69
70. Modern Bio Energy Technologies
•Offer opportunities to conserve biomass
through efficiency improvements, and for
conversion to electricity and liquid and
gaseous fuels.
• Bio-energy technologies based on
sustained biomass supply are carbon
neutral and lead to net CO2 emission
reduction if used to substitute fossil fuels.
70
72. How can biomass supplement
coal as a feedstock for power
plants?
For decentralised small / medium
scale power plants
Biomass Power Programmes are
available
73. Biomass energy is not necessarily the ‘poor man’s
fuel’, its role is rapidly changing for a combination of
environmental, energy, climatic, social and
economic reasons. It is increasingly becoming the
fuel of the environmentally-conscious, rich society.
The use of biomass energy has many pros and
cons. One of the major barriers confronting
renewable energy is that the conventional fuels do
not take into account the external costs of energy,
such as environmental costs. 73
74. It is important to create a new situation in which all
sources of energy are put on a more ‘equal footing’.
For biomass energy, which has little or no
environmental costs, the internalisation of the cost
of energy could be a major determinant for its large-
scale implementation. This, together with
agricultural productivity and technological advances,
could be a key determinant in ensuring greater
competitiveness with fossil fuels.
74
76. The Biomass Power Programme of India has reached the take off
stage, after dedicated and sustained efforts over the last decade.
The total potential is about 19,500 MW, including 3,500 MW of
exportable surplus power from bagasse-based co-generation in
sugar mills, and 16,000 MW of grid quality power from other
biomass resources.
76
79. The Program could CONSISTS OF the following Components:
· Interest Subsidy for Bagasse/Biomass Co-generation projects,
including IPP mode projects;
· Interest Subsidy for Biomass Power Projects, including captive power
projects;
· Grants to MW-scale projects with 100% producer gas engines, and
Advanced Biomass Gasification projects;
· Promotion of Industrial Co-generation projects in core industry sector
for surplus power generation;
· Promotional Incentives for awareness creation, training and
preparation of Detailed Project Reports; and
· Grants for Biomass Resource Assessment Studies.
79
82. BIOMASS INTEGRATED GASIFIER /GAS TURBINE
(BIG/ GT) TECHNOLOGY
• HIGH THERMODYNAMIC CYCLE EFFICIENCY
GAS TURBINES TECHNOLOGY IS MADE
AVAILABLE NOW AT REASONABLE COSTS
LOW UNIT CAPITAL COST AT MODEST SCALES
FEASIBLE
IT IS EXPECTED THAT THIS TECHNOLOGY
WILL BE COMMERCIALLY SUCCESSFUL IN THE
NEXT TEN YEARS.
82
85. Briquetting: Briquetting
improves the energy density of
loose biomass, which is either
charred and compacted or
directly compacted in the form
of briquettes.
Biomass briquettes made
through manual processes can
be used as cooking fuel in
homes. Briquettes produced
through mechanical processes
can be used in boilers and
furnaces.
85
86. What is Biomass Briquetting?
Fuel derived from compacting the biomass into
dense block is known as Briquette. It is cheaper
and requires no other raw material and produce
heat equivalent to other fuel. Now a days
biomass briquetting is used by the same
industries where the low-density biomass is
produced. Jute waste, groundnut shell, coffee
husk, coir pith and rice husk is used for
Briquetting.
86
87. biomass briquettes in Malawi.
• The briquette evaluation was made in terms
of physical and chemical characteristics (like
material content, size, weight, energy
content), costs for the fuel and usability in
household cooking stoves. The feasibility of
the production method for each briquette
type was also evaluated.
• The briquettes were compared with the
characteristics of firewood and charcoal.
87
88. Agro-residues and agro-industry residues-1
• Agricultural or agro-industrial biomass is
generally difficult to handle because of its
bulky and scattered nature, low thermal
efficiency and copious liberation of smoke
during burning. It will be useful to compress
them into manageable and compact pieces,
which have a high thermal value per unit
weight.
88
89. Agro-residues and agro-industry residues-2
• Biomass residues and by products are
available in abundance at the agro processing
centres (rice husk, bagasse, molasses,
coconut shell, groundnut shell, maize cobs,
potato waste, coffee waste, whey), farms
(rice straw, cotton sticks, jute sticks).
89
90. briquetting or pelleting
• The process is called • Briquetting consists of
biomass briquetting or applying pressure to a
pelleting. mass of particles with or
• Compressed biomass without a binder and
briquettes are usually converting it into
cylindrical in shape with a compact aggregate. Ram
diameter between 30 to type and screw type
90 mm and length varying machinery are used for
between 100 to 400mm. the manufacture of
briquettes.
90
91. Briquetting technology
• Ram type consists of a plunger or rod which
forces the material received from a hopper
into a die, which is not usually heated by
external means.
• The screw type machine employs a screw
auger which forces the material into a pipe
heated by electricity.
• The choice of the type of machinery depends
on many factors.
91
92. Ram type [piston type]
briquetting machine
• Ram type consists of a
plunger or rod which
forces the material
received from a hopper
into a die, which is not
usually heated by
external means.
92
93. Ram type briquetting press
• Common in India, alternate to screw type.
• Material is compressed in horizontal press,
made into a cylindrical continuous log; Cut
to pellets later.
• Log diameter is 50 mm for a 500 kg per hour
machine and 90 mm for a 1500 kg / hr
machine
93
94. Screw type
briquetting machine
• The screw type machine
employs a screw auger
which forces the
material into a pipe
heated by electricity.
94
95. Screw type
briquetting Press
• The material is extruded under compression
continuously in the form of a log, under screw.
• These logs are partially carbonized and free of
volatile compounds.
• They can supplement charcoal / lignite as solid fuel
for small scale uses.
• Wear of screw is a problem and designers of
machine have solved this.
95
99. PELLETISING: High pressure, smaller size
• In pelletising, the biomass material
is compressed through many holes by giving very
high pressure from rollers to the material.
• The stick is continuous but the size of pellet is
smaller (6-25 mm in diameter) than briquettes.
• Pelletizing is more efficient and recognized as a
good method because of low investment.
99
100. PELLETISING: Ring and Flat Die
• Pelletizing, though introduced very recently, is
considered to be most wanted method due to its
high bulk density.
• Ring and Flat Die are two types found in this
category.
• The Ring die method is mostly used for making
animal feed, which has high bulk density.
• The flat die is used for low bulk density.
100
119. Liquid and gaseous transport fuels derived from a range of
biomass sources are technically feasible. They include
• methanol,
• ethanol,
• dimethyl esters,
• pyrolytic oil,
• Fischer- Tropsch gasoline and distillate and
• Biodiesel from (i) Jatropha , Pongamia pinnata, Salvadora
persica, Madhuca longifolia and
• ( ii) hydrocarbon from Euphorbia species.
119
120. Sugar cane, like other plants, absorbs carbon dioxide from the
atmosphere during photosynthesis. Burning ethanol made from
sugar thus returns to the atmosphere what was recently there, rather
than adding carbon that was previously underground. Unfortunately,
turning sugar cane into ethanol uses more energy, and thus causes
more greenhouse-gas emission, than making petrol from crude oil.
Nevertheless, says Lew Fulton of the International Energy Agency, a
sister body of the OECD, studies suggest that Brazil's present
method of making ethanol fuel from sugar leads to net savings of
about 50% in greenhouse-gas emissions per kilometre travelled,
compared with running cars on petrol.
120
131. Name a recently published
Reference book and point out the
bioenergy related chapters in it.
See the next three slides
132. The Energy and Resources Institute
Reference book Chapters 12 to15
132
132
133. The promotion of energy using biomass available
in form of natural waste such as agricultural
residue, sugarcane bagasse, banana stems,
organic effluents, cattle dung, night soil, fuelwood
and twigs holds considerable promise. A National
Programme on Biomass Power/Cogeneration was
launched to optimise the use of a variety of
forestry-based and agro-based residues for power
generation by the adoption of state-of-the-art
conversion technologies. 133