A barrier and techno-economic analysis of small-scale bCHP (biomass combined heat and power) schemes in the UK.
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Abstract
bCHP (Biomass combined heat and power) systems are highly efficient at smaller-scales when a significant proportion of the heat produced can be effectively utilised for hot water, space heating or industrial heating purposes. However, there are many barriers to project development and this has greatly inhibited deployment in the UK. Project viability is highly subjective to changes in policy, regulation, the finance market and the low cost fossil fuel incumbent. The paper reviews the barriers to small-scale bCHP project development in the UK along with a case study of a failed 1.5 MWel bCHP scheme. The paper offers possible explanations for the project’s failure and suggests adaptations to improve the project resilience. Analysis of the project’s: capital structuring; contract length and bankability; feedstock type and price uncertainty, and; plant oversizing highlight the negative impact of the existing project barriers on project development. The research paper concludes with a discussion on the effects of these barriers on the case study project and this industry more generally. A greater understanding of the techno-economic effects of some barriers for small-scale bCHP schemes is demonstrated within this paper, along with some methods for improving the attractiveness and resilience of projects of this kind.Citation
Wright, D. G., Dey, P. K., & Brammer, J. (2014). A barrier and techno-economic analysis of small-scale bCHP (biomass combined heat and power) schemes in the UK. Energy, 71, 332–345. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.energy.2014.04.079Publisher
ElsevierJournal
EnergyType
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
0360-5442EISSN
1873-6785ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1016/j.energy.2014.04.079
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