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New IEA Bioenergy report examines cost reduction potential in advanced biofuels

Decarbonising transport will require a range of bio-based transport fuels and especially advanced low carbon fuels suitable for long-haul transport including aviation. A number of appropriate technologies to produce such fuels are being developed and commercialised but production has only reached a limited scale. A new IEA Bioenergy report considers what scope there is to reduce the production costs of a range of advanced biofuels and identify under what conditions they could become affordable.

A new IEA Bioenergy report considers what scope there is to reduce the production costs of a range of advanced biofuels and identify under what conditions they could become affordable. Comparison with fossil fuel and carbon prices from IEA scenarios (2040) shows advanced biofuels can be competitive under these conditions (graphic courtesy IEA Bioenergy).

The International Energy Agency (IEA) Bioenergy Task 41 (IEA Bioenergy T41) has recently published a new report on the potential for advanced biofuels cost reduction carried out under Task 41. The project is funded by the European Commission with in-kind contributions from Germany, the Netherlands, and Sweden.

The report “Advanced Biofuels – Potential for Cost Reduction” confirms that there is a gap between the cost of the advanced biofuels and current fuel prices.

A number of appropriate technologies to produce such fuels are being developed and commercialised. However, so far their production has only reached a limited scale and a massive roll-out of these technologies would be needed to fulfill their potential role in low carbon transport scenarios.

For example, providing the 35 EJ of such fuels foreseen within the IEA’s Sustainable Bioenergy Roadmap would require some 4 000 large scale production plants world-wide by 2060.

The costs of these advanced biofuels are currently higher than those of the fossil fuels which they can displace and of more conventional biofuels such as ethanol from sugar or corn, or biodiesel. It is therefore important to consider what scope there is to reduce the production costs of a range of advanced biofuels and to identify under what conditions they could become affordable.

Bridging the advanced biofuels cost gap

This new IEA Bioenergy report, carried out by an experienced international team, uses as its starting point a study on the costs of such biofuels carried out within the programme of work of the Sub-Group on Advanced Biofuels (SGAB) (under the European Commission’s Sustainable Transport Forum (STF)) and published in 2017. The report:

  • Updates and extends this study to provide estimates of the current costs of producing a selection of relevant advanced biofuels;
  • Identifies the scope for cost reduction for these advanced biofuels;
  • Compares these costs and cost trajectories with likely trends in fossil fuel prices, and those of conventional biofuels;
  • Examines the impact of policy measures, including carbon pricing, on the economic competitiveness of advanced biofuels.

Based on information gathered from industry and other sources the report confirms that there is a gap between the cost of the advanced biofuels and current fuel prices. According to the report, this gap can be reduced in the medium term through process improvements in designing, building and operating plants, financing costs reduction as well as technology learning.

Extensive deployment of the technologies, in line with the patterns needed to meet the ambitions for advanced biofuels within low carbon scenarios, could lead to additional significant cost reductions through technology learning.

Such cost reductions would narrow the cost gap between the advanced biofuels costs and those of the fossil fuels they aim to replace but it will still be significant for many of the pathways studied.

Policy support will, therefore, continue to be needed to enable these technologies to mature either through an added value for low carbon fuels or a substantial carbon cost applied to fossil fuels.

In the longer term, the effective cost of using fossil fuels may rise through a combination of higher prices and/or more extensive carbon pricing. If there is an extensive increase in the production capacity of advanced biofuels at the scale envisaged within low carbon scenarios, then there is the prospect of the technologies being cost-effective in the context of anticipated fossil and carbon prices, for example, those foreseen in the IEA’s World Energy Outlook scenarios.

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