fully integrated agricultural & forest products biorefinery in southeast arkansas

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Potlatch 1 Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas ARKANSAS GENERAL ASSEMBLY JOINT INTERIM COMMITTEES Tommy Smith, Cypress Bend Mill Manager Potlatch Corporation February 27, 2006

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Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas. ARKANSAS GENERAL ASSEMBLY JOINT INTERIM COMMITTEES Tommy Smith, Cypress Bend Mill Manager Potlatch Corporation February 27, 2006. Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Arkansas. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

Potlatch 1

Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

• ARKANSAS GENERAL ASSEMBLYJOINT INTERIM COMMITTEES

• Tommy Smith, Cypress Bend Mill Manager• Potlatch Corporation

• February 27, 2006

Page 2: Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

Potlatch 2

Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery

in Arkansas

Meeting Objectives• Enhance attendees understanding of

– The fully integrated agricultural and forest products biorefinery

– Potential opportunities and benefits for Arkansas• Next Steps• Partners and Supporters

Page 3: Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

Potlatch 3

BackgroundThe Energy Policy Act of 2005 has provisions to

encourage the annual production of 1 billion GPY of biofuels from cellulosic sources by 2015. – Primary feedstocks - forest and agricultural residues

and energy crops– Thermochemical (gasification) technology can

effectively process biomass feedstocks, be built on a large scale, achieve high conversion efficiencies, and be rapidly replicated nationwide.

– Working together, the agricultural, petrochemical, and forest products industries have the resources, infrastructure, and technical skills needed to produce, collect, and convert the target biomass at commercial scale.

Page 4: Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

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Background(Continued)

• Technologies currently exist to build a fully integrated biorefinery capable of producing transportation grade fuels from untapped sources of biomass.

• Using thermochemical (gasification) technologies, virtually any biomass feedstock can be converted to higher value products.

• Sufficient low cost biomass exists (agricultural residues, forest residues, pre-commercial thinnings, woody debris, and black liquor) to support numerous biorefineries in Arkansas and the U.S.

• In addition, many more could be deployed in areas such as the Delta region using dedicated energy crops.

Page 5: Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

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Hemi Extraction and Conversion

Agenda 2020: Integrated Forest Products Biorefinery (IFBP) Concept

Forest Building Products Mill

Pulp Mill Recovery/ Power Plant

Paper, Board, Other Mills

Paper, Boxes/Cartons, Tissue/Diapers,

Specialties

Chips

Energy

Black Liquor

Energy

Boards, Paneling,

Etc.

Pulp

Ethanol,Polymers,

Etc.

Gasifier

Fuels/ Chemicals

Fuels/ Chemicals

Ethanol,DME,Others

Biomass

Optimized Plantations

Page 6: Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

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National PerspectiveIntegrated Forest Products Biorefineries

• Fully developed and commercialized, IFPB technologies have potential for significant national benefits:– Diversified, more secure national energy supply– Significant rural economic development– Geographically distributed supply source– Reduced environmental impacts– Improved energy efficiencies

Page 7: Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

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National Perspective(Continued)

• Quantified Potential Benefits– $9 billion/year new revenues throughout industry– 175 MM bbl/year in energy savings– 150 MM tons/year positive impact on carbon

balance– 165,000 new jobs in primarily rural communities

Page 8: Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

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Arkansas Perspective Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest

Products Biorefineries (IAFPB)

• Fully developed and commercialized, IAFPB technologies have potential for significant statewide benefits:– New markets for existing industries– Additional revenues for business and state– Improved economics for existing agricultural &

forest industry– Significant rural economic development

Page 9: Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

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A Fully Integrated Agricultural and Forest Products Biorefinery (IAFPB)

at Cypress Bend

• The thermochemical (gasification and gas-to- liquids technologies) and bioconversion (fermentation) pathways would be used to process biomass and black liquor.

• The eventual biorefinery would be sized to convert up to 8,000 dry TPD of forest and agricultural residuals and 1,300 dry TPD of black liquor solids into higher value biofuels.

• It is anticipated that the biorefinery would eventually include the equipment needed to extract hemicellulose from the wood chips prior to pulping and convert it to ethanol.

Page 10: Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

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Flow Diag.

Agri. Residuals

Energy Crops

Heat Recovery

Gas Cleaning

Biofuel & Other

Chemicals

Wood Chip Storage

Pulping & Paper Manufacturing

Low Pressure Steam

Pulping

Flare Gas

Gen

High Pressure Steam

Stm Turb

Gasifier(Reformer)DryingForest

Residuals

Black Liquor

Hemicellulose(Sugar)

Extraction

Conc.of Sugars

Conversion to Ethanol

Ethanol

Lime Kiln

GenGas Turb

Gas To Liquids

High Pressure Steam

Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery

(Possible Mill Configuration)

Page 11: Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

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Potential Biorefinery Products

• The fully developed biorefinery could produce up to 10,000 barrels/day of transportation grade biofuels (eg. FT diesel, ethanol, others).

• Most of Cypress Bend’s energy needs would be met from biorefinery waste heat.

• Some of the syngas would be used in the plant’s existing lime kiln.

• This project would also indirectly reduce green house gas emissions by an estimated 2MM TPY.

• The ash may be recovered and converted to higher value chemicals.

Page 12: Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

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Cypress Bend as the First Site

• Single line Pulp & Paper Mill • Produces 300,000 TPY of bleached coated food

board• Consumes 550,000 dry TPY of wood chips• 350 employees• Two boilers• One gas-fired lime kiln• Technical skills exist to operate complex chemical

processes• Potlatch has been developing and implementing

energy conservation strategies to reduce costs.

Page 13: Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

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 Cypress Bend as the First Site (Continued)

• The mill could utilize the waste heat from the biorefinery to reduce natural gas use.

• There is adequate agricultural and forest based biomass available within 100 miles to support a refinery at Cypress Bend.

• Cypress Bend is located on the Mississippi River in the Southeast corner of Arkansas, making fuel shipment and feedstock deliveries by barge possible.

• The mill is also located in a sparsely populated, economically depressed area where local and state governments are eager for industrial development.

• Cost models indicate ROI would be acceptable

Page 14: Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

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Risk• Partners are needed to minimize financial and technical

risk.– This would be a first-of-a-kind plant. No one has

attempted to marry biomass gasifiers to a gas-to-liquid plant and integrate both units with a pulp mill.

– Potlatch has limited expertise in operating gas-to-liquid technologies.

– Potlatch has limited experience marketing liquid biofuels.

– The project would be large and technically complicated.

Page 15: Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

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 Path Forward• Validate the preliminary system design and assumptions (a

detailed assessment is in process)• Break the project into three major phases

– Phase I is focused on producing biofuel from biomass – Phase 2 would focus on producing fuels from black liquor– Phase 3 would focus on extracting the hemicellulose from

wood chips prior to pulping and converting it to ethanol• Target support / partnerships:

– A company that has gas-to-liquids expertise (in process) – A company that has liquid fuels marketing expertise

• Government support needed to off-set first-generation risks– Grant to offset biorefinery capital cost– Loan guarantee(s) for other debt

Page 16: Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

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First Commercial Biorefinery Phase I Scope

• Gasification and gas-to-liquids technologies would be used to process the biomass.

• The gasifiers and GTL plant would be sized to significantly reduce the mill’s current consumption of natural gas.

• Up to 1,500 dry TPD of forest and agricultural residuals will be converted into higher value biofuels.

• Feedstocks analyses show agricultural residues could supply 40% to 50% of the feedstock.

• The phase 1 plant could produce up to 2,000 barrels/day of transportation grade bio-fuels (e.g., FT diesel, ethanol).

Page 17: Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

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Potlatch’s Intention

• Potlatch’s full commitment to this initiative is subject to:– Positive outcome of the feasibility assessment– Engaging an experienced GTL partner– Identifying markets for biorefinery products– Securing funding to move forward

• Including government support to off-set first-generation risks

– Management approval

Page 18: Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

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Public Policy Considerations

• Incentives for landowners and farmers– energy crop production– field residue harvesting

• Renewable fuel standard (state/federal)• Green power purchase incentives• Biomass transportation considerations• Strengthen SE Arkansas infrastructure

– I-530, I-69, Great River Bridge, Yellow Bend Port, Wilmar Intermodal, Rail Options/Upgrades

Page 19: Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

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Feasibility Assessment Partners

• Potlatch• Arkansas Department of Economic Development• American Forest and Paper Association

– Agenda 2020 Technology Alliance• Winrock International• University of Arkansas at Monticello• Price Industries

Page 20: Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

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Supporters

• Crossett Economic Development Foundation• Riceland Foods Foundation• McGehee/Dermott Industrial Corporation• Dumas Chamber of Commerce• Merchants and Farmers Bank of Dumas• McGehee Industrial Foundation• McGehee Bank• First National Bank of McGehee

Page 21: Fully Integrated Agricultural & Forest Products Biorefinery in Southeast Arkansas

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Letters of Support• AR Congressional Delegation• Governor Huckabee• Delta Regional Authority• AR Farm Bureau Federation• Murphy Oil • Georgia Pacific, Crossett Operations• Chicot-Desha Metropolitan Port Authority• Pulp and Paperworkers’ Resource Council• Arkansas Association of Conservation Districts• Industrial Development Organizations

– Bradley County– Monticello– Southeast Arkansas Cornerstone Coalition