Economic feasibility assessment of coal-biomass co-firing power generation technology

Yun Long Zhang, Lan Cui Liu, Jia Ning Kang, Song Peng, Zhifu Mi*, Hua Liao, Yi Ming Wei*

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    3 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Biomass co-firing technology is a potential solution for low-carbon transition of coal-fired power plants. Existing techno-economic analyses of this technology fail to consider indirect benefits, such as avoided losses from technology retrofitting, and the heterogeneity across regions. To address these limitations, we developed five types of techno-economic indicators to analyze six possible future scenarios for the application of this technology in 29 provinces of China, based on regional heterogeneous data. The results show, first, generally, the higher the local coal price, the local on-grid electricity price, the biomass feed-in tariff subsidy, and the carbon trading price, the greater the incentives and benefits for biomass co-firing. Second, bio-electricity tariff subsidies greatly increase the incentives for technology retrofitting, with 26 of the 29 provinces analyzed having sufficient incentives for retrofits in this scenario. Third, biomass co-firing technology has more revenue potential when emission quota is limited than when it's not. Our results indicate that a timely tightening of the CO2 emission quotas of the coal power sector will stimulate technological retrofits even without additional policy incentives, while more plants retrofitted will achieve positive returns with additional incentives.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number131092
    JournalEnergy
    Volume296
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Jun 2024

    Keywords

    • Biomass co-firing technology
    • Break-even price
    • CO2 reduction
    • China
    • Coal-fired power
    • Emission quota
    • Indirect benefits
    • LCA
    • Scenario analysis
    • Techno-economics

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