Project Objective
The aim of this project is to assess whether biomethane has the potential to contribute significantly to decarbonization in the maritime industry from an early stage, and what strategy is needed to realize this potential.
Biogenic residue serves as feedstock for biogas, which offers an attractive source of biomethane and biogenic CO2 for the manufacturing of biofuels. Moreover, by repurposing this residue methane emissions, from mismanaged waste, are mitigated, making it an attractive process for gaining carbon credits. However, currently there are also several challenges to this supply chain making it difficult to implement biogas as a fuel source in the maritime industry. This project addresses these issues via different areas of study and aims to develop a strategy which assures acceleration of deployment in order to support the industry.
The aim of this project is to assess whether biomethane has the potential to contribute significantly to decarbonization in the maritime industry from an early stage, and what strategy is needed to realize this potential.
Biogas is an utmost attractive resource of biomethane and biogenic CO2, which are keystones molecules for biofuels manufacturing. Biogenic residue serves as feedstock, which is abundant and deleterious to the environment if mismanaged. Processing of such feedstocks into biofuels is based upon anaerobic digestion and syntheses, which are well-established technologies. Processing waste in an anaerobic digestor may afford carbon credits, due to the avoidance of methane emissions caused by spontaneous methanogenesis of mismanaged waste. Anaerobic digestion further generates digestate, a natural fertilizer that replaces synthetic fertilizers and has commercial and environmental value.
There are however also challenges: the global availability of biomass is disputed, plant capacities tend to be small and do not lend themselves to a good economy of scale, methane fugitive emissions can plague the supply chain, and this questions the effective GHG emission intensity of the resulting biofuels. Finally, for biogas to become a significant source of fuels for shipping and other off takers, the industry must grow immensely and very rapidly, and it is unclear how to promote and support this required growth.
This project addresses these issues via five areas of study:
By the completion of this project, the aim is to have published several position papers, update NavigaTE and to lay out a strategy on how to ensure acceleration of deployment.