Towards circular economy: economic feasibility of waste to biomethane injection through proposed feed-in tariff

Lately International Energy Agency (IEA) highlighted the vital role the biogas and anaerobic digester (AD) in the advent of circular economy. Organic residues or waste will be converted into high-value products, power, heating and fuel in the future of bio-economy. This study look specifically into...

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Main Authors: Hoo, Poh Ying, Hashim, Haslenda, Ho, Wai Shin
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier Ltd 2020
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/91587/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2020.122160
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spelling my.utm.915872021-07-11T14:30:14Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/91587/ Towards circular economy: economic feasibility of waste to biomethane injection through proposed feed-in tariff Hoo, Poh Ying Hashim, Haslenda Ho, Wai Shin TP Chemical technology Lately International Energy Agency (IEA) highlighted the vital role the biogas and anaerobic digester (AD) in the advent of circular economy. Organic residues or waste will be converted into high-value products, power, heating and fuel in the future of bio-economy. This study look specifically into the institutional and market factor, of a Feed-in Tariff (FiT) mechanism as a policy instrument to promote integration of biomethane into existing gas grid. In the circumstance where market is not in the favour of bioenergy/biogas, with fossil fuels are subsidised under national economic policy of the case study in Malaysia; this study found that under the current piped natural gas price, the proposed FiT, 34.02–141.79 MYR/GJ (7.13–29.73 EUR/GJ) is economically incompetent for biomethane to be injected into the grid without other policy and mandate support. However, natural gas price rationalisation may close the price gap, this is especially for biomethane derived from palm oil mill effluent (POME) and food waste at 4 MW size. Through Net Present Value (NPV) approach, among the four locally available feedstock assessed in this study: POME, food waste, chicken manures and cattle manures; POME and food waste show lower levelised cost due to minimal competing utilisation value in addition to their higher biogas conversion rate. POME prevails as a feedstock choice for its uniform composition and on-site production advantage. Discussion and recommendations based on the current policy scenarios in Malaysia are provided in the section following results and findings. Elsevier Ltd 2020-10-10 Article PeerReviewed Hoo, Poh Ying and Hashim, Haslenda and Ho, Wai Shin (2020) Towards circular economy: economic feasibility of waste to biomethane injection through proposed feed-in tariff. Journal of Cleaner Production, 270 . ISSN 0959-6526 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2020.122160 DOI:10.1016/j.jclepro.2020.122160
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic TP Chemical technology
spellingShingle TP Chemical technology
Hoo, Poh Ying
Hashim, Haslenda
Ho, Wai Shin
Towards circular economy: economic feasibility of waste to biomethane injection through proposed feed-in tariff
description Lately International Energy Agency (IEA) highlighted the vital role the biogas and anaerobic digester (AD) in the advent of circular economy. Organic residues or waste will be converted into high-value products, power, heating and fuel in the future of bio-economy. This study look specifically into the institutional and market factor, of a Feed-in Tariff (FiT) mechanism as a policy instrument to promote integration of biomethane into existing gas grid. In the circumstance where market is not in the favour of bioenergy/biogas, with fossil fuels are subsidised under national economic policy of the case study in Malaysia; this study found that under the current piped natural gas price, the proposed FiT, 34.02–141.79 MYR/GJ (7.13–29.73 EUR/GJ) is economically incompetent for biomethane to be injected into the grid without other policy and mandate support. However, natural gas price rationalisation may close the price gap, this is especially for biomethane derived from palm oil mill effluent (POME) and food waste at 4 MW size. Through Net Present Value (NPV) approach, among the four locally available feedstock assessed in this study: POME, food waste, chicken manures and cattle manures; POME and food waste show lower levelised cost due to minimal competing utilisation value in addition to their higher biogas conversion rate. POME prevails as a feedstock choice for its uniform composition and on-site production advantage. Discussion and recommendations based on the current policy scenarios in Malaysia are provided in the section following results and findings.
format Article
author Hoo, Poh Ying
Hashim, Haslenda
Ho, Wai Shin
author_facet Hoo, Poh Ying
Hashim, Haslenda
Ho, Wai Shin
author_sort Hoo, Poh Ying
title Towards circular economy: economic feasibility of waste to biomethane injection through proposed feed-in tariff
title_short Towards circular economy: economic feasibility of waste to biomethane injection through proposed feed-in tariff
title_full Towards circular economy: economic feasibility of waste to biomethane injection through proposed feed-in tariff
title_fullStr Towards circular economy: economic feasibility of waste to biomethane injection through proposed feed-in tariff
title_full_unstemmed Towards circular economy: economic feasibility of waste to biomethane injection through proposed feed-in tariff
title_sort towards circular economy: economic feasibility of waste to biomethane injection through proposed feed-in tariff
publisher Elsevier Ltd
publishDate 2020
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/91587/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2020.122160
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