Comparative life cycle assessment of sustainable energy carriers including production, storage, overseas transport and utilization

Title

Comparative life cycle assessment of sustainable energy carriers including production, storage, overseas transport and utilization

Subject

Natural gas transportation
Liquefied natural gas
Hydrogen production
Life cycle
Electrolysis
Hydrogen storage
Ammonia
Methanol
Combustion
Carbon dioxide
Dimethyl-ether
Liquid hydrogen
Heavy oil production
Petroleum transportation
Gas emissions
Greenhouse gases
Emission control
Carbon
Cryogenic liquids
Internal combustion engines
Ethers
Road vehicles
Natural gas wells
Energy transport
Liquid ammonia

Description

Countries are under increasing pressure to reduce greenhouse gas emissions as an act upon the Paris Agreement. The essential emission reductions can be achieved by environmentally friendly solutions, in particular, the introduction of low carbon or carbon-free fuels. This study presents a comparative life cycle assessment of various energy carriers namely
liquefied natural gas, methanol, dimethyl ether, liquid hydrogen and liquid ammonia that are produced from natural gas or renewables to investigate greenhouse gas emissions generated from the complete life cycle of energy carriers accounting for the leaks as well as boil-off gas occurring during storage and transportation. The entire fuel life cycle is considered consisting of production, storage, transportation via an ocean tanker to different distances, and finally utilization in an internal combustion engine of a road vehicle. The results show that using natural gas as a feedstock, total greenhouse gas emissions during production, ocean transportation (over 20,000 nmi) by a heavy fuel oil-fueled ocean tanker, and utilization in an internal combustion engine are 73.96, 95.73, 93.76, 50.83, and 100.54 g CO2 eq. MJ−1 for liquified natural gas, methanol, dimethyl ether, liquid hydrogen, and liquid ammonia, respectively. Liquid hydrogen produced from solar electrolysis is the cleanest energy carrier (42.50 g CO2 eq. MJ−1 fuel). Moreover, when liquid ammonia is produced via photovoltaic-based electrolysis (60.76 g CO2 eq. MJ−1 fuel), it becomes cleaner than liquified natural gas. Although producing methanol and dimethyl ether from biomass results in a large reduction in total greenhouse gas emissions compared to conventional methanol and dimethyl ether production, with a value of 73.96 g CO2 eq. per MJ, liquified natural gas still represents a cleaner option than methanol and dimethyl ether considering the full life cycle.
279

Publisher

Journal of Cleaner Production

Date

2021

Contributor

Al-Breiki, Mohammed
Bicer, Yusuf

Format

123481

Type

journalArticle

Identifier

0959-6526
10.1016/j.jclepro.2020.123481

Collection

Citation

“Comparative life cycle assessment of sustainable energy carriers including production, storage, overseas transport and utilization,” Lamar University Midstream Center Research, accessed May 18, 2024, https://lumc.omeka.net/items/show/24913.

Output Formats