Stora Enso and Nesto Oil partner on biomass-to-liquids production
Finland-based wood processing firm Stora Enso has signed an agreement with Neste Oil to join forces to develop technology for producing next-generation biofuels from wood residues to replace fossil fuels in transportation and thus cut greenhouse gases. The first step will be to design and build a demonstration plant at Stora Enso's Varkaus Mill in Finland. The demonstration plant, which will be owned on a 50/50 basis by the parties, is expected to start up in 2008.
Stora Enso is pioneering the production of synthetic biofuels for transportation. Expertise from Stora Enso, Neste Oil and VTT (the Technical Research Centre of Finland) will be utilised to implement the development phase and commercialise the renewable fuels.
Synthetic biofuels are obtained from gasifying biomass, in this case wood residues from Stora Enso's mill, which results in a carbon dioxide and hydrogen rich gas. This syngas is then liquefied via a Fischer-Tropsch process.
The €14 million demonstration plant will be integrated into the energy infrastructure of the Stora Enso's Varkaus Mill, where the gas produced will equal the energy needed to heat 4300 homes and cut carbon dioxide emissions significantly.
Stora Enso's Varkaus Mill currently produces fine paper, directory paper, newsprint, coreboard and sawn timber on three paper machines and one board machine with a total annual capacity of about 620 000 tonnes of paper and board, and 345 000 m3 of sawn wood products. The mill's annual wood consumption is approximately 2.3 million m3. The mill employs about 980 people:
biomass :: bioenergy :: biofuels :: energy :: sustainability :: ethanol :: wood :: biomass-to-liquids :: gasification :: Fischer-Tropsch :: Finland ::
Following the development phase, the joint venture will build a fullscale commercial production plant at one of Stora Enso's mills, once the technical solutions are ready and the JV partners have gained enough experience from the demonstration plant. This facility will be owned on a 50/50 basis between the JV partners. In the jointventure, Stora Enso will be responsible for supplying the wood biomass and utilising the heat generated at its pulp and paper mill.
Stora Enso's wood biomass is supplied from forests according to ecological criteria. Neste Oil will be responsible for final refining and marketing of the biofuels produced.
The European Union has set a target of replacing 5.75% (18 million tonnes) of the fossil fuels consumed by transportation with biofuels by 2010 and 10% by 2020. This would mean replacing 30 million tonnes of fossil fuels and would require significant increases in biofuel production. Emissions from biofuels are considered to be carbon-neutral because the carbon dioxide is recycled through the atmosphere and stored by growing forests as part of the natural carbon cycle, whereas combustion of fossil fuels introduces "new" sources of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
This new enterprise supports Stora Enso's sustainability policies and the Group's efforts to mitigate climate change. Stora Enso is focused on reducing greenhouse gases by improving energy efficiency, increasing usage of biofuels and other renewable energy sources, and maximising the use of combined heat and power in energy production.
Image: logs at Stora Enso's Varkaus Mill. Courtesty: Stora Enso.
Stora Enso is pioneering the production of synthetic biofuels for transportation. Expertise from Stora Enso, Neste Oil and VTT (the Technical Research Centre of Finland) will be utilised to implement the development phase and commercialise the renewable fuels.
Synthetic biofuels are obtained from gasifying biomass, in this case wood residues from Stora Enso's mill, which results in a carbon dioxide and hydrogen rich gas. This syngas is then liquefied via a Fischer-Tropsch process.
The €14 million demonstration plant will be integrated into the energy infrastructure of the Stora Enso's Varkaus Mill, where the gas produced will equal the energy needed to heat 4300 homes and cut carbon dioxide emissions significantly.
Stora Enso's Varkaus Mill currently produces fine paper, directory paper, newsprint, coreboard and sawn timber on three paper machines and one board machine with a total annual capacity of about 620 000 tonnes of paper and board, and 345 000 m3 of sawn wood products. The mill's annual wood consumption is approximately 2.3 million m3. The mill employs about 980 people:
biomass :: bioenergy :: biofuels :: energy :: sustainability :: ethanol :: wood :: biomass-to-liquids :: gasification :: Fischer-Tropsch :: Finland ::
Following the development phase, the joint venture will build a fullscale commercial production plant at one of Stora Enso's mills, once the technical solutions are ready and the JV partners have gained enough experience from the demonstration plant. This facility will be owned on a 50/50 basis between the JV partners. In the jointventure, Stora Enso will be responsible for supplying the wood biomass and utilising the heat generated at its pulp and paper mill.
Stora Enso's wood biomass is supplied from forests according to ecological criteria. Neste Oil will be responsible for final refining and marketing of the biofuels produced.
The European Union has set a target of replacing 5.75% (18 million tonnes) of the fossil fuels consumed by transportation with biofuels by 2010 and 10% by 2020. This would mean replacing 30 million tonnes of fossil fuels and would require significant increases in biofuel production. Emissions from biofuels are considered to be carbon-neutral because the carbon dioxide is recycled through the atmosphere and stored by growing forests as part of the natural carbon cycle, whereas combustion of fossil fuels introduces "new" sources of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
This new enterprise supports Stora Enso's sustainability policies and the Group's efforts to mitigate climate change. Stora Enso is focused on reducing greenhouse gases by improving energy efficiency, increasing usage of biofuels and other renewable energy sources, and maximising the use of combined heat and power in energy production.
Image: logs at Stora Enso's Varkaus Mill. Courtesty: Stora Enso.
1 Comments:
Hello, i would like to know why Stora Enso invests in Varkaus and not invests in Barcelona where they will use rejects from Used beverage to produce electrical energy and reuse the aluminium? Isn't a project so ambicious like Varkaus? Thank you.
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