Title: lessons learned Sanju Deenapanray CDM National Project
1Bio-energy in Mauritius lessons learned
Sanju Deenapanray CDM National Project
Coordinator, Mauritius prakash.deenapanray_at_undp.or
g
Bio-carbon in Eastern Southern Africa, Addis
Ababa, Ethiopia (24 April 2009)
2Overview
- CO2 emissions Electricity Sector in Mauritius
- Bagasse co-generation co-firing
- Potential for CDM in Africa
3Dependence on Fossil Fuel
4CO2 Emissions
Per capita CO2 emission 2.7 tonnes (2007)
5Sectoral CO2 Emissions (1995 - 2007)
Electricity Transport accounted for gt83 of
total emissions in 2007
6Electricity Supply
Demand growing at 5-6 per annum over the past
decade
78 of electricity produced from fossil fuels
7Role of Independent Power Producers
- In 2007, IPPs generated around 66.5 of total
thermal electricity in Mauritius (1461.5 GWh out
of 2464.6 GWh) - Internal consumption of IPPs was 234.8 GWh
- Exported 1226.7 GWh to the gird (i.e. 56 of all
grid electricity) and CEB generated 972.3 GWh (or
44) - Thermal electricity is produced in 3 ways by IPPs
- 1. Bagasse only (continuous power)
- 2. Bagasse/Coal (firm power)
- 3. Coal only (firm power)
8Overview
- CO2 emissions Electricity Sector in Mauritius
- Bagasse co-generation co-firing
- Potential for CDM in Africa
9Cogeneration the concept
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12Key Enabling Factors
- Economic fiscal incentives
- Power Purchase Agreements (attractive sale price
of electricity for firm power) - Research Development (technology transfer
bio-engineering etc ) - Equity Participation (of small in cogeneration
plants through the State Investment Trust up to
25)
13Increase in Efficiency in Cogeneration
14Increase in Generation of Firm Power
15Reduction in CO2 Emissions
- Grid Emission Factor, EFgrid,2007 1.1773
tCO2/MWh - In 2007, a total of 346.8 GWh generated from
bagasse (_at_ 242.5 kWh/TB) - Avoided CO2 emissions 408,300 tonnes (2007)
- Considering an average efficiency 374.6 kWh/TB
(_at_82 bars) - Potential for avoided CO2 emissions 630,705
tonnes
16How dirty is the grid?
EFgrid,CM,y EFgrid,OM,y X wOM EFgrid,BM,y X
wBM
Generation-weighted average CO2 emissions net of
electricity generated (excludes low-cost, must
run plants CDM projects)
Generation-weighted average CO2 emissions net of
electricity generated of either 5 most recently
built plants or 20 of last power generated
(whichever is larger)
wOM wBM 50 (1st crediting period)
For Mauritius (2007) EFgrid,OM,y 1.0886 tCO2 /
MWh EFgrid,BM,y 1.2659 tCO2 / MWh
EFgrid,CM,y 1.1773 tCO2 / MWh
?
VERY DIRTY GRID
17Overview
- CO2 emissions Electricity Sector in Mauritius
- Bagasse co-generation co-firing
- Potential for CDM in Africa
18Bagasse Cogeneration in Africa
- 10,000 GWh/yr (or 10 TWh/yr) in 2005 90 million
tonnes of cane - In 2005, total demand of electricity in Africa
was 533 TWh - Potential to generate 2 of electricity demand
from bagasse - Potential could be much larger considering
availability of other renewable biomass in Africa
(e.g. crop residues, woody biomass - quantity?) - Biomass can also be used to provide only thermal
energy (process steam and heat) for industrial
processes
19Example - Mozambique
- 596,271 TB produced in 2007
- Assuming a conversion efficiency of 374.6 kWh/TB
- EFgrid,2005 0.045 MWh/tCO2
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20Clean Development Mechanism
- Several bagasse (biomass) cogeneration projects
have successfully generated CERs - Approved baseline monitoring methodologies
exist. For example
- ACM0006 Consolidated methodology for electricity
generation from biomass residues Version 8 - Several Small-Scale methodologies in Categories
I.A, I.C and I.D
19
21ACM0006 Consolidated methodology for
electricity generation from biomass residues
Version 8
22ACM0006 Consolidated methodology for
electricity generation from biomass residues
Version 8
23Additionality
Reductions in emissions must be additional to
any that would occur in the absence of the
project activity
- Most registered CDM projects (biomass
cogeneration / thermal energy production) have
employed Barrier Analysis to justify
additionality. Some barriers are
- Investment barrier (high upfront CapEx)
- Technological barrier
- Barrier due to prevailing practice (cultural
barrier) - Institutional barrier (e.g. access to grid,
feed-in tariff) - Price risk of biomass residue
- Biomass collection and storage barriers
24End
Sanju Deenapanray CDM National Project
Coordinator, UNDP prakash.deenapanray_at_undp.org Tel
230 208 2416 Fax 230 208 4871