1 / 31

Biomass Furnaces for Heating Poultry Houses November 2008

Biomass Furnaces for Heating Poultry Houses November 2008. By Jim Wimberly Bio Energy Systems LLC Fayetteville, AR. Presentation Objective. … To provide a better understanding of how to evaluate a biomass-fired furnace system prior to purchase What are the key factors to evaluate?.

Download Presentation

Biomass Furnaces for Heating Poultry Houses November 2008

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Biomass Furnaces for Heating Poultry HousesNovember 2008 By Jim Wimberly BioEnergy Systems LLC Fayetteville, AR

  2. Presentation Objective … To provide a better understanding of how to evaluate a biomass-fired furnace system prior to purchase • What are the key factors to evaluate?

  3. Presentation Overview • Understanding the problem…expensive propane consumption • Displacing propane with biomass • Technical considerations • Economics considerations • Other considerations

  4. Displacing Propane • The amount of energy required for space heating varies… • Within a flock

  5. Displacing Propane • The amount of energy required for space heating varies… • Within a flock • From flock to flock

  6. Displacing Propane • The amount of energy required for space heating varies… • Within a flock • From flock to flock • From year to year average = 6,000 (?) range high low 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Gallons / year (thousands)

  7. Displacing Propane • Propane is convenient. • But it’s the #1 expense for growers -- and it’s getting more expensive… ~$2.20 in April 2008 residential @ Savoy wholesale

  8. Anticipating future propane prices? $4.93 Average annual escalation since ’98 = 14.4% $4 $3.29 Future escalation if @ 14.4% $3 $2 $ / gallon $1 0 1999 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014

  9. average = 6,000 range high low 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Gallons / year (thousands) Displacing Propane • What’s a realistic target displacement level of propane? @ $2.20/gal, value of propane displaced  $11,200 / year @ 85% of total consumption, propane displaced  5,100 gal/yr 85% Total furnace system heat energy output required for a 40’x400’ house = ~250,000 Btu / hour

  10. Displacing Propane…conclusions • target displacement rate = 85% of propane consumed • target displaced quantity = 5,100 gallons/year • value of displaced propane = $11,200/year • required output size of furnace = 250,000 Btu/hour • note: these figures are for the assumed “typical” broiler house in northwest Arkansas

  11. What are the Key Selection Criteria for a Furnace? • Technically viable • Is it proven? • Will it stand up to conditions in a poultry house? • Economically feasible • Do the numbers work? • Is it a good investment? • Environmentally acceptable • Are there any significant issues that must be addressed? • The “hassle factor” • Does it require lots of TLC to keep it going? • How much maintenance will be needed?

  12. What’s included in a biomass furnace system? fuel storage, handling and in-feed combustor, including heat exchanger & ash management hot air distribution Flue Poultry House Heat Exchanger Auger to Hot Air Distribution System Hopper Combustion Chamber Instrumentation & controls

  13. Farm Options: Single-house system Furnace outside the poultry house Furnace inside the poultry house Heat distribution system Furnace Fuel supply

  14. System Options: Multi-house system

  15. What are the Primary Fuel Options? • Cordwood • Corn • Raw litter • Pelletized litter • Raw sawdust • Wood (& other) pellets • Baled biomass • *Coal* Pellet furnace; Prim, AR; 1995.

  16. Economics: Key Factors to Consider An economic analysis should be performed for each individual farm considering an investment in a bioenergy system • Price of propane • And the assumed annual escalation rate • Amount of propane displaced • Price of biomass fuel • System service life • System efficiency Pellet furnace; Savoy, AR; ~1998.

  17. Fuel Economics: example calculations of fuel costs @ 85% displ. = 8,400 x 93% = 5,100 x 91,000 / 1,000,000 = 464,000,000 / 7,800 / 2,000 = 30 / 0.65 = 46 x $140 = $6,400 / 464

  18. Economics: Sensitivities • Let’s look at key sensitivities for a wood pellet-fired system • First, let’s review the “base case” assumptions: • Current propane consumption = 6,000 gal / yr • Current propane cost = $2.20 / gal • Target propane displacement = 85% • Energy content of wood pellets = 7,800 Btu / lb • Overall system efficiency = 65% • Cost of wood pellets, delivered = $160 / ton • Capital cost, all-inclusive = $20,000 • Financing costs (20% dn, 7.5% APR, 5 yrs) = $3,000 • Service life = 10 years • Maintenance & utilities = $400 / year (with 8% AIF) • Inflation rate of propane = 7.0% per year • Inflation rate of pellets = 2.5% per year • Fuel support payment = $0

  19. $22 $17 $000 / year (@$160/ton) $11 $6 $0 Sensitivity: Pellets Required vs. System Efficiency $24,200 Conclusion: Overall system efficiency fundamentally affects the economics of the furnace systems 152 160 120 $12,100 76 80 $8,100 Tons / year 51 $6,100 38 $4,900 40 30 0 0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% Overall system efficiency For wood pellet fuel @ base-case assumptions

  20. $22 $17 $000 / year (@$160/ton) $11 $6 $0 Sensitivity: Pellets Required vs. System Efficiency $24,200 Conclusion: Overall system efficiency fundamentally affects the economics of the furnace systems 152 160 120 $12,100 76 80 $8,100 Tons / year 51 $6,100 38 $4,900 40 • Key factors affecting system efficiency: • Furnace design • Proper operation • Effective furnace maintenance • Effective maintenance of heat exchanger(s) 30 0 0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% Overall system efficiency For wood pellet fuel @ base-case assumptions

  21. Sensitivity: Economics vs. System Efficiency $100,000 $50,000 Net benefit (cost) 0 -$50,000 -$100,000 0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% Overall system efficiency For wood pellet fuel @ base-case assumptions

  22. Sensitivity: Economics vs. System Service Life $100,000 $50,000 Net benefit (cost) 0 -$50,000 -$100,000 4 7 10 13 16 Service Life, years For wood pellet fuel @ base-case assumptions

  23. Sensitivity: Economics vs. Capital Cost $100,000 $50,000 Net benefit (cost) 0 -$50,000 -$100,000 $10 $15 $20 $25 $30 capital cost (x000) For wood pellet fuel @ base-case assumptions

  24. Sensitivity: Economics vs. Biomass Fuel Cost $100,000 $50,000 Net benefit (cost) 0 -$50,000 -$100,000 $120 $140 $160 $180 $200 Cost of Wood Pellets, per ton delivered For wood pellet fuel @ base-case assumptions

  25. Sensitivity: Economics vs. Propane Consumption $100,000 $50,000 Net benefit (cost) 0 -$50,000 -$100,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000 8,000 Average Current Propane Consumption, gallons / year For wood pellet fuel @ base-case assumptions

  26. Sensitivity: Economics vs. Propane Cost $100,000 $50,000 Net benefit (cost) 0 -$50,000 -$100,000 $1.40 $1.80 $2.20 $2.60 $3.00 Cost of Propane, per gallon For wood pellet fuel @ base-case assumptions

  27. Sensitivity: Inflation Rate for Propane 14.4% @ 6,000 gal / yr & 65% sys eff. & $160 / ton $100,000 $50,000 Net benefit (cost) 0 -$50,000 -$100,000 3% 5% 7% 9% 11% 13% Annual inflation rate of propane costs For wood pellet fuel @ base-case assumptions

  28. Sensitivity: Inflation Rate for Propane @ 6,000 gal / yr & 65% sys eff. & $160 / ton $100,000 $50,000 Net benefit (cost) 0 @ 4,000 gal / yr & 50% sys eff. & $200 / ton -$50,000 -$100,000 3% 5% 7% 9% 11% 13% Annual inflation rate of propane costs

  29. Economic Analyses … Conclusions • Key factors affect the economics of the system • Price of propane • And the assumed annual escalation rate • Amount of propane displaced • Price of biomass fuel • System service life • System efficiency • Some systems appear attractive, based on certain assumptions • Each situation requires making various assumptions and projections regarding future fuel prices • An economic analysis should be performed for each individual farm considering an investment in a bioenergy system

  30. Environmental Considerations • Air emissions: these farm-scale systems are not currently regulated. • Ash: • The ash needs to be effectively managed, regardless of fuel type. • In particular, litter-derived ash would need to be managed. • Essentially all of the P & K in the litter ends up in the ash • Benefits of dry heat • Reduced moisture levels in the house  lower ammonia levels • Better environment for the birds (& the operators) • Reduced mortality? • Improved feed conversion? • Shorter grow-out period? • Less Nitrogen in the air  more Nitrogen in the litter • higher quality litter (= higher $$$ litter) 6.8 pounds of H2O per gallon of propane burned

  31. Jim Wimberly BioEnergy Systems LLC Fayetteville, AR 479.527.0478 www.biomass2.com Pellet furnace demo; Durham, AR; 1995.

More Related