Biomass Power Generation – Tad Mason · BIOMASS POWER GENERATION Tad Mason, CEO ... 12 THE FUTURE...

14
BIOMASS POWER GENERATION Tad Mason, CEO TSS Consultants Biomass Market Fundamentals Workshop April 15, 2016

Transcript of Biomass Power Generation – Tad Mason · BIOMASS POWER GENERATION Tad Mason, CEO ... 12 THE FUTURE...

BIOMASS POWER GENERATION

Tad Mason, CEO TSS Consultants

Biomass Market Fundamentals

Workshop

April 15, 2016

2

WHAT IS BIOMASS?

¡ Biomass – any solid, nonhazardous, cellulosic material derived from: forest-related resources, solid wood wastes, agricultural wastes, and plants grown exclusively as a fuel.*

*based on the definition of biomass per the Federal Energy Act of

2005.

3

COMBUSTION TECHNOLOGY

Burney Forest Power 31 MW CHP at Burney, CA

Phoenix Energy 500 kWh Gasification Unit at Merced, CA

6

SHORT HISTORY OF THE BIOMASS POWER SECTOR IN THE WEST

¡ Forest products sector was an

early adopter. ¡ Public Utilities Regulatory Policy

Act of 1978 (Federal). § Market response – 80+ new

biopower plants (1,000+ MW of generation capacity in the West).

¡ Power contract buyouts following de-regulation of natural gas.

¡ Latest OR policy – SB 1547 (March 2016). No coal power by 2030. OR Renewable Portfolio Standard – 50% renewable by 2040.

7

OREGON FACILITIES

¡ 8 biomass plants in commercial service – about 140 MW capacity.

¡ Utilize a blend of urban, ag and forest feedstocks. Urban feedstock is the low price leader, then ag, with forest biomass as the highest priced.

¡ Preferred feedstock characteristics: § < 50% moisture content § > 8,000 Btu/dry pound § < 5% ash content

¡ 6 idle plants with about 80 MW capacity.

¡ Most recent biomass plant curtailment is SP Newsprint 40 MW at Newburg.

CURRENT WEST-WIDE AND FEDERAL TRENDS – PART I

¡ Conversion of existing coal fired power generation facilities to biomass or co-fire with biomass.

¡ State legislative push towards small-scale distributed generation facilities. Example – move to technology specific feed in tariff rates (California Senate Bill 1122).

¡ Diversion of forest biomass away from BAU practice of pile and burn and towards alternative uses – including bioenergy.

9

CURRENT WEST-WIDE AND FEDERAL TRENDS – PART II

¡ Much interest in replacing aging fossil fuel fired thermal energy systems with biomass fired systems.

¡ Capital costs for small-scale biomass gasification systems are trending downward (<$5M/MW).

¡ Downward pressure on wholesale energy prices. Several states have SRAC and MPR pricing tied directly to current natural gas prices.

10

11

CHALLENGES FOR THE BIOMASS POWER SECTOR

¡ Overall energy prices have dropped significantly. § Natural gas, oil, and coal commodity values down significantly in

recent years.

¡ Renewable energy technologies have improved capital costs and efficiency. Solar and wind are very competitive renewable power generators now with cost of generation as low as $.05 - $.06/kWh.

¡ Unlike solar and wind, biomass plants must procure fuel – at a price point equivalent around $.03-$.04/kWh.

¡  Federal renewable energy Production Tax Credits are priced about ½ of PTC for wind and solar.

¡ Oregon Biomass Producers Tax Credit sunsets 2017.

12

THE FUTURE OF COMMERCIAL SCALE BIOMASS POWER PLANTS IN THE WEST DEPENDS ON …

¡ Market of energy (especially natural gas). ¡ Collective response to environmental issues:

§ Air emissions – particulate, black carbon, etc. § Carbon accounting

¡ KEY - Monetization of societal and ratepayer benefits.

¡ KEY – Level playing field for all renewable energy technologies. (PTC that is equal for all renewables)

NOT ALL BIOMASS USERS AGREE

13

14

Tad Mason, Forester TSS Consultants 916.600.4174

[email protected]

www.tssconsultants.com