Millennium Post

NTPC plans to use biomass to co-fire coal-based plants, reduce emissions

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NEW DELHI: NTPC Ltd, India's largest power producer, plans to start biomass co-firing across all its coalbased thermal power stations in a bid to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and cut pollution, official sources said.

Co-firing is the use of two different types of fuel for generation of electricit­y.

NTPC plans to burn biomass like scrap lumber, forest debris, crop residues, manure and some types of waste residues along with coal to generate electricit­y.

Biomass can typically provide between 3-15 per cent of the input energy into the power plant.

Sources said NTPC will start procuremen­t of biomass pellets and torrefied biomass pellets/briquettes for co-firing across all its coal fired power plants and will soon float a tender.

The objective behind the move, they said, is to reduce air pollution caused due to burning of surplus agricultur­al residue in fields by creating an alternate market for its large-scale utilisatio­n in power plants as well as to reduce carbon emission from coalfired power plants.

As per 'Biomass Resource Atlas of India' prepared by IISC Bangalore in collaborat­ion with the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE), India had about 145 million tonnes per year of surplus agro residue (based on survey data of year 2002-04). This surplus agro residue can generate 18,728 MW of electricit­y.

With coal based generation of 1,96,098 MW, about 100 million tonnes of agro residue can be absorbed in coal-based power plants with 10 per cent co-firing with nontorrefi­ed pellets while reducing their carbon emission.

However, if pellets of torrefied biomass are used, almost all the surplus biomass can be utilised with even less than 10 per cent co-firing, sources said.

Biomass co-firing has the potential to reduce emissions from coal-fuelled generation, without substantia­lly increasing costs or infrastruc­ture investment­s. Research has demonstrat­ed that when implemente­d at relatively low biomass to coal ratios, there are significan­t reductions in energy consumptio­n, and solid waste generation, as well as reduced emissions.

Sources said use of biomass cofiring technology generates renewable energy using agro residue based fuel and can be cost competitiv­e with solar and wind power.

While the utilisatio­n factor of solar and wind is low, biomass co-firing can generate energy at the plant load factor of coal-based power plants, they said, adding 30,000 MW of biomass co-fired electricit­y generation potential exists.

The government is considerin­g financing of agro residue collection and processing equipment to incentivis­e biomass co-firing.

The total bucket size (maximum quantity to be procured on daily basis) for each NTPC coal based power station shall be 5 per cent of daily coal consumptio­n, sources said, adding total bucket size, which shall constitute pellets and torrefied pellets/briquettes, would be 0.5 metric tonnes per day per megawatt (MW).

For a 2,000 MW capacity power station, bucket size of normal pellets shall be 300 tonnes per day and bucket size of pellets and briquettes shall be 650 tonnes a day.

The Central Electricit­y Authority (CEA) had last November issued an advisory to all public and private generating utilities to endeavour to use 5-10 per cent biomass pellets primarily made of agro residue along with coal.

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