exploring potential products

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www.fpinnovations.ca Exploring Potential Products from willow and poplar plantations May 1 st , 2012; Edmonton Eric Phillips Researcher, Silvicultural Operations Tony Sauder Doug Singbeil Marian Marinescu Grant Nishio

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Page 1: Exploring Potential Products

www.fpinnovations.ca

Exploring Potential Products from willow and poplar plantations

May 1st, 2012; Edmonton

Eric Phillips Researcher, Silvicultural Operations

Tony Sauder Doug Singbeil Marian Marinescu Grant Nishio

Page 2: Exploring Potential Products

© 2010 FPInnovations. All rights reserved. Copying and redistribution prohibited.

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Outline

General economic factors Solid wood products Pulp Heat energy

– Direct combustion – Chips or pellets – Co-firing

Heat process products – Bio-char – Bio-oils – Syn-gas – Ethanol – Ash

Page 3: Exploring Potential Products

General economic factors

What factors influence the value of your product? – Product itself

• What are the customer requirements? • Pre-harvest size of trees • Harvested cost at roadside • Contaminants • Bark • Moisture content • Material form – does it need further reduction to

meet a market requirement? • Energy content

– Location – distance to market

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Page 4: Exploring Potential Products

Minimize transport costs

Transport represents a significant portion of the delivered product costs – Decrease distance – Improve transport efficiency – Decrease moisture content – Increase density

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Page 5: Exploring Potential Products

Proximity to processing facility

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Lyonsdale Biomass • Commercial power plant • $21.50/t chips • 100 k source

Page 6: Exploring Potential Products

Improve transport efficiency

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Increase efficiency through Truck/trailer configuration selection Increase Density

Moisture content – decrease weight through roadside drying

Page 7: Exploring Potential Products

Dry chips

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Dry chips to meet customer requirements

Page 8: Exploring Potential Products

Business planning and decisions

Business plan? Cost/revenue estimates? Short or longer rotation? Potential products? Economies of scale?

© 2010 FPInnovations. All rights reserved. Copying and redistribution prohibited.

8 www.esf.edu/willow/download.htm

Page 9: Exploring Potential Products

Business planning: tools and guides

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Page 10: Exploring Potential Products

Short verses “long” rotations

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willow poplar

• Short rotation ~ 3 years • Energy crop

• 20-25+ year rotation • Pulp + energy • Lumber + pulp + energy • Carbon credits?

Page 11: Exploring Potential Products

costing example – extended rotation + value added

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Costs commodity + value addedsite prep & maintenance $605 $605plant $1,176 $1,176taxes $247 $247rent $1,236 $1,236prune & sort $2,002harvest & transport $5,560 $5,560total costs $8,824 $10,825

Revenuespulp paper and OSB $12,973 $8,649veneer & furniture stock $7,413total revenue $12,973 $16,062

profit $4,149 $5,236

Poplar 20 yr rotation 370 m3/ha $/ha

Page 12: Exploring Potential Products

Solid wood products

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furniture

acoustic fence

whips

Page 13: Exploring Potential Products

Solid wood products

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live fencing

animal bedding

Page 14: Exploring Potential Products

Extended Rotation - example

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• Saw-logs (veneer) + pulp chips + energy chips • Plantations grown for pulp chips

Page 15: Exploring Potential Products

Other values?

Snow fence Wildlife use Visuals Carbon credits? Bio-Chemicals Others?

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Page 16: Exploring Potential Products

Reduction Processes

Direct combustion Pellets Pulp Syngas Bio-ethanol

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Page 17: Exploring Potential Products

Direct combustion: Indian Head, Saskatchewan example

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Harvest natural willow Air dry

Grind <2” (5cm)

Page 18: Exploring Potential Products

Direct combustion: Indian Head, Saskatchewan 2

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Burn

• Anderson WB55 Biobaler • Hay Buster tub grinder • Fink Machine / KOB

Viessmann furnace

Agro-Forestry Development Centre

Page 19: Exploring Potential Products

Energy

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Page 20: Exploring Potential Products

Energy calculator

http://www.fpinnovations.ca/FPJoule/Views/Report.aspx

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Page 21: Exploring Potential Products

Pellets

Used to create a dense uniform product for direct combustion. Consumer as well as industrial market but residential requires

low ash and therefore low bark content. Tops and branches may yield higher ash content. Lower lignin makes pellet production more difficult. Status: commercial

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Page 22: Exploring Potential Products

Co-fire

Wood biomass can be added to other feed-stocks such as coal.

Up to 50% additions are reported to not affect combustion.

Particle size and moisture are critical. Other types of commercial burners may have different

requirements.

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Page 23: Exploring Potential Products

Pulp requirements

Chip thickness and size – Uniform size with few

pins/fines and thick chips Bark content

– <1% Rule of thumb:

– <3” (8cm diameter) = energy only

– 3”-10” (8-28cm diameter) = 75% pulp, 25% energy

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Page 24: Exploring Potential Products

Wood conversion with heat

Heat wood in the absence of oxygen to produce secondary products: – Densified wood – Bio-char – Pyrolysis oil – Syngas

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Page 25: Exploring Potential Products

Biomass conversion w/o Oxygen comparison of processes

Torrefaction Pyrolysis Gasification

Process Temp: 200 – 350 C 350 – 500 C > 600 C

Primary product:

Value-added product:

Dense wood

Biocarbon, biochar

Pyrolysis oil

crude oil

Syn-gas

diesel + other products

Heating value of primary product*: 18-21 MJ/kg 17 MJ/kg 4 MJ/kg – 15 MJ/kg

Yield/bdt wood: max 700 kg max 750 kg

or 625 L variable depending on

gasifier design

*Compare to: Natural gas: 43 MJ/kg Diesel/fuel oil: 42 MJ/kg Coal: 33 MJ/kg Ethanol: 30 MJ/kg Wood: 14-17 MJ/kg From Doug Singbeil - FPInnovations

Page 26: Exploring Potential Products

Torrefaction

Mild pyrolysis (200-4000 C) Briquettes hydrophobic Coal like properties Higher energy than pellets Yields affected by bark, species (lignin), MC% Status: pilot/demonstration stage

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Page 27: Exploring Potential Products

Pyrolysis

< 7000 C Lower char output for hardwoods High bark content may reduce oil output Status: energy is at pilot plant stage;

specialty chemicals is commercial

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Page 28: Exploring Potential Products

Gasification

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• “Town gas/syn-gas/producer gas” since 19th C • Popular during fuel shortages

Page 29: Exploring Potential Products

Syngas

>6000 C Process: heat in the absence of

oxygen (controlled oxygen) and collect the gas

Status: pilot to commercial

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Page 30: Exploring Potential Products

Gasification: Nexterra

Outputs: Steam Heat and power Hot water

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Page 31: Exploring Potential Products

Ash – asset or liability?

Principle “uses”: – Landfill – Soil amendment

• Soil type – has value on some soils • Environmental concerns: heavy metals etc. • Reference:

“Introduction to spreading wood ash on forest soils in Canada – Ash spreading primer” by Grant Nishio, FPInnovations [email protected]

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Page 32: Exploring Potential Products

Ethanol

Hardwood species better than softwood because of lower lignin content.

Similar requirements as for pulp chips: – Size – Bark – Contamination

Status: demonstration

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Page 33: Exploring Potential Products

Summary

With current state of technologies, willow has the greatest use as an energy crop.

Extended rotation popular can produce chips for pulp plus other products.

Bark content, product size and moisture content are universal themes.

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Page 34: Exploring Potential Products

Questions / Discussion

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[email protected]