Well-to-Wheels Analysis of Future Automotive Fuels and Powertrains in the EU context IMMISSIONI & EMISSIONI MILANO – 16th December 2008.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Biofuels: Environmental Friend or Foe? Presentation to 1 st Year Environmental Engineering Students Deniz Karman.
Advertisements

Hawaii: 2020 Presented by Alex Waegel for Team Cake B.
Main elements in a possible revision of the Energy Taxation Directive Informal meeting with stakeholders, 15 July 2009 European Commission, DG Taxation.
Analyses of World Supply of Natural Gas with DNE21+ Model.
Environmental aspects of using alternative fuels and biofuels Vladimír Vlk Adviser for sustainable energy and transport 13 th – 14 th October 2011 Prague,
ALTERNATIVE FUEL.
Key Factors in the Introduction of Hydrogen as the Sustainable Fuel of the Future John P Blakeley, Research Fellow Jonathan D Leaver, Chairman Centre for.
Roskilde University – Zero Regio Mantova PCC Funded by EU FP Anders Chr. Hansen Can HFC in automotive use contribute to EU goals? Economic.
Does biofuels can be commodities? Marcia Real, D.Sc. Fluminense Federal University WBS Bioenergy Symposium 2013 Rio de Janeiro, Brasil.
IPCC Synthesis Report Part IV Costs of mitigation measures Jayant Sathaye.
SEDS Review Liquid Fuels Sector May 7, 2009 Don Hanson Deena Patel Argonne National Laboratory.
Dr. Lajos CSEPI (State Secretary for Transport ) Hungary CLIMATE CHANGE: ENERGY AND TRANSPORT Issues, challenges and strategies in Hungary.
Tax Exemption for Biofuels in Germany: Is Bio-Ethanol Really an Option for Climate Policy? Jan Michael Henke, Gernot Klepper, Norbert Schmitz International.
JEC WTW study 12/2005. HyCARE Symposium Slide 1 Well-to-Wheels analysis of future automotive fuels and powertrains in the European context A joint study.
Economic and Land Use Implications of Biofuels: Role of Policy Madhu Khanna With Xiaoguang Chen and Haixiao Huang Department of Agricultural and Consumer.
The Transportation Challenge. U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions by Sector (2007) Transportation Energy Use by Mode (2006)
Well-To-Wheels Energy Use and Greenhouse Gas Emissions of Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicles Amgad Elgowainy, Andy Burnham, Michael Wang, John Molburg, and.
Biomass, Biofuels and Hydrogen Sectors in Context of SEDS
What jobs in a low carbon European economy ? ETUC/CES Brussels, February 2007 Transport policies and measures in EU to mitigate climate change François.
09/2005 Slide 1 Well-to-Wheels analysis of future automotive fuels and powertrains in the European context A joint study by EUCAR / JRC / CONCAWE EFV GENEVA.
GRPE_djrndt_ ppt Slide 1 Transport Fuels for the Future Neville Thompson, David Rickeard CONCAWE Inland Transport Committee Round Table, 20 February.
INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY AGENCE INTERNATIONALE DE L’ENERGIE 1 Dr. Robert K. Dixon Head, Energy Technology Policy Division International Energy Agency.
PSA PEUGEOT CITROËN's sustainable mobility commitment for today's and tomorrow's generation.
Opportunities and Constraints on Possible Options for Transport Sector CDM Projects – Brazilian Case Studies Suzana Kahn Ribeiro Importance of Transport.
SUSTAINABLE ENERGY: TRANSPORTATION. UNITED STATES POPULATION 300 MILLION MOTORIZED VEHICLES ~300 MILLION TRANSPORTATION ENERGY CONSUMPTION ~32 % OF TOTAL.
Bus and coach transport for greening mobility Contribution to the European Bus and Coach Forum 2011 Huib van Essen, 20 October 2011.
CAI Asia / MoEF Better Air Quality Conference Agra India, 6-8 December 2004 Planning the Energy Scenarios for Asia: How to Minimize Negative Air Quality.
Vehicle Technology: 2 and 3 Wheelers in Asia: Current and Future Greenhouse Gas Emissions Narayan Iyer, Adviser (Technical), Bajaj Auto Ltd, Pune, India.
Creating sustainable mobility Piet Steel Toyota Motor Europe
Latest EU policy developments in the field of bioenergy
European Commission, Directorate General for Mobility and Transport Slide 1 Future Mobility in Europe l Challenges l EU transport policy l Alternative.
10/3/2011 DRAFT – DO NOT CITE OR QUOTE For NPC Study Discussion Only 1 FTF Coordinating Subcommittee Meeting Model Structure Discussion Deanne Short October.
Pricing policies for reducing CO 2 emissions from transport Huib van Essen Manager Transport CE Delft.
1 The Renewable Fuels Standard: A Status Report Dr. Michael Shelby EPA’s Office of Transportation and Air Quality March 7 th.
Conference on the Future of Energy in Enlarged Europe Warsaw, 7 – 8 th October 2004 Round Table : Hydrogen Energy Technology / Economy « The New Fuels.
DAC PROJECT Capacity Building in Balcan Countries for the Abatement of Greenhouse Gases Setting priorities for GHG emissions’ reduction George Mavrotas.
A least-cost approach to reduce CO 2 - emissions in passenger car transport: This time economics will kill the electric car Amela Ajanovic Energy Economics.
Agenda 2-6 Fuel specification in India and Alternative Fuel Scenario SIAM – JAMA Two-Wheeler Group Meeting 31 st October 2014, Goa.
HOW WILL TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS BE TRANSFORMED IN OUR ENERGY FUTURE? GEORGE A. HUME April 28, 2006 Reference was made to the following internet sites in.
Johnthescone The IPCC Special Report on Renewable Energy Sources and Climate Change Mitigation UN Climate Change Conference June 2011 Bonn, Germany, 7.
Senate Transportation and Housing Committee Providing Fuels of the Future Catherine Reheis-Boyd President October 24, 2011 WESTERN STATES PETROLEUM ASSOCIATION.
1 System Dynamic Modeling Dave Reichmuth. 2 Objectives Use dynamic models of infrastructure systems to analyze the impacts of widespread deployment of.
Europe’s Share of the Climate Challenge Domestic Actions and International Obligations to Protect the Planet December 1 st, 2009 Charles Heaps, Pete Erickson,
Scania – Sustainable Urban Transport – April 2008
California’s Low Carbon Fuel Standard Overview of the Proposed Regulation March 16, 2009 California Environmental Protection Agency Air Resources Board.
The Swedish Energy Foresight Energy supply and use in Sweden 2001, TWh.
By Shalnev Dmitry Class 9 A Pervomaisk Secondary School Tambov Region 2014.
ALTERNATIVE FUELS. World today is facing the pinch of rising energy consumption. Green house gas emissions and global warming is also in the forefront.
Internal Combustion Engine SJCHS. Fossil Fuels Gasoline: 4-12 carbons in hydrocarbon chain Diesel: 8-25 carbons in hydrocarbon chain; 113% more energy.
Report of the national experts‘ Joint Expert Group Transport Environment on the perspective of alternative fuels in Europe Conference on Future Transport.
Joint Research Centre the European Commission's in-house science service Serving society Stimulating innovation Supporting legislation Scientific challenges.
Workshop on the Criteria to establish projections scenarios Sectoral projection guidance: Transport Mario Contaldi, TASK-GHG Emanuele Peschi, TASK-GHG.
Assessment of the Economic Impact of Greening Vehicular Transport in Barbados Winston Moore (PhD) and Stacia Howard Antilles Economics November 2015.
JOANNEUM RESEARCH Forschungsgesellschaft mbH LIFE CYCLE ASSESSMENT OF ELECTRIC VEHICLES – Austrian Results in an International Context Gerfried Jungmeier.
1 Some Modeling Results for the Low Carbon Fuel Standard International Energy Workshop Venice, June 19, 2009 Carmen Difiglio, Ph.D. Deputy Assistant Secretary.
Energy Demand Analysis and Energy Saving Potentials in the Greek Road Transport Sector Dr. Spyros J. Kiartzis Director Alternative Energy Sources & New.
PQ2016, Tallinn Long-term impact of technological development on European road transportation sector’s fuel mix: focus on electric vehicles Ekaterina Grushevenko.
Betül Özer, Erdem Görgün, Selahattin İncecik
Future Technologies and Fuels for the Trucking Sector
JOANNEUM RESEARCH Forschungsgesellschaft mbH
Biofuel Demand Projections In the Annual Energy Outlook
The Economics of Biofuel Production and Use
Revised Transition Scenarios for California
CO2 and the Road Transport Sector in India
CALCULATION OF GHG EMISSIONS IN THE FUEL CHAIN
CONCAWE’s Views on the Fuels Directive, Article 7a
Comprehensive Electrification
Revised Transition Scenarios for California
Optiresource – Daimler‘s „Well-to-Wheel“- Optimizer
A Clean Planet for all A European strategic long term vision for a prosperous, modern, competitive and climate neutral economy.
Presentation transcript:

Well-to-Wheels Analysis of Future Automotive Fuels and Powertrains in the EU context IMMISSIONI & EMISSIONI MILANO – 16th December 2008

What is the Well-to-Wheels study ? It is a Life-Cycle Analysis restricted to quantitative aspects: Green-House Gases (GHG)‏ Energy efficiency Direct costs to “EU inc.” The study aims at clarifying the following issue: How to compare different ways to reduce GHG gases from passenger cars, in the time frame? Efficiency ? Availability ? Costs ? The study estimates the energy balance GHG balance, costs, and availability of ALL technically feasible and alternative fuels from all sources with a significant potential to replace oil-based fuels. Derived figures include cost of GHG avoidance and cost of fossil road-fuel substitution for each alternative fuel process

The WTW analysis is: A CONSENSUAL REFERENCE STUDY TRANSPARENT - ALL assumptions and input data specified and accessible STAKEHOLDER INVOLVEMENT - oil/car/biofuels….industries are collaborating - Several Peer Review Meetings - Many improvements achieved using stakeholder suggestions

Resource Crude oil Coal Natural Gas Biomass Wind Nuclear Well-to-Wheels Pathways Powertrains Spark Ignition: Gasoline, LPG, CNG, Ethanol, H 2 Compression Ignition: Diesel, DME, Bio-diesel Fuel Cell Hybrids: SI, CI, FC Hybrid Fuel Cell + Reformer Fuels Conventional Gasoline/Diesel/Naphtha Synthetic Diesel CNG (inc. biogas)‏ LPG MTBE/ETBE Hydrogen (compressed / liquid)‏ Methanol DME Ethanol Bio-diesel (inc. FAEE)‏

MJMJ MJ non renewable primary input / MJ in the tank GHG(g)MJ GHG(g) in CO2 eq. / MJ in the tank WTT Pathways Decomposition

Tank-to-Wheels Matrix

Vehicle Assumptions

Tank-to-Wheels study Vehicles Performance & Emissions Time lag for km/h [s] < 13 > 30 Gradeability at 1 km/h [%] > 180> 600 Range (20 km ZEVRange) [km] Top speed Continuous [km/h] Time lag for 0-50 km/h [s] Time lag for km/h in 4th gear [s] Acceleration [m/s²] < 4 < 13 > 4.5 Minimum Vehicle Performance Set All technologies fulfil at least minimal customer performance criteria All technologies fulfil at least minimal customer performance criteria “Vehicle / Fuel” combinations comply with emissions regulations “Vehicle / Fuel” combinations comply with emissions regulations  The 2002 vehicles comply with Euro III  The vehicles comply with EU IV

Cost of fossil fuels substitution and CO 2 avoided  Some cost elements are dependent on scale (e.g. distribution infrastructure, number of alternative vehicles etc)‏  As a common calculation basis we assumed that 5% of the relevant vehicle fleet (SI, CI or both) converts to the alternative fuel –This is not a forecast, simply a way of comparing each fuel option under the same conditions –If this portion of the EU transportation demand were to be replaced by alternative fuels and powertrain technologies, the GHG savings vs. incremental costs would be as indicated  Costs of CO 2 avoided are calculated from incremental capital and operating costs for fuel production and distribution, and for the vehicle The costs, as calculated, are valid for a steady-state situation where 5% of the relevant conventional fuels have been replaced by an alternative. Additional costs are likely to be incurred during the transition period, especially where a new distribution infrastructure is required.

Costing basis  We considered the cost from a macro-economic point of view (cost to “EU inc.”)‏ –The cost of internationally traded commodities is the market price whether imported or produced within Europe (unless the production cost in Europe is higher)‏ –The 12% capital charge excludes the tax element (internal)‏  Cost elements considered –For fuels produced within Europe Raw material cost Production cost (capital charge + fixed operating costs + energy/chemicals costs)‏ –For imported fuels: market price –Distribution and retail costs –Additional cost of alternative vehicles (compared to state-of-the- art gasoline PISI)‏

Costing basis: oil price  Oil price is important because –It sets the cost of fossil fuels –It influences the cost of virtually all other materials and services  We have considered two oil price scenarios –25 €/bbl (30 $/bbl)‏ –50 €/bbl (60 $/bbl)‏  All other cost elements are adjusted according to an “Oil Cost Factor” (OCF) representing the fraction of the cost element that will follow the oil price

Additional cost of alternative vehicles Base: Gasoline PISI

Road fuels and vehicle market assumptions: Substitution scenario These figures are for replacing like for like and may not be representative of an evolving car market Total demand and gasoline/diesel ratio significantly changed from version 1 Car population figure reduced from version 1

Overall picture: GHG v. total energy Liquid fuels, DME/LPG/CNG/CBG Alternative fuels are generally less energy-efficient than conventional ones vehicles

Overall picture: GHG v. total energy Hydrogen Most hydrogen pathways are energy-intensive vehicles

Overall picture: GHG mitigation Costs

CONCLUSIONS:  Easy to do worse, even with advanced technologies…  To do better than conventional vehicles, you have to pay, and the study is useful to rank and compare  No single fuel pathway offers a short term route to high volumes of “low carbon” fuel: contributions from a number of technologies/routes will be needed.  Conventional biofuels save GHG if made on EU set- aside land, but the GHG saving per € and per ha is much worse than in other sectors Well-to-Wheels Analysis

JEC Study History Version 1: 2001 – 2003 Version 1 published December 2003 Workshop at JRC 2004 to review and start of updates Version 2: 2004 – 2005 Version 2a published May 2006 Biomass availability workshop May 2006 Version 2b published December 2006 Version 2c published May 2007 after small corrections Version 3: 2007 – 2008 (MAINLY FUELS UP-DATE)‏ Preliminary results published these days Full release expected first quarter 2009 Version 4: 2008 – 2010 (MAINLY “CARS” UP-DATE)‏ Expected first quarter 2010

Download: > visitors and > downloads (latest version)‏ Better input data TBS to: Well-to-Wheels Analysis of Future Automotive Fuels and Powertrains

THEEND Many Thanks

Some more technological bits…. Source: PSA