Integrated Economic and Environmental Assessment of Biogas and Bioethanol Production from Cassava Cellulosic Waste

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Author listTrakulvichean S., Chaiprasert P., Otmakhova J., Songkasiri W.

PublisherSpringer

Publication year2019

JournalWaste and Biomass Valorization (1877-2641)

Volume number10

Issue number3

Start page691

End page700

Number of pages10

ISSN1877-2641

eISSN1877-265X

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85028985246&doi=10.1007%2fs12649-017-0076-x&partnerID=40&md5=99044b449e663c98f8c59cc8eb153da8

LanguagesEnglish-Great Britain (EN-GB)


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Abstract

Cassava cellulosic waste, or cassava bagasse or pulp, is a solid waste generated from both the coarse and fine extraction processes used for producing starch. Current disposal alternatives, such as selling the wet or dried pulp for animal feed, do not provide a high economic value. Furthermore, when stored at the factory the resulting microbial fermentation of the waste causes environmental pollution and a strong odor. The pulp still has a high starch content and so is suitable for other utilization purposes. The aim of this research was to use a direct economic and environment cost model to assess three potential high value-added renewable energy utilization alternatives for cassava pulp utilization to help define appropriate option(s) for on-site pulp management. The selected utilization options were the production of (i) biogas for heat generation, (ii) biogas for electricity generation and (iii) bioethanol. Primary and secondary data were collected from the literature, surveys and field data. The boundaries of data collection were set as gate-to-gate of a new unit in an existing starch factory with a receiving capacity of 500 t/d of pulp (equivalent to the pulp produced from a 200-t starch factory). The total production cost of each cassava pulp utilization option was calculated from both the economic and environmental cost. The most economically attractive scenario was the production of biogas for heat generation since it gave the highest net present value (NPV), net cash flow and return on sale. The biogas for heat generation option has the highest NPV sensitivity value in all case studies. ฉ 2017, Springer Science+Business Media B.V.


Keywords

pulp


Last updated on 2023-29-09 at 07:36