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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,

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Presentation on theme: "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,"— Presentation transcript:

1 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

2 Integrated biorefineries By 2050 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 Biobased versus inorganic catalysis  High yield, purity and specificity  Water-based, low T, low P  New product spectrum  Large reduction in environmental compliance costs

3 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”

4 Requirements Cost efficient raw materials Cost efficient raw materials  Carbon, energy and water Efficient catalysis Efficient catalysis  Enzymatic catalysis, fermentation, in planta Efficient separation processes Efficient separation processes  Water based separation Smart system integration Smart system integration  Capital utilization for smaller plants  New integrated product model

5 Criteria for a good feedstock Perennial crop Perennial crop  Reduced mechanical input High biomass density High biomass density  Reduced transport energy High water efficiency High water efficiency High fertilizer efficiency High fertilizer efficiency  Reduced energy input and environmental impact Readily processed Readily processed  Reduced process energy input and capital costs Inexpensive relative to quality Inexpensive relative to quality Supply of energy for processing Supply of energy for processing

6 Feedstock versus process EnergyChemicalsProductionMillableStalk Feedstock52%47% Process48%53% Renewable source of process energy is as important as feedstock in developing bio-based products. Sugarcane has a unique advantage through bagasse.

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8 Corn Cane LA fermentation purification gypsum biomass PLA polymerisation Sug crushing Wet-milling enz hydrolysis 8.8+0.6 MJ 12.8+0.4 MJ 14.9+11.4 MJ Gluten Oil Fibre 32 MJ 28.4+5.3 MJ Corn Cane PLA production

9 Ethanol Energy gain Price per bbl oil eq. Gasolin0.8 US $50 US corn 1.3 US $60-75 ($2.6/bu) Cane juice 8-10 US $60-75 (10c/lb) SugarBooster10-15 US $40-60, 2015 Corn stover 5.32020? Bagasse Very high 2020? Switch grass 2.62025?

10 Lignocellulosics

11 Lignocellulosic ethanol Bagasse is to sugar as coal is to oil 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 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

12 Ethanol: the worst possible product Crude  Petrol40 GJ $480$500 Sugar  EtOH 18 GJ27 GJ $200$400 ($600oe) In conventional combustion engines, no premium for higher purity ChemicalsSpot price Ethylene$ 950/t Propylene$ 1100/t Styrene$ 1290/t LDPE$ 1350/t PP$ 1260/t PS$ 1420/t ABS$ 1600/t 23.4.2007

13 Political imperatives Indirect farm subsidies Indirect farm subsidies Resource security Resource security Environmental impact Environmental impact  Passenger cars <8% of Australian GHG emissions  Existing technology could half this  Several future alternatives

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15 Political imperatives Indirect farm subsidies Indirect farm subsidies Resource security Resource security Environmental impact Environmental impact  Passenger cars <8% of Australian GHG emissions  Existing technology could half this  Several future alternatives Ease of introduction Ease of introduction  Readily controlled by policy  Existing technology  Easy to explain Path to better products? Path to better products?

16 Efficient catalysts Enzyme bio-catalysis Enzyme bio-catalysis  Low cost, flexible  Limited product range (e.g., co-factor needs) Fermentation Fermentation  Fast development, large engineering potential  Broad product range In planta In planta  Potentially lowest cost  Long lead time, downstream purification

17 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.

18 Classical biotechnology Random mutations Process optimisation Fixed product range

19 Classical biotechnology Random mutations Process optimisation Fixed product range Genetic engineering New products PDO

20 Classical biotechnology Random mutations Process optimisation Fixed product range Genetic engineering New products PDO Enzyme engineering Improved kinetics

21 Classical biotechnology Random mutations Process optimisation Fixed product range Genetic engineering New products PDO Enzyme engineering Improved kinetics Metabolic engineering Pathway redesign Control redesing      

22 Metabolic engineering From retrofitting to green field design From retrofitting to green field design  Genetic engineering  systems & synthetic biology PDO PDO  7 years, 15 staff using conventional metabolic engineering Succinic acid Succinic acid  3 years, 10 staff using systems biology Amino acids Amino acids  2-3 years, 3 staff using synthetic biology followed by systems biology

23 Real challenges One 50,000 tpa facility One 50,000 tpa facility  $50m in R&D  $75-150m in capital cost  7-10 years to market Integration 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! Need collaborations to succeed!

24 Conclusions Over the next generation Over the next generation  $2,000b chemical industry will become bio-based  Large opportunities throughout the value chain Sugarcane ideal biomass crop Sugarcane ideal biomass crop  Bagasse provides inexpensive, renewable energy Australia can compete Australia can compete  Century long tradition of competing through leading sugarcane technology  Strong biotech infrastructure  Portal to growing markets in Asia


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