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The economics of bioenergy production at farm level: An Irish Case Study

The economics of bioenergy production at farm level: An Irish Case Study. D. Clancy 1, 2 , J. Breen 1 , A. M. Butler 2 , F. Thorne 1 , M. Wallace 2 1 Rural Economy Research Centre, Teagasc

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The economics of bioenergy production at farm level: An Irish Case Study

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  1. The economics of bioenergy production at farm level: An Irish Case Study D. Clancy1, 2, J. Breen1, A. M. Butler2, F. Thorne1, M. Wallace2 1 Rural Economy Research Centre, Teagasc 2 Department of Agribusiness, University College Dublin

  2. Overview • Biomass Crops • Rationale • Irish Policy • Objectives • Results • Conclusions

  3. Willow • Willow production often referred to as Short Rotation Coppice • Production lifespan of 15 - 22 years • First harvest in year 4, every 2/3 years after this • Can be grown on a wide variety of soils • Suitable for wet conditions – however there is a limit to this

  4. Miscanthus • Miscanthus is a perennial tall woody grass • Production lifespan of 15 – 20 years • First harvest in year 2, every year thereafter • Slightly better soil quality than willow required, but can be grown on wide range

  5. Rationale • Kyoto Protocol • Security of Supply • CAP Reform • Deurwaarder (2005): identified profitability at farm level as one of the main barriers to bioenergy production

  6. Irish Policy • National co-firing targets: replace 30% of peat burned in three state owned power stations with biomass by 2015 • Approx 80,000 ha of willow or 41,000 ha of miscanthus would be required to meet the targets - currently > 3,000 ha • REFIT scheme is mechanism to achieve this target – offers power station price per GJ supplied by alternative energy

  7. Irish Policy • Maximum allowable area for farmers in REPS or receiving disadvantaged area payments • Therefore biomass will need to be grown outside the region of power stations in order to meet target • Biomass is a bulky product – high cost of transportation will reduce area in which it would be viable to produce • Supply chain issues need to be resolved to further develop market

  8. Bioenergy Scheme • Offers a grant for 50% of establishment costs (major barrier to entry) • Scheme only available for approx 700 ha in 2009 – far lower than required area • Scheme to end next year – no indication over whether it will be renewed, increases uncertainty in market

  9. Research Objectives • Investigate the financial feasibility of willow & miscanthus • Address the uncertainty regarding the suitability of these crops to Irish growing conditions • Examine the competitiveness of biomass with traditional agricultural enterprises

  10. Baseline Assumptions per hectare

  11. Baseline investment results of willow and miscanthus

  12. Results with alternative superseded enterprises

  13. Conclusions • At current prices, willow & miscanthus generate positive returns and are potentially worthwhile investments • Approx 80,000 ha of willow or 41,000 ha of miscanthus would be required to meet the co-firing targets • Biomass will need to be produced outside region of power stations – large transportation costs

  14. Conclusions • Analysis of the net effect on GHG emissions required • Greater incentives need to be offered in order to attract sufficient investment • Longer term support mechanisms required to reduce uncertainty

  15. Thank you for your attention! Questions, comments and suggestions welcome

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