Transcript Document
Sugarcane Biorefineries
The Stone Age did not end for lack of
stone, and the Oil Age will end long
before the world runs out of oil.
Sheikh Zaki Yamani, Saudi Arabia oil minister
Integrated biorefineries
• By 2050
75% of $2,000 billion chemical industry biobased
Large opportunities for all participants in the value-chain,
including suppliers of renewable resources
• Biobased versus inorganic catalysis
High yield, purity and specificity
Water-based, low T, low P
New product spectrum
Large reduction in environmental compliance costs
Why bioproducts (DuPont)?
Renewable & widespread
sustainable and reliable resource
Low toxicity & flammability
inherent safe and benign process
Good raw material economics
comparable to petrochemicals
Unique & rich functionality
novel materials, oxygen built-in
Requires new technology
opportunities for proprietary position
Chad says so: “25% renewable in 2010”
Requirements
• Cost efficient raw materials
Carbon, energy and water
• Efficient catalysis
Enzymatic catalysis, fermentation, in planta
• Efficient separation processes
Water based separation
• Smart system integration
Capital utilization for smaller plants
New integrated product model
Criteria for a good feedstock
• Perennial crop
Reduced mechanical input
• High biomass density
Reduced transport energy
• High water efficiency
• High fertilizer efficiency
Reduced energy input and environmental impact
• Readily processed
Reduced process energy input and capital costs
• Inexpensive relative to quality
• Supply of energy for processing
Feedstock versus process
Energy
Chemicals
Production
Millable
Stalk
Feedstock
52%
47%
Process
48%
53%
Renewable source of process energy is as important as feedstock in
developing bio-based products.
Sugarcane has a unique advantage through bagasse.
1.40
Substituted products
TOTAL
-10.00
Sugar beet
Corn
-15.00
1.00
0.80
0.60
0.40
0.20
0.00
-0.20
-0.40
-0.60
-0.80
Sugar beet
Agricultural production
Processing
1.20
Corn
-5.00
Field emissions
Agricultural production
Processing
Substituted products
TOTAL
Sugarcane
0.00
Greenhouse gas emissions (kg CO2(eq)/kg monosaccharide)
5.00
Sugarcane
Energy input (MJ/kg monosaccharide)
10.00
PLA production
28.4+5.3 MJ
Corn
Corn
Gluten
Oil
8.8+0.6 MJ
Wet-milling
enz hydrolysis
Sug
Cane
crushing
Fibre
32 MJ
14.9+11.4 MJ
fermentation
purification
LA
12.8+0.4 MJ
polymerisation
gypsum
biomass
Cane
PLA
Ethanol
Gasolin
Energy gain
0.8
Price per bbl oil eq.
US $50
US corn
Cane juice
SugarBooster
1.3
8-10
10-15
US $60-75 ($2.6/bu)
US $60-75 (10c/lb)
US $40-60, 2015
Corn stover
Bagasse
Switch grass
5.3
Very high
2.6
2020?
2020?
2025?
Lignocellulosics
Lignocellulosic ethanol
• Bagasse is to sugar as coal is to oil
Excellent source of heat and electricity
Suited for some C5 (e.g., furfural) and lignin products
Need quantum leap in technology to achieve meaningful
ethanol economy
• Limited quantity, seasonality
Current thermochemical approaches non-viable
Need enzymatic approach or high value by-products
Realize environmental value though co-gen
Use coal-to-liquid and burn the bagasse
Ethanol: the worst possible product
Crude
40 GJ
$480
Petrol
40 GJ
$500
Sugar
18 GJ
$200
EtOH
27 GJ
$400 ($600oe)
In conventional combustion engines,
no premium for higher purity
Chemicals
Ethylene
Propylene
Styrene
Spot price
$ 950/t
$ 1100/t
$ 1290/t
LDPE
PP
PS
ABS
$ 1350/t
$ 1260/t
$ 1420/t
$ 1600/t
23.4.2007
Political imperatives
• Indirect farm subsidies
• Resource security
• Environmental impact
Passenger cars <8% of Australian GHG emissions
Existing technology could half this
Several future alternatives
Political imperatives
• Indirect farm subsidies
• Resource security
• Environmental impact
Passenger cars <8% of Australian GHG emissions
Existing technology could half this
Several future alternatives
• Ease of introduction
Readily controlled by policy
Existing technology
Easy to explain
• Path to better products?
Efficient catalysts
• Enzyme bio-catalysis
Low cost, flexible
Limited product range (e.g., co-factor needs)
• Fermentation
Fast development, large engineering potential
Broad product range
• In planta
Potentially lowest cost
Long lead time, downstream purification
Metabolic engineering
We are studying microbes as "programmable"
manufacturing factories to make chemicals,
monomers and polymers from different nutrient
feedstocks. Current feedstocks for these materials
are petrochemicals from oil. We are programming
microbes to make very sophisticated polymer
building blocks and molecules out of simple,
renewable feedstocks, like glucose and methane.
Chad Holliday, Chairman & CEO – DuPont, Boston Chief Executive Club, Sept 99.
• Classical biotechnology
• Random mutations
• Process optimisation
• Fixed product range
• Classical biotechnology
• Random mutations
• Process optimisation
• Fixed product range
• Genetic engineering
• New products
PDO
• Classical biotechnology
• Random mutations
• Process optimisation
• Fixed product range
• Genetic engineering
• New products
• Enzyme engineering
• Improved kinetics
PDO
• Classical biotechnology
• Random mutations
• Process optimisation
• Fixed product range
• Genetic engineering
• New products
PDO
• Enzyme engineering
• Improved kinetics
• Metabolic engineering
• Pathway redesign
• Control redesing
Metabolic engineering
• From retrofitting to green field design
Genetic engineering systems & synthetic biology
• PDO
7 years, 15 staff using conventional metabolic engineering
• Succinic acid
3 years, 10 staff using systems biology
• Amino acids
2-3 years, 3 staff using synthetic biology followed by
systems biology
Real challenges
• One 50,000 tpa facility
$50m in R&D
$75-150m in capital cost
7-10 years to market
• Integration
End-users expect complete solutions
Existing chemical industry benefits immensely from process
and product integration
Market penetration
50% lower production price for replacement products
Distinct advantages for new products
• Need collaborations to succeed!
Conclusions
• Over the next generation
$2,000b chemical industry will become bio-based
Large opportunities throughout the value chain
• Sugarcane ideal biomass crop
Bagasse provides inexpensive, renewable energy
• Australia can compete
Century long tradition of competing through leading
sugarcane technology
Strong biotech infrastructure
Portal to growing markets in Asia