Abstract
INTRODUCTION
While biofuels account for just 1% of world fuel consumption for
transportation and the substitution of oil-based fuels is only 1.8% in the
United States, in Brazil it reaches 20%. Latin America is one of the regions
with the most potential to offer biofuels given its climatic advantages
combined with low population density.
A large part of Brazil' s advantages derives from the climate and the
availability of lands. The developed countries do not have enough land to
cover demand for crops to make ethanol. With barely 1.5% of its land sown,
Brazil could entirely replace gasoline with ethanol. The United States on the
other hand, would have to convert half of its total corn production to ethanol
in order to implement a mixture of 10% ethanol to gasoline. That would mean
dedicating 15% of its agricultural land. To meet the 20% benchmark Bush set in
his State of the Union address, the nation has to look South America.
Conventional resources, mainly fossil fuels are becoming limited because of
the rapid increase in energy demand. This imbalance in energy demand and
supply has placed immense pressure not only on consumer prices but also on the
environment, prompting mankind to look for sustainable energy resources.
Biomass is one such environmentally friendly renewable resource from which
various useful chemicals and fuels can be produced. A system similar to a
petroleum refinery is required to produce fuels and useful chemicals from
biomass and is known as a biorefinery.
Biorefinery technology separates the plant biomass, so called lignocellulosic
materials, into building blocks' phenols and sugars. Biorefinery technologies
produce value-added products that might range from basic food ingredients to
complex pharmaceuticals and from simple building materials to complex
industrial composites. Products such as ethanol, biodiesel, glycerol, lipids,
oils, citric acid, lactic acid, acetic acid, methanol, isopropopanol,
vitamins, sugar and protein polymers, etc., could be produced for use as fuels
in food, cosmetic and pharmaceutical industries.
The crucial biorefinery products include energy, special fibers, new
adhesives, biodegradable plastics, degradable surfactants, biodetergents,
specific polymers and enzymes, etc.Development with a target to fill
particular niches. Recently almost 50% of all detergents in the United States
of America contain enzymes and the market share in Europe and Japan for
enzyme-based detergents is over 90%. The cost of enzymes has dropped by more
than 75% in the last 10 years as a result.
SCOPE OF STUDY
This report:
- Provides a complete techno-economic and environmental analysis of
industrial biorefineries which have been identified as the most promising
route to the creation of a domestic biobased industry.
- Covers all biomass fractionation and conversion technologies.
- Includes forecasts to 2012 for biomass conversion processes and equipment
to produce fuels, power, and chemicals from biomass.
- Covers feedstocks, chemical products, transportation fuels.
- Analyzes prospects for biorefineries built on different "platforms" such
as the "sugar platform" based on fermentation of sugars extracted from biomass
feedstocks versus the "syngas platform" based on thermochemical conversion
processes.
- Includes patent analyses, competitive analysis, R&D update, market shares,
and complete company profiles.
METHODOLOGY
In this report, both historic and current data have been used in the demand
analysis. The results of the calculations presented here are therefore based
on three components: a historic analysis of the demand in the period 2003 to
2006, data for 2007 and forecasted demand for the period through 2012.
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