Bioenergy Subcommittee

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Bioenergy Subcommittee Biomass Standards in the Bioenergy Sector BIO World Congress on Industrial Technology Babak Owlam - CSA Group Montreal, QC July 26, 2017 Biomass/Biofuel/Bioenergy Definitions Biomass: material of biological origin excluding material embedded in geological formations and/or fossilized. Biofuel: solid, liquid or gaseous fuel produced directly or indirectly from biomass Solid biofuel: Solid fuels produced directly or indirectly from biomass Bioenergy: energy derived from Biomass Source: CAN/CSA-ISO 16559:15 2 CSA Group - Solid Biofuels • In 2013 CSA decided to develop standards for solid biofuels to respond to demand from industry and government agencies • An agreement was reached in 2013 between SCC and CSA Group to merge the CSA initiative with Canadian effort under ISO/TC238 • The CSA-ISO Solid Biofuels Standards are voluntary standards • Objectives of publishing solid biofuels standards: • Biomass to become a commodity fuel that users can buy with confidence of trouble free operation (e.g. reliable, efficient, clean and safe operation). • Assists industry to develop safer, cleaner, more energy-efficient biomass conversion processes. ISO/TC 238 Solid Biofuels ISO/TC 238 Solid Biofuels Scope: Standardization of terminology, specifications and classes, quality assurance, sampling and sample preparation and test methods in the field of raw and processed materials originating from arboriculture, agriculture, aquaculture, horticulture and forestry to be used as a source for solid biofuels CSA Group - solid biofuels publications CSA Group has adopted and published Standards as the first series of solid biofuels standards, under the general title of Solid biofuels — Fuel specifications and classes • 17 standards in 2015 • 6 standards in 2016 • 4 standards in 2017 Why Standards for Solid Biofuels? Necessary to become a commodity fuel that users can buy with confidence and with the expectation of trouble free operation. Benefits: • Facilitate international trade • Enhance adoption of new technologies • Promote public safety and contribute to a more sustainable industry • Minimize emission of pollutants • Facilitate quality assessment of solid biomass resources • Ensure safe handling and storage of solid biofuels • Facilitate efficient permitting of bioenergy systems Stakeholders: • Solid biofuel producers • End users and consumers • Equipment manufacturers • Testing laboratories • Regulators Applications: • Residential • Commercial • Industrial Opportunities for Standards • Moving forward, Canadian fuel and heating equipment standards will need to be developed (although many international standards exist, there are currently none for the domestic market) due to issues such as: – Variations in environmental regs between jurisdictions – Inconsistent and non-uniform fuel quality – Lack of policy clarity • Standards for Biomass Heating Equipment (Standards for Fuel Quality is NEW and NO Equipment Performance in Canada) – For Improved Performance – For Safe & Reliable Operation – For Saving $$$$ • Continue working closely with the Government and industry focused associations (to write guidelines, best practices) BQNC Subcommittee Members • Ataullah Khan Mohammed/ InnoTech Alberta • Dennis St. George/ Manitoba Hydro • Joy Agnew/ PAMI • Naresh Thevathasan/ University of Guelph • Sebnem Madrali/ Natural Resources Canada • Stephane Gauthier/ Biovalco Inc. • Victor Cheng/ Alberta Agriculture and Forestry • Babak Owlam/ CSA Group Final report and work plan • Report on BIOENERGY HEAT MARKET POTENTIAL, SUPPLY CHAIN AND EQUIPMENT SUITABILITY – Assessment of supply chain pathways and business models – Comparison of delivered energy – Feedstock Grading System Bioheat Installations by Sector (as of March 2017) Ref. Updating and Expansion of the Canadian Bioheat Database, March 2017 prepared by Torchlight for Natural Resources Canada Commercial and Institutional Sector >50 kW and < 5 MWth 364 (total) bioheat installations (as of March 2017) Ref. Updating and Expansion of the Canadian Bioheat Database, March 2017 prepared by Torchlight for Natural Resources Canada Canadian Bioheat projects by capacity (as of March 2017) Ref. Updating and Expansion of the Canadian Bioheat Database, March 2017 prepared by Torchlight for Natural Resources Canada Canadian Bioheat Installations by Solid Biomass Fuel Types Ref. Updating and Expansion of the Canadian Bioheat Database, March 2017 prepared by Torchlight for Natural Resources Canada Current Tasks • Alberta Initiatives – InnoTech Alberta Projects – Alberta Agriculture Projects – GOA Initiatives • Manitoba Initiatives – Biovalco Project – Manitoba Hydro Initiatives • Saskatchewan Initiatives – PAMI Projects Alberta Initiatives New Regulation in Alberta Bioenergy/Biomass is part of solution for Alberta energy portfolio due to New Climate Change Leadership Policy By 2030, coal will disappear: One third replaced with natural gas Two thirds replaced with renewables BRIMS BIO-RESOURCE INFORMATION MANAGEMENT SYSTEM Municipal Landfill Sites & Volume Estimates # Landfills or Waste sites Gross Tonnes (2015 Data) Waste Streams 1 Calgary - Spyhill 68,871 MSW, C&DW, Org Waste 2 Edmonton 44,503 MSW, C&DW 3 Calgary - East 43,580 MSW, C&DW, Org Waste 4 Sturgeon 38,665 MSW 5 Grand Prairie 38,202 MSW 6 Red Deer 37,296 MSW, C&DW, Org Waste, Wood waste 7 Northlands Forest Products 32,580 Wood waste 8 Elk point 30,530 Wet Sludge Forestry Residue - Regional Volume Estimates # Region Facility Volume (2007-09 Category/ Waste data) Stream dry tonne 3 Grand Prairie – Grand Cache Weyco 131 k Lumber, P&P 8 GP - GC Norbord 83 k OSB 10 GP - GC Canadian FP 68 k Lumber 18 GP – GC Foot Hills FP 30 k Lumber 433 k Total 2 White Court Miller 139 k Lumber, P&P Western 5 WC Blue Ridge 118 k Lumber 14 WC ANC 46 k P&P 303 k Total 1 Athabasca – Fort McMurray Alpac 225 k Pulp & Paper (P&P) 20 Athabasca – Fort McMurray Northlands FP 29 k Lumber 254 k Total 4 Peace River – High Level – La DMI 120 k P&P Crete 6 PR – HL - LC Tolko 85 k Lumber 19 PR – HL - LC West Fraser 30 k Lumber 235 k Total 7 Hinton – Edson West Fraser 84 k Lumber, P&P 11 Hinton – Edson Sundance 63 k Lumber 16 Hinton – Edson Weyco 33 k OSB 180 k Total 13 Slave Lake – High Prairie West Fraser 56 k Lumber, Veneer 15 SL – HP Slave Lake 35 k P&P 17 SL – HP West Fraser 30 k Lumber 121 k Total 9 RMK – Calgary – Southern AB Sundre FP 80 k Lumber 80 k Total 12 Drayton Weyco 60 k Lumber 60 k Total Forestry Residue - Waste Stream Volume Estimates # Region Facility Volume (2007-09 Category/ Waste data) Stream dry tonne Lumber Residue 2 White Court Miller 80 k Lumber Western 3 GP - GC Weyco 94 k Lumber 5 WC Blue Ridge 118 k Lumber 6 PR – HL - LC Tolko 85 k Lumber 7 Hinton – Edson West Fraser 58 k Lumber 9 RMK – Calgary – Southern Sundre FP 80 k Lumber AB 10 GP - GC Canadian FP 68 k Lumber 11 Hinton – Edson Sundance 63 k Lumber 12 Drayton Weyco 60 k Lumber 13 Slave Lake – High Prairie West Fraser 32 k Lumber 17 SL – HP West Fraser 30 k Lumber 18 GP – GC Foot Hills FP 30 k Lumber 19 PR – HL - LC West Fraser 30 k Lumber 20 Athabasca – Fort McMurray Northlands FP 29 k Lumber 857 k Total BRIMS in action - Whitecourt BRIMS in action – Drayton Valley Bioenergy Producer Program • $60M • April 1, 2016 – September 30, 2017 • Credit for bioenergy production – Biofuels – Biogas – Pellets – Electricity and/or Heat (biomass combustion) • http://aep.alberta.ca/climate-change/programs-and-services/bioenergy-producer program.aspx Bioenergy Producer Program – Heat from combustion • $0.50 / GJ 12% Biomass- • 11 facilities electricity 7% Biomass-heat • Feedstocks: Biofuel – Hog fuel 20% 54% – Kraft black liquor Wood Pellet – Wood fibre residuals Biogas-electricity 7% Bioenergy Producer Program – Heat from combustion Manning Forest (WF) Manning Peace River Grande Canadian Forest Products Ltd. Grande Prairie - Smoky Prairie Ranger Board (WF) Blue Ridge Whitecourt-Ste. Anne Edson Forest (WF) Edson West Yellowhead Rimbey-Rocky Mountain Sundre Forest (WF) Sundre House-Sundre Rocky Rimbey-Rocky Mountain Sundre Forest Product LVL (WF) Mountain House-Sundre House Blue Ridge Lumber (WF) Blue Ridge Whitecourt-Ste. Anne Hinton Wood Products(WF) Hinton West Yellowhead High Prairie Forest Products (WF) High Prairie Lesser Slave Lake Fort Northland Forest Products Fort McMurray-Conklin McMurray Tolko Slave Lake Lesser Slave Lake co-gen facilities (yellow) CARBON LEVY -carbon levy in Alberta: $20 in 2017, $30 in 2018 Manitoba Initiatives Where are we at in Manitoba By Use By Fuel Natural Transp. Gas Ref. Heat 35% 32% Petro. 45% 40% Light & Power Electric 20% 26% Other 2% • 74% of the energy consumed is imported and non-renewable (transportation & heat). • Approximately 45% of the energy usage is for heat. • Interest in utilizing waste stream & byproducts and readily available low cost biomass growing. Where are we at in Manitoba • Coal And Petroleum Coke Ban effective July 2017. • Has led to the developed a 55,000 t/yr biomass fuel market. • Canada-wide carbon pricing starts in 2018 • Leads to $50 per tonne CO2 Eq. taxation by 2022 Purchased Biomass Fuels Option I • 35 MW potential by 2023/24 • Approved Biomass Heating Initiative with $1 million budget allocation in 2016/17. • Targeting 175 schools, institutions and public buildings by 2023. • 1 public school and 1 institution willing to commit capital. • Public Schools Finance Board supportive and interested. • The Sagkeeng First Nation is keenly interested, however awaiting formation of the new Manitoba First Nations School System. Purchased Biomass Fuels Option II • Biomass
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