Scott Swinton Presentation June 28th

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Introduction to the Economics of Liquid Biofuels & Crop Production Sco$ M. Swinton Michigan State University Bioenergy Ins7tute, June 28, 2010


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Where we are headed !   Energy in the US economy   (and why oil ma$ers)

!   How food and fuel markets are linked !   Where cellulosic ethanol fits in   (Will farmers grow cellulosic biofuel crops?)

!   What could change the economic picture

www.glbrc.org


Transportation uses Âź of US energy, almost all from oil


Energy distribution !   Fixed point energy demand (buildings, immobile equipment)

  Electricity – mostly coal-­‐powered in USA   Nuclear & hydro are important niches

!   Transporta7on energy demand   Liquid fuel (planes, cars)   95% petroleum products


Why do most cars run on gasoline, not ethanol? !   Gasoline is cheaper   (if oil price below $60-­‐70 per barrel)

!   Ethanol role   Fuel addi7ve to improve combus7on (oxygenate)   Subs7tute fuel for gasoline (up to 10% in vehicles that not flex-­‐fuel)   US ethanol almost 100% from corn grain, so corn ethanol supply depends on food prices too


Links between markets from petroleum to grain to cropland Oil prices ↑

Substitute fuel prices ↑ (ethanol & biodiesel)

Biofuel crop prices ↑ & production ↑ (corn, soy, switchgrass)

Intensification: More input use on same land

Extensification: more land in biofuel crops


Crude oil market links to ethanol links to corn grain market $/Gallon

Ability to Pay for Corn Grain (with current subsidy)

Willingness to Pay for Ethanol

4.00

3.00

2.00

1.00

Source: Babcock et al, 2008 $9

8

7

6

5

4

3

$/Bushel of Corn

2

1

0

20

40

60

80

100

$/Barrel of Oil

120

$140


Key policies affecting the ethanol market !   Cost of US ethanol produc7on is lowered by:   Federal tax credit ($0.45/gal) + state credits

!   Cost of imported sugarcane ethanol raised by:

  Tariff on imports ($0.54/gal)

!   Mandated blending of ethanol into na7onal liquid fuel supply (EISA 2007)


Renewable Fuel Standard (current U.S. law) (Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007) 40

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Biodiesel General Advanced

Biofuel Volume (billion gallons)

30

25

Cellulosic Advanced Conven@onal Previous RFS

Advanced

20

15

10

5

0

Year

Slide from Chris Somerville


Status of ethanol market !   Corn ethanol growing steadily, despite compe77on with feed & food uses

!   Cellulosic ethanol has much higher cost of

produc7on to convert ligno-­‐cellulose to sugars & alcohol   EISA creates mandated market   But EPA relaxed mandate for 2010 due to supply constraints


Where would we produce 16 bil gal of cellulosic ethanol? !   Crop land   At what price would farmers switch from corn to a cellulosic crop? Break-­‐even price must cover: •  1) Costs of produc7on •  2) Profits that would have been earned from corn.

!   Non-­‐crop land   Value of fuel crop needs to beat alterna7ve


Break-even biomass price per ton for switching away from corn (corn grain @$3.50/bu) Breakeven biomass prices near $100/ton for switchgrass, grass & poplar. Best bet: Miscanthus if cheap rhizomes ($52/ton).

James et al (2010) Agronomy Journal


Bottom line: No cellulosic crop beats corn at current prices & yields !   For cellulosic biomass crops to become a$rac7ve:

  Higher yields & prices over $60/ton for switchgrass, mixed grasses or poplar

!   Non-­‐crop lands?   Study underway using GIS tools


Future drivers of biofuel economics !   Markets   Oil supply: New discoveries, war/risks, OPEC   Oil demand: new technology, popula7on, incomes   Electrical demand (big if more electric cars)

!   Technological change   Liquid fuel processing breakthroughs (ethanol, biodiesel)   Electric ba$ery life7me & power storage

!   And … policy


Biofuel policy: Future possibilities !   Energy independence policy   Subsidies & mandates to favor biofuels

!   Environmental policy   Climate change policy •  Cap and trade policy (like Waxman-­‐Markey bill) would create market for carbon sequestra7on by farmers & foresters

  Other environmental benefits of more sustainable crop systems will need policy support •  Biodiversity •  Water quality


Future of liquid biofuel economics bears close watching


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