SHV and UGI join forces in $1bn rDME venture

  • Spanish Market: Biofuels, LPG
  • 02/06/21

European LPG distributors UGI International and SHV Energy have announced plans to invest up to $1bn in advancing the production of renewable dimethyl ether (rDME), a fuel with similar molecular properties to LPG. They aim to develop up to six plants that can produce 300,000 t/yr combined by 2027, with first investment in the UK in early 2022 and the US the next target market. UGI International's business development vice-president Neil Murphy and SHV Energy's sustainable fuels director Rebecca Groen spoke with Argus' Aidan Lea about the duo's landmark agreement.

What role will UGI and SHV, as distributors, take in developing rDME production?

Groen: We feel that we need to take a step back in the [supply] chain to really support [production] projects. We do not know how much of it we will do ourselves and how much will be with other people, but we want to stimulate production of rDME for the LPG industry.

Murphy: We will be the guardian of production. We are certainly going back up the supply chain to the production area to work with other parties — it is not a procurement exercise, it is an investment and production exercise.

Which rDME production methods are you investigating?

Groen: All routes are interesting. The standard route through renewable methanol is proven, and methanol is widely available, so this could be a short time to market. The route where you gasify wastes and residues is also interesting, as it makes use of feedstocks that [can be acquired] at negative cost. In the future, the power-to-X opportunity [combining CO2 from the atmosphere with H2 from water to make fuels] is also something we will explore. It will depend on timing, where you are in the world, what feedstocks are available. We are keeping options as broad as possible.

Murphy: The construct of the JV [joint venture] allows us to work with multiple technologies. We are not straightjacketed to one.

Groen: One of the reasons for doing this is to encourage technology players to start thinking about how they can make rDME for the LPG industry.

Will there be enough feedstock available to achieve 300,000 t/yr of rDME?

Groen: There is more than enough, but we have to look at what is available and where. We are keen to understand how you scale up a production method [based on] local feedstock availability because it does not always make sense to ship feedstock overseas. Around the world, a lot of wastes and residues cause problems, such as municipal solid waste in the UK — a lot of which is shipped abroad. A solution we have been looking at is gasification of this waste in the UK, where the overall regulatory framework for renewable fuels is pretty good.

Murphy: The technology and type of plant we are looking at is mobile and does not depend on other co-products or partners producing gasoline, diesel or jet [fuel]. We are looking to build plants that exclusively make rDME, which could be modest in size and relatively mobile. We could follow feedstocks, pockets of abundance, and the decision would be 100pc ours and the technology providers.

Does legislative support for rDME as a fuel exist anywhere yet?

Groen: Legislative support for the off-grid heating industry is lacking everywhere. We need to get the right collaborative frameworks in place. RDME is listed as a fuel in the EU's renewable energy directive (RED) [but] there are still things [to be done to secure] support for the use of wastes, residues, and captured carbon. We need a wider association-level approach with the [World LPG Association] and others.

Murphy: The molecule and its properties are already understood — it is used in products such as aerosols. All we are doing is making it from renewable sources, so it should not be a surprise to policymakers. And blends such as adblue in diesel and E10 and E5 in gasoline are already an accepted concept in the fuel area.

Groen: The International DME Association has met with various EU representatives over RED and the green new deal. But [rDME] is a bit of an unknown. Part of the reason for the JV is to make a statement about our joint belief in this product. In the US, it is further on in certain states, such as California. The low carbon fuel standard gives strong support to renewable fuels and is now being implemented in three more states. In the UK, we are having conversations with the Department of Transport and some ministers in the government. There is general excitement about the possibility of producing a molecule from local waste to make a renewable fuel.

Can rDME be used in existing LPG infrastructure?

Groen: The blend of 20pc of rDME with propane does not require any infrastructure modification — 20pc is an accepted norm in some parts of the world. Tests show this ratio could be increased but, as an industry, we prefer to be conservative and prioritise safety. But 100pc rDME will also be available, and this requires some minor modifications to the elastomers and seals. Customers will optimise their systems for one or the other. SHV is working on two transport projects, one for a 20pc blend in California, and one for 100pc rDME in Germany.

Murphy: In some jurisdictions, carbon accreditation schemes may allow distributors to take a tonne of rDME, for example, and blend it virtually across their LPG business. Meaning end users get credit for lower emissions without each user physically taking delivery of rDME. But where this is not possible, small modifications may be needed to enable customers to take physical deliveries. Legislation around accrediting carbon intensity to an end use will determine the logistics.

How much can carbon emissions be lowered by using rDME?

Groen: There is an 85pc greenhouse gas reduction compared with diesel and gasoline based on calculations by a European Commission-funded well-to-wheel study. This figure can be higher or lower depending on which feedstock and production process is used. This means cuts of around 75pc compared with propane.

How big an impact can rDME have on the LPG industry?

Murphy: The JV targets defossilisation of the industry. In the right volumes, rDME would enable the industry to meet its 2030 defossilisation targets in the US and EU.

Groen: Customers are looking for an immediate and affordable solution. Some of the infrastructure changes required to decarbonise the off-grid industry are too expensive. It is important to offer incremental improvements to meet decarbonisation targets, which people can afford.

Does rDME have any advantages over bio-LPG? Which will play a bigger role?

Murphy: Both are valuable arrows in our communal quiver. RDME is less established than bio-LPG but it can have a higher negative [carbon] index, and so has a more powerful impact on defossilisation. But it is clear the industry is heading down the path of both, where it will become a portfolio of molecules from different sources, of which rDME will be a very important one.

What is the biggest challenge to grow the rDME market?

Groen: We need to make the projects happen, update the legislation, and support customers to understand implications for them. We feel this JV can drive those activities from a broader perspective than either organisation could alone. Murphy: The biggest challenge is for policy makers and the industry is to embrace this. We want to bring critical mass to this, because the industry has to adapt.


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26/04/24

New technologies aim to boost SAF production

New technologies aim to boost SAF production

London, 26 April (Argus) — A likely rise in global demand for sustainable aviation fuel (SAF), underpinned by mandates for its use, is encouraging development of new production pathways. While hydrotreated esters and fatty acids synthesised paraffinic kerosine (HEFA-SPK) remains the most common type of SAF available today, much more production will be needed. The International Air Transport Association (Iata) estimated SAF output at around 500,000t in 2023, and expects this to rise to 1.5mn t this year, but that only meets around 0.5pc of global jet fuel demand. An EU-wide SAF mandate will come into effect in 2025 that will set a minimum target of 2pc, with a sub-target for synthetic SAF starting from 2030. This week the UK published its domestic SAF mandate , also targeting a 2pc SAF share in 2025 and introducing a power-to-liquid (PtL) obligation from 2028. New pathways involve different technology to unlock use of a wider feedstock base. US engineering company Honeywell said this week its hydrocracking technology, Fischer-Tropsch (FT) Unicracking, can be used to produce SAF from biomass such as crop residue or wood and food waste. Renewable fuels producer DG Fuels will use the technology for its SAF facility in Louisiana, US. The plant will be able to produce 13,000 b/d of SAF starting from 2028, Honeywell said. The company said its SAF technologies — which include ethanol-to-jet , which converts cellulosic ethanol into SAF — have been adopted at more than 50 sites worldwide including Brazil and China. Honeywell is part of the Google and Boeing-backed United Airlines Ventures Sustainable Flight Fund , which is aimed at scaling up SAF production. German alternative fuels company Ineratec said this week it will use South African integrated energy firm Sasol's FT catalysts for SAF production. The catalysts will be used in Ineratec's plants, including a PtL facility it is building in Frankfurt, Germany. The plant will be able to produce e-fuels from green hydrogen and CO2, with a capacity of 2,500 t/yr of e-fuels beginning in 2024. The e-fuels will then be processed into synthetic SAF. Earlier this month , ethanol-to-jet producer LanzaJet said it has received funding from technology giant Microsoft's Climate Innovation Fund, "to continue building its capability and capacity to deploy its sustainable fuels process technology globally". The producer recently signed a licence and engineering agreement with sustainable fuels company Jet Zero Australia to progress development of an SAF plant in north Queensland, Australia. The plant will have capacity of 102mn l/yr of SAF. Polish oil firm Orlen formed a partnership with Japanese electrical engineering company Yakogawa to develop SAF technology . They aim to develop a technological process to synthesise CO2 and hydrogen to form PtL SAF. The SAF will be produced from renewable hydrogen as defined by the recast EU Renewable Energy Directive (RED II) and bio-CO2 from biomass boilers, Orlen told Argus . By Evelina Lungu Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Japan’s Mol starts operating LPG-fuelled VLGC


26/04/24
26/04/24

Japan’s Mol starts operating LPG-fuelled VLGC

Tokyo, 26 April (Argus) — Japanese shipping firm Mitsui OSK Line's (Mol) Singapore-based subsidiary Aramo Shipping started operating today a new LPG-fuelled LPG and ammonia carrier for domestic importer Gyxis. The 87,119m³ very large gas carrier (VLGC) Aquamarine Progress 2 was built by Japanese shipbuilder Namura Shipbuilding at Namura's Imari shipyard in south Japan's Saga prefecture. The vessel is equipped with a dual-fuel engine, which can burn LPG and conventional marine fuel. Mol expects use of LPG to reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) and nitrogen oxide emissions by 20pc and sulphur oxide and particulate matter emissions by 90pc compared with a heavy oil-dedicated vessel. The VLGC is also designed to be able to carry ammonia, eyeing potential demand growth for decarbonisation. Japanese shipping firms and shipbuilders have boosted construction of LPG carriers that can also ship ammonia, as demand for the cleaner fuel is expected to increase in future. Japan plans to co-fire ammonia at coal-fired power plants to reduce CO2 emissions, while aiming to use ammonia as a hydrogen carrier. Shipbuilders Kawasaki Heavy Industries and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries each delivered a VLGC, which can carry LPG and liquefied ammonia. Mol, in partnership with shipbuilders Tsuneishi Shipbuilding and Mitsui E&S Shipbuilding, completed risk assessments to design a mid-size ammonia-fuelled ammonia and LPG carrier , targeting to finish construction by 2026. By Nanami Oki Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Be8 quer ISCC de etanol para SAF em nova usina


25/04/24
25/04/24

Be8 quer ISCC de etanol para SAF em nova usina

Sao Paulo, 25 April (Argus) — A produtora de biocombustíveis Be8 buscará a Certificação Internacional em Sustentabilidade e Carbono (ISCC, na sigla em inglês) Corsia para comprovar que seu etanol à base de grãos está de acordo com as exigências internacionais para a produção de combustível de aviação sustentável (SAF, na sigla em inglês), contou hoje o CEO da empresa, Erasmo Carlos Battistella, à Argus . A companhia quer obter o certificado para sua nova e primeira planta de etanol, localizada em Passo Fundo, no Rio Grande do Sul. "Já estamos trabalhando nisso", disse Battistella. A usina terá capacidade de produzir 209.000 m³/ano do biocombustível e recebeu uma licença ambiental nesta semana. As operações devem começar em 2026. O ISCC é o principal sistema de certificação internacional para biomassa e bioenergia, com foco na sustentabilidade do uso da terra em conjunto com a rastreabilidade e a verificação dos gases de efeito estufa. Diversas empresas de etanol à base de cana-de-açúcar já receberam o certificado no Brasil – como Raízen, São Martinho, BP Bunge, Adecoagro, Copersucar e Zilor. A produtora de biocombustível de milho FS foi a primeira a conseguir o reconhecimento para o etanol de grãos. O Brasil, referência global em biocombustíveis como o etanol e o biodiesel, é considerado um grande player em potencial no SAF pela indústria de transporte aéreo e pelo Departamento de Energia dos EUA, devido à via de conversão pela tecnologia alcohol-to-jet (AtJ, na sigla em inglês). Por Laura Guedes Envie comentários e solicite mais informações em feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . Todos os direitos reservados.

Etanol de milho deve compensar parte da queda da cana


25/04/24
25/04/24

Etanol de milho deve compensar parte da queda da cana

Sao Paulo, 25 April (Argus) — A produção de etanol de milho compensará parcialmente uma queda no processamento do biocombustível à base de cana-de-açúcar na safra de 2024-25, de acordo com a Companhia Nacional de Abastecimento (Conab). A companhia espera que a produção total de etanol – de cana-de-açúcar e milho – para a temporada atual atinja 34,1 milhões de m³, baixa de 4pc em comparação ao ciclo recorde de 2023-24. O processamento total de anidro, usado como mistura para a gasolina, deve crescer 6,2pc, 892.500m³ a mais que na safra anterior, a 15,1 milhões de m³. Já o hidratado deve recuar 10pc, para 18,9 milhões de m³. Do total que será produzido no ano, a cana-de-açúcar deverá ser matéria-prima para 27,3 milhões de m³ deste volume, 8pc a menos do que na safra anterior, à medida que sua moagem deve diminuir 3,8pc, para 685,8 milhões de t. Isto se compara com 713,2 milhões de m³ em 2023-24, o maior valor já registrado no país. Condições climáticas adversas, como falta de chuvas e altas temperaturas no Centro-Sul, reduzirão a produtividade no período, reportou a Conab. Enquanto isso, a área de plantação de cana-de-açúcar subiu 4,1pc, para 8,6 milhões de hectares (ha), com mais áreas em expansão e renovação. As usinas também devem continuar favorecendo um mix mais açucareiro em detrimento do biocombustível. A organização espera que a produção de açúcar cresça 1,3pc, para 46,2 milhões de t. Os preços do açúcar estão mais atrativos no mercado internacional, com importantes exportadores como Índia e Tailândia diminuindo os embarques e abrindo espaço para a commodity brasileira. Nesse cenário, o processamento do etanol de milho deve compensar "parcialmente" o volume menor de biocombustível de cana, segundo a Conab. Serão produzidos 6,8 milhões de m³ do produto, alta de 16pc na base anual. O etanol de grãos está quebrando recordes a cada safra nos últimos anos, crescendo exponencialmente especialmente no Mato Grosso, Mato Grosso do Sul e Goiás. O país construirá 10 novas plantas do biocombustível de milho nos próximos dois anos, afirmou a consultoria SCA Brasil. Por Laura Guedes Envie comentários e solicite mais informações em feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . Todos os direitos reservados.

UK publishes SAF mandate, targets 22pc by 2040


25/04/24
25/04/24

UK publishes SAF mandate, targets 22pc by 2040

London, 25 April (Argus) — The UK will mandate the supply of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) from next year, targeting a 2pc share in 2025, which equates to around 230,000t of SAF according to the government, and increasing the obligation annually to 10pc in 2030, 15pc in 2035 and 22pc in 2040. The obligation, which falls on the jet fuel supplier, will remain at 22pc from 2040 until it is reviewed and updated, the UK said. The mandate is subject to parliamentary approval. An EU-wide SAF obligation is also due to come into effect next year, targeting a 2pc SAF share in 2025, increasing to 6pc from 2030, 20pc from 2035, 34pc from 2040, 42pc from 2045 and 70pc in 2050. Under the new UK mandate, hydrotreated esters and fatty acids (HEFA) SAF can be used to meet 100pc of SAF demand in 2025 and 2026, but it will be capped at 71pc in 2030 and 35pc in 2040. HEFA is the most common type of SAF today, and is expected to account for over 70pc of global production by the end of the decade, according to Argus data. An obligation for Power-to-Liquid (PtL) SAF will be introduced from 2028 at 0.2pc of total jet fuel demand, rising to 0.5pc in 2030 and 3.5pc in 2040. The EU is targeting a 1.2pc share of synthetic aviation fuels in 2030, rising to 2pc in 2032, 5pc in 2035 and 35pc in 2050. To be eligible under the mandate, SAFs must achieve minimum greenhouse gas (GHG) reductions of 40pc compared with a fossil fuel jet comparator of 89g CO2e/MJ, and must be made from sustainable wastes or residues, such as used cooking oil or forestry residues. SAF from food, feed or energy crops is currently not eligible for support under the scheme, the government said. PtL SAF will need to be produced from low carbon — renewable or nuclear — electricity. Recycled carbon fuels (RCF) from feedstocks like unrecyclable plastics can also be used to meet the obligation. Hydrogen, whether used as fuel precursor or as final fuel, must be bio-hydrogen from wastes and residues, RCF hydrogen or derived from low carbon energy. The mandate will also introduce tradeable certificates for the supply of SAF, with additional certificates awarded for fuels with higher GHG emissions savings. There will be three types of certificates: PtL, standard and HEFA. Buy-out mechanisms will be set at the equivalent of £4.70/l and £5.00/l for the main and PtL obligations, respectively. Formal reviews of the mandate will be conducted and published at least every five years, with the first to be carried out by 2030, the government said. The mandate will be separate from the country's Renewable Transport Fuel Obligation (RTFO). In tandem with the publication of the SAF mandate, the government launched a consultation on four options for an SAF revenue certainty scheme aimed at guaranteeing revenue from SAF and support production in the country. The UK previously said it aims to introduce the mechanism, which will be industry funded, by the end of 2026 . The consultation includes a preferred option for a "guaranteed strike price" (GSP), which would guarantee a pre-agreed price of SAF supplied into the UK market. By Giulia Squadrin Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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