4.7 Article

Environmental impacts of producing bioethanol and biobased lactic acid from standalone and integrated biorefineries using a consequential and an attributional life cycle assessment approach

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 598, Issue -, Pages 497-512

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.04.087

Keywords

Biobased products; Attributional LCA; Economic allocation; Consequential LCA; Biorefinery; Indirect land use change; System expansion

Funding

  1. Bio-Value Platform under the SPIR initiative by The Danish Council for Strategic Research
  2. Danish Council for Technology and Innovation [0603-00522B]
  3. Research Alliance
  4. Graduate School of Science and Technology (GSST) of AU

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This study evaluates the environmental impacts of biorefinery products using consequential (CLCA) and attributional (ALCA) life cycle assessment (LCA) approaches. Within ALCA, economic allocation method was used to distribute impacts among the main products and the coproducts, whereas within the CLCA system expansion was adopted to avoid allocation. The study seeks to answer the questions (i) what is the environmental impacts of process integration?, and (ii) do CLCA and ALCA lead to different conclusions when applied to biorefinery?. Three biorefinery systems were evaluated and compared: a standalone system producing bioethanol from winter wheat-straw (system A), a standalone system producing biobased lactic acid from alfalfa (system B), and an integrated biorefinery system (system C) combining the two standalone systems and producing both bioethanol and lactic acid. The synergy of the integration was the exchange of useful energy necessary for biomass processing in the two standalone systems. The systems were compared against a common reference flow: 1 MJ(EtOH) + 1 kg(LA), which was set on the basis of products delivered by the system C. Function of the reference flow was to provide service of both fuel (bioethanol) at 99.9% concentration (wt. basis) and biochemical (biobased lactic add) in food industries at 90% purity; both products delivered at biorefinery gate. The environmental impacts of interest were global warming potential (GWR(100)), eutrophication potential (EP), non-renewable energy (NRE) use and the agricultural land occupation (ALO). Regardless of the LCA approach adopted, system C performed better in most of the impact categories than both standalone systems. The process wise contribution to the obtained environmental impacts also showed similar impact pattern in both approaches. The study also highlighted that the recirculation of intermediate materials, e.g. C-5 sugar to boost bioethanol yield and that the use of residual streams in the energy conversion were beneficial for optimizing the system performance. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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