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Economics of chemicals and fuels from forest biomass Tom Browne

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Economics of chemicals and fuels from forest biomass Tom Browne

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    1. 1 Economics of chemicals and fuels from forest biomass Tom Browne

    2. Annual average oil prices, $US/bbl $80 to $100/bbl: the new normal? Apart from a couple of geopolitical events in the 1970s and 1980s, oil has been at $20/bbl from the end of WWII to about 2004. At $20, there are not a lot of commercially-viable biomass-based opportunities for new products. Barring unforeseen events such as a glut of shale oil driving prices down, new oil production costs a lot more than drilling a hole in Saudi Arabia. The cash costs associated with deep offshore or arctic drilling, or oil sands production, imply a new long-term price of $80 to $100 which leaves lots of room for new bio-products.Apart from a couple of geopolitical events in the 1970s and 1980s, oil has been at $20/bbl from the end of WWII to about 2004. At $20, there are not a lot of commercially-viable biomass-based opportunities for new products. Barring unforeseen events such as a glut of shale oil driving prices down, new oil production costs a lot more than drilling a hole in Saudi Arabia. The cash costs associated with deep offshore or arctic drilling, or oil sands production, imply a new long-term price of $80 to $100 which leaves lots of room for new bio-products.

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    4. Regional newsprint demand Severe drop in NA, flat in EU, growth in Asia

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    6. A Lesson from Petroleum Refineries

    7. Todays Forest Bio-refinery

    8. Scale of Refineries

    9. Economies of scale vs. feed costs

    10. Economies of scale vs. feed costs

    11. Volume or Value?

    12. Substitution of Existing Chemical Feeds Tactical approach: Requires an exact molecular replicate of existing feeds Cost, product performance will be crucial Olefins: thin margins, strong competition Bio-ethylene from Brazilian sugar cane BTX: Breakthrough required No easy path from lignin to commercial aromatics The same issues of volumes vs. capex arise

    13. New Chemicals Based on Bio-properties Identify novel products based on unique biomass properties Requires strategic thinking Cost less critical if new functionalities available? Exact molecular replicate less critical? New capital infrastructure? Is this our 4%?

    14. Approach Identify value-added products from wood Focus on chemicals first, then energy from residues Early economic evaluation (Bio-Pathways) Start with bolt-on additions to existing plants Improve economics of existing infrastructure Reduce costs due to shared infrastructure Build relationships with customers Lab-scale samples initially, pilot scale as demand arises Ensure product meets customers needs Involve engineering firms early Good estimates of capex, opex, unexpected problems

    15. Long term: brownfield biorefineries Located on an existing mill site Reuse existing equipment Integrated with forestry supply logistics Build it as big as possible, consistent with supply costs Produce a cheap-to-ship intermediate Better understanding of processes and markets allows this Use all components of wood in profitable fashion Energy self-sufficient Integrated with end-users infrastructure Minimize changes to existing petro-chemicals

    16. Pathways

    17. Forestry-Chemical Industry: one model

    18. Conclusion Biomass is bulky, wet and distributed Petroleum is cheap, dense, comes out of a pipe GWTH-scale of forestry installations: Driven by feedstock costs Implies additives, not wholesale replacement Competing in commodities will be very challenging The petroleum example is critical 4% of feed makes 42% of revenues Doing something useful with the other 96% is equally critical We can always burn the residues Combustion, fermentation are among our oldest technologies

    19. Mankinds oldest technologies The pointy stick To catch dinner

    20. Thank you for your attention Support came from Natural Resources Canadas Transformative Technologies Program Tom.Browne@FPInnovations.ca +1 514 630 4104

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