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Economic and life-cycle assessment of OME 3–5 as...
Journal article

Economic and life-cycle assessment of OME 3–5 as transport fuel: a comparison of production pathways

Abstract

OME 3–5 as an alternative transport fuel: a comprehensive environmental and economic assessment of multiple production pathways.

Reducing the contribution of the transport sector to climate change calls for a transition towards renewable fuels. Polyoxymethylene dimethyl ethers (OME n ) constitute a promising alternative to fossil-based diesel. This article presents a comparative analysis of 17 OME 3–5 production pathways, benchmarked against fossil-based diesel under environmental and economic criteria following a life-cycle approach. OME 3–5 fuels that are reliant on biomass as feedstock, or use H 2 produced from wind- or nuclear-powered electrolysis and CO 2 from direct air capture, have the potential to reduce global warming impacts by up to 20%. Nevertheless, such fuels are also found to shift environmental burdens to other impact categories under human health and ecosystems quality due to procurement of raw materials (H 2 , CO 2 and biomass), and their predicted total monetized cost is 1.5–3.6 times that of fossil-based diesel. These results highlight the need for embracing impacts beyond climate change in the environmental assessment of alternative fuels and including negative externalities in their economic assessment.

Authors

Rodríguez-Vallejo DF; Valente A; Guillén-Gosálbez G; Chachuat B

Journal

Sustainable Energy & Fuels, Vol. 5, No. 9, pp. 2504–2516

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)

Publication Date

May 4, 2021

DOI

10.1039/d1se00335f

ISSN

2398-4902

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